The News (New Glasgow)

Canada’s Heslip hoping to land spot with Raptors

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It’s near the end of a practice at Toronto Raptors’ training camp and like most of the team, Brady Heslip is working on his shot.

He steps behind the three-point line and drains one with ease, then makes two more.

A hand in his face from a Toronto assistant to serve as a distractio­n? No problem. A tough pass and a quick release? Got it.

“Brady’s a shooter,” said Raptors head coach Dwane Casey. “I love the way he shoots the basketball.”

There’s no doubting Heslip’s deadly accuracy from his time in both college and the pros – he buried a record 13 threes in an NBA D-League contest back in 2014. But it’s the other parts of his game that will mostly determine the Canadian’s fate with the club he cheered for as a kid.

“Defend. That’s the No. 1 thing,” Casey said of what he wants to see from Heslip. “He’s one of our best shooters that we have right now. I’m sure Kyle (Lowry) would argue that, but it’s almost like a layup for him, a three-point shot. He’s done it for a while. He’s a proven shooter.”

While Heslip might be a proven shooter, it hasn’t translated into an NBA job up to this point.

He went undrafted following three seasons at Baylor University but got a tryout with the Minnesota Timberwolv­es in 2014. Heslip didn’t survive training camp and wound up in the D-League for a brief time.

From there he would spend the next year-and-a-half playing in Europe before the Raptors acquired his rights and signed him last week.

“When my agent told me they were interested and this could be a possibilit­y, I just made it my No. 1 priority,” said the 26-yearold from Burlington, Ont., a city roughly 60 kilometres west of Toronto. “It was the only thing I wanted to have happen.”

Heslip said getting part of his contract guaranteed should he get bumped to the D-League was critical in luring him back across the Atlantic. He has watched from afar as the Raptors have grown in popularity, with last season’s run to the Eastern Conference final a high point.

“A few things had to fall into place,” he said. “I’m just grateful everything worked out and that I’m getting this opportunit­y.”

Apart from his defence, the Raptors want to find out if the six-foot-two, 185-pound Heslip can run the offence. He’s been a shooting guard the majority of his career, but there’s an opening at the point behind Lowry and Cory Joseph with Delon Wright out until at least December with a shoulder injury.

“It’s something I like doing and I can do,” Heslip said of running the point. Like any training camp, there are other players looking to take their chance. For all the praise Casey has for Heslip in the battle for the 15th spot on the roster, he seems equally high on Fred Van-Vleet, an undrafted natural point guard out of Wichita State who signed a multi-year deal after an impressive Summer League showing.

“The moment isn’t too big for either one of them,” said Casey. “I like both of them, because both of them are right now showing they belong in the NBA.”

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