The Standard (St. Catharines)

Siakam is the calm and the storm for Raptors

- DOUG SMITH

TORONTO — The iconic John Wooden gave basketball so much during his tenure as the head coach at UCLA, too much to itemize in one place, too many moments and sayings and skills.

But there is one of his truisms playing out with the Toronto Raptors in general this season, and with Pascal Siakam in particular, that fans might want to take to their hearts.

‘Be quick,’ the legendary Wooden would say, ‘but don’t hurry.’

And now, watching Siakam’s whirling dervish style of play being complement but a sudden calmness when it comes time for meticulous implementa­tion of the final move, that saying resonates.

All anyone had to do was watch Siakam hit a career-best three three-pointers in his last game out to understand just how he’s taken that advice and followed it.

That shooting display, plus a 20-points-per game average in four games on 72.4 per cent shooting, earned the 24-year-old Eastern Conference player of the week honours, the NBA announced Monday. Siakam set a career high with 23 points in Saturday’s win over New York and was also 15-for-16 from the free throw line over the week.

He watches his teammates, he understand­s that going 100 kilometres an hour isn’t always necessary, and it’s added something to an impressive array of skills.

“Someone I always look at is Kawhi (Leonard) because he seems to never rush himself in anything he does,” Siakam told reporters Monday morning before the Raptors played the New Orleans Pelicans at the Scotiabank Arena. “That’s something that I always try to just look at, and it’s more important for my shot, because I run so fast and it’s like I’ve got to just slow down for a second.

“That’s something I’m learning to do.”

And learning pretty well.

Speed is always going to be the staple of Siakam’s game and what makes him stand out most nights. He’s in perpetual motion, almost always beating his man down the court for easy transition baskets. When he gets to swirling and twirling with the ball in the lane, good things tend to happen.

Whether he knows precisely what he’s doing when he starts making moves is almost secondary because he’s able to adapt to whatever happens when he gets going.

“We have to believe he knows what he’s doing because he ends up finishing most of those, right?” Raptors coach Nick

Nurse joked last week.

“I think he’s reading what’s happening. Once he turns his back and spins, it’s usually something good, which is again, for me, is neat to watch.”

Siakam knows he’s put in the work in each of the last two summers to improve all facets of his game. Once he gets on the court, he just reacts.

His long-range shot is still a work in progress — the threepoint­ers Saturday were a welcome sign but he still has to be more consistent from deep — but he’s prepared himself to take the shots, some day he’ll make more.

“I think it’s just when you work, if you feel prepared, it’s like going into a test, right?” Siakam said. “When you prepare going into the test, you feel good, you get in there.

 ?? SCOTT THRELKELD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Toronto Raptors forward Pascal Siakam hit a career-best three three-pointers in his last game.
SCOTT THRELKELD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toronto Raptors forward Pascal Siakam hit a career-best three three-pointers in his last game.

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