The Niagara Falls Review

Raptors eager to work on late-game strategies

- DOUG SMITH

TORONTO — Dwane Casey has some tricks up his sleeve but it’s been hard of late to show just what they are.

Casey and his Toronto Raptors coaching staff have a series of last-second plays to draw on — “at least” 20 or a couple of dozen, he said, with options off each — but the team’s penchant for winning easily hasn’t created an opportunit­y to use many of them. Only two of Toronto’s last nine games before an outing in Orlando on Wednesday had been decided by fewer than 15 points; the need for a last second play has been non-existent.

“It’s hard to replicate the stress level, the angst, the pressure of the moment of the game,” Casey said this week. “I don’t know what our number is but our end of game situations haven’t been a lot lately. It’s almost like a few years go we had quite a few and you got used to it.”

There is no doubt the Raptors would prefer to have either DeMar DeRozan or Kyle Lowry decide games on a last possession, but how they get to a shot or the chance for someone else to make a surprise move are keys.

Jonas Valanciuna­s, hardly thought of as a late-game option, tied a game against the Milwaukee Bucks at the fourth quarter buzzer last week, that’s the kind of options Casey wants to investigat­e if the chance arises.

“The odds are it’s going to be in one of those two guys’ hands some kind of way,” he said of his all-star guards DeRozan and Lowry. “We’re trying to keep the

defence off balance by developing different people, developing different options going forward.

“I think Jonas’s skill set has developed to where there’s a trust level there, that he can do some of those things. We’ve got some more things that we have, we work on, we haven’t used them that are there involving Jonas and Yak (Jakob Poeltl) and some of those guys.”

For those final game-deciding plays, there is far more that goes into deciding what to run other than which player might have an

acceptable matchup, how opponents are guarding things like screen-roll action or who has the hot hand that night.

The deep analytics the team look at provide them with a “what can we do in this time” chart; with ‘X’ seconds, they can probably get two dribbles off before a shot, with ‘Y’ seconds left there’s probably time for a pass and a couple of dribbles, with ‘Z’ seconds left they might get two passes to get up a shot.

Casey and his staff have that informatio­n at their disposal on

the bench and use it to design plays. They don’t break out a printout in a timeout huddle because they don’t want to overwhelm the players with too much informatio­n but they do offer reminders to whoever is handling the ball.

“That’s when you have those plays for those situations,” Casey said earlier this week.

“People think that you don’t know what to do or they don’t know what to do or whatever, and that’s not true. We spend a lot of time and resources and research to know how long a play takes.”

And then get a chance to use them in real time in real games. While some coaches might want to hold a play or two back so they can’t be scouted, Casey wouldn’t mind having a chance to see them. All things considered, it’s more stress-free to win games by a large margin than to need a last-second bucket but there’s something to be said for practice.

“I don’t want to say when we’re going to use them or how we’re going to use them but, believe me, if it’s going to win a game for us, we’re going to use it,” Casey said.

“We’re not at that point yet where we’re saving something. If the situation presents itself like (Valanciuna­s on Friday), we need a quick bucket and other guys have been struggling a little bit, that was the right play.”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Raptors big man Jonas Valanciuna­s, left, backs up into New York Knicks Kyle O’Quinn during first-half NBA action in Toronto last month.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Raptors big man Jonas Valanciuna­s, left, backs up into New York Knicks Kyle O’Quinn during first-half NBA action in Toronto last month.
 ?? TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? “It’s hard to replicate the stress level, the angst, the pressure of the moment of the game,” Dwane Casey said this week.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO “It’s hard to replicate the stress level, the angst, the pressure of the moment of the game,” Dwane Casey said this week.

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