The Welland Tribune

Casey feels Raptors comfortabl­e in the role of top dog

- DAN RALPH

TORONTO — It’s been an unpreceden­ted playoff start for Dwane Casey and the Toronto Raptors.

For the first time in its history, Toronto boasts a 2-0 series lead following its 130-119 National Basketball Associatio­n win Tuesday night over the Washington Wizards. The Raptors began with a 114-106 Game 1 victory on Saturday, the first time they’d won a playoff opener since 2001.

Traditiona­lly, nothing has come easily in the post-season for the Raptors. Suddenly, they find themselves in unchartere­d waters as an overwhelmi­ng favourite to win a playoff series. It’s a role Casey feels Toronto, which finished atop the Eastern Conference with a 59-23 record, is comfortabl­e with.

“A few years ago, we had to have that (underdog) mentality, that chip on our shoulder mentality, or else,” Casey said during a conference call Wednesday. “So we’re growing, I think our guys are developing a mental toughness that you have to have to be the favourite.

“I think our guys are very comfortabl­e in that role, I’m comfortabl­e in that role as far as having the mental toughness to be the favourite. I think it coincides with the growth and establishi­ng ourselves as a top seed of the conference.”

Action now shifts to Washington, with the third game in the best-of-seven series scheduled for Friday night. Game 4 will go Sunday. Toronto has been dominant thus far, averaging a playoffhig­h 122 points per game. The Raptors have also hit 29 threepoint­ers (first overall) and are averaging 7.5 blocks while shooting 52.4 per cent from the field.

Toronto’s early success at the Air Canada Centre isn’t surprising given it was 34-7 at home. But the Raptors head to Washington boasting more road wins (25) than the Wizards have home victories (23).

“It’s going to be a hostile environmen­t,” Casey said. “They’re going to be playing in a desperate mode, we’ve got to continue to be hungry, we’ve got to continue to go in with a fighter’s mentality to start the game as we did at home.

“Don’t change that and try to say we’re going to come in here and it’s going to be a cakewalk, no. It’s going to be probably even tougher than Game 1, to get over that Game 1 jinx we had there for a little bit.”

DeMar DeRozan was a force Tuesday, matching his career playoff-high with 37 points. But the all-star forward is dealing with more than basketball, with his dad, Frank, in hospital in California battling kidney problems and multiple other issues.

“I love him,” Casey said of DeRozan. “To me, he’s like a son as far as just watching him grow up the last seven years from a snotty-nosed kid from Compton to the man he is now and taking on the family responsibi­lity he’s taking on and still playing.

Toronto’s early success has come with backup guard Fred VanVleet (shoulder) ailing. But Delon Wright has stepped up, registerin­g nine and 11 points, respective­ly in the two games.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Raptors coach Dwane Casey reacts against the Washington Wizards in Toronto on Tuesday night.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Raptors coach Dwane Casey reacts against the Washington Wizards in Toronto on Tuesday night.

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