The Telegram (St. John's)

The big experiment

Stage 1 of Raptors’ Florida experience a complete success

- MIKE GANTOR

TORONTO — The Raptors are getting ready to decamp and head into the NBA bubble at Disney World.

Two weeks of individual work is behind them, but most importantl­y the team has come through the coronaviru­s-hotbed otherwise known as Florida reportedly without incident.

According to head coach Nick Nurse everyone is healthy.

Today, they will make their way north to Orlando and enter the NBA campus as the third wave of three groups arriving to take over the Sports Park area of the grounds for the next three months and finish this 201920 season once and for all.

Once there, they immediatel­y go into a mini-quarantine in their respective hotel rooms that will last between 36 and 48 hours depending on the amount of time it takes them to provide consecutiv­e negative tests for the coronaviru­s.

At that point, the chains come off, but only to the extent that they will be allowed 5-on-5 drills for the first time since early March when the NBA shut down.

Those inside the bubble will still practise social distancing and follow the handwashin­g and mask-wearing protocols they’ve been doing for months, but basketball as they know it will become a little more familiar to them.

The team’s two-week stay in Naples was deemed a success by Nurse.

“Well, first and foremost, we’ve been safe and done well there. That’s been good,” Nurse said. “We’re not going to count any chickens, that’s for sure. I think as each day of testing that goes by, you’ve got a bit of anxiety to get that e-mail at night from the doc and see what the results are, so, first and foremost, that’s been good.”

On the court, what he has seen has also been good. It’s been strictly individual on-court work to this point — one player per basket, no more than four on the court at any one time — but Nurse is confident the team got as much as they could have out of the situation given the circumstan­ces.

“We’ve been solid,” he said. “I really like the individual work that especially a lot of our young guys have gotten I think it’s been way more consistent. I mean, when you’re not flying and playing and games interrupti­ng and there’s late flights where you need a day off the next day, it’s just been a consistent block of work, both in the weight room and on the court.”

Nurse pointed out that having the team all together in one place for these past two weeks has also allowed them to control things like their food intake and nutrition.

And while one would normally expect a group of wealthy young athletes to somewhat bristle at their sudden lack of freedom, Nurse hasn’t sensed much of that at all.

“They’ve had great attitudes,” he said. “I haven’t sensed hardly any boredom or whining or ‘not another day of one on zero work.’ I’ve sensed great energy, great profession­alism. The vibe in the gym, even though it’s different, has still been pretty good. We still got our music playing and you look across the floor and guys are working and sweating and getting better so it’s been probably a pleasant surprise and a pleasant experience so far.”

But now the grand experiment begins. Take 22 teams and put them in a confined space for up to three months. What could go wrong?

Well, the correct answer is anything and everything, but the league is hoping all the preventati­ve measures they have taken to prevent an outbreak within the bubble will be sufficient.

Having seen the success the Raptors had with that in their own little experiment in Naples/fort Myers, Nurse is even a little more optimistic that the league can pull off their own return-to-play successful­ly than he was two weeks ago.

“Let’s not get over-confident but let’s say slightly more confident,” Nurse said.

Nurse knows speaking definitive­ly on what lies ahead is a fool’s game.

LOWRY LOOKING ‘AWESOME’

Outside of a few comments about his golf game, talk of Kyle Lowry and how he has fared over these past couple of weeks as the Raptors reconvened in southern Florida has been all but non-existent.

Head coach Nick Nurse strongly suggested to reporters last week that no one need worry about his veteran point guard.

“Yeah he is looking awesome. I mean like really awesome,” Nurse said, emphasizin­g the awesome. “He is really working hard.

“He comes into camp always in great shape, full of energy and feisty and all that stuff and he is,” Nurse continued. “He’s going at it. He’s working extremely hard very early in the morning in all facets — his conditioni­ng, his shooting. He’s good. He looks good and his workouts have been excellent.”

It’s no secret that Lowry is the straw that stirs the Raptors, more this season than ever.

As he goes, so goes the team. We might not have said that a year ago with Kawhi Leonard on the roster, but there’s no debating that now.

 ?? POSTMEDIA FILE ?? Kyle Lowry has shown star power in the leadup to the Raptors’ move to Disney World to finish the 2019-20 season.
POSTMEDIA FILE Kyle Lowry has shown star power in the leadup to the Raptors’ move to Disney World to finish the 2019-20 season.

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