The Province

Valanciuna­s in slump but Raptors not worried

- MIKE GANTER mganter@postmedia.com twitter.com/Mike_Ganter

TORONTO — Jonas Valanciuna­s is struggling. Part of it is matchup driven, like Monday’s game against the Cleveland Cavaliers, where Tristan Thompson and Channing Frye tend to give the Raptors centre problems.

Part of it might also be health as he comes back from an ankle injury.

But it’s not just the Cavs that Valanciuna­s is struggling against.

In the past four games, the normally productive centre is averaging just 4.5 points a game, is shooting just under 32 per cent and is collecting 6.5 rebounds per night.

All numbers are well below his season averages. The numbers are a little concerning, but not to head coach Dwane Casey.

“Jonas is fine, it’s a matchup league,” Casey said after the loss to Cleveland on Monday in which Valanciuna­s played 25 minutes, his longest outing in five games and had just four points, chipping in with 10 rebounds. “I thought Lucas (Nogueira) did a little bit better job of guarding Frye, which is a hard matchup for any (centre) in the league, not just Jonas and Lucas. He’s really a four playing the five and that’s why we decided to go small; that kind of got us going a little bit toward the end but again, you give up something.”

At the same time as Valanciuna­s appears to be struggling, Nogueira’s stock seems to be on the rise.

He and Kyle Lowry have developed a nice chemistry and his ability to get out to the three-point line and recover is a little quicker than Valanciuna­s.

Earlier this year, Valanciuna­s had another dip in his production. At the time Casey blamed that one, too, on Valanciuna­s just finding his legs after a short injury layoff. This could be more of the same.

Finding balance

Seeing DeMar DeRozan lead the league in scoring earlier in the season was good for everyone in the Raptors organizati­on, but what is better is what is going on right now.

That’s a balanced scoring attack, meaning opponents can no longer load up on DeRozan only. They have to account for all five Raptors on the court.

“Yeah, that’s preferable,” Casey said. “I thought the first few games, everybody was kind of watching the DeMar DeRozan show, averaging and scoring all those points. And he did put on a show, but at the same time it allows teams to triple team him, double team, send a third body to him, and now he’s doing a good job of finding people, the ball’s moving.

“I’m a firm believer in when that ball’s zinging around, it gets a rhythm and has energy in it,” he added.

“That’s kinda where the ball is now.”

 ?? — STAN BEHAL/POSTMEDIA NETWORK FILES ?? Raptors centre Jonas Valanciuna­s has averaged just 4.5 points over his last four games, well below his season totals. However, if Toronto coach Dwayne Casey is concerned he’s not letting on, saying Valanciuna­s is “fine”.
— STAN BEHAL/POSTMEDIA NETWORK FILES Raptors centre Jonas Valanciuna­s has averaged just 4.5 points over his last four games, well below his season totals. However, if Toronto coach Dwayne Casey is concerned he’s not letting on, saying Valanciuna­s is “fine”.

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