Toronto Life

| Sports-mad Toronto’s bromance with Masai Ujiri

- —Sarah Fulford Email: editor@torontolif­e.com Twitter: @sarah_ fulford

Overall, it’s been a pretty crummy decade for the planet. Floods, fires and other symptoms of climate change created havoc on every continent, Trump almost single-handedly destroyed the postwar global order, the catastroph­e in Syria severely exacerbate­d the refugee crisis, and social media, which was once hailed as a radical democratiz­ing force, turned out to be an outrage-generating cesspool that brings out the worst in people.

The end of this decade can’t come soon enough.

Against this bleak internatio­nal landscape, Toronto, amazingly, is thriving. This city’s reputation as a welcoming, prosperous, multicultu­ral metropolis has grown over the last decade (despite a few rocky Rob Ford years). Toronto’s ballooning population has vastly improved the texture of the city. Terrific restaurant­s open every month, pockets of cool pop up in every corner, and our downtown office towers are positively crammed.

Historians will look back at this decade as a seminal time in Toronto’s evolution, when we finally shed the last vestiges of civic insecurity inherited from a previous generation. That transforma­tion, which had been brewing for years, coincided with the maturation of the Raptors. Just as Toronto’s population surpassed Chicago’s, as our musicians took over Billboard charts and superstar tech companies set up shop here, the Raptors started to seem like serious championsh­ip contenders.

The pivotal moment in the transforma­tion of Toronto’s identity might have been the first “We the North” video in 2014, featuring concrete playground­s and graffiti-covered alleys. That myth-making video upended the old Toronto-the-good cliché and instead emphasized the city’s toughness, grit and ambition—its proud, almost defiant, otherness. Or maybe the pivotal moment happened when Masai Ujiri, the Raptors president, said with surprising swagger to a crowd of fans during a playoff round with the Brooklyn Nets: “Fuck Brooklyn.” (He was fined $25,000, a small price to pay for internatio­nal recognitio­n as a badass.)

Which came first—the city’s healthy new ego or the Raptors’ revitaliza­tion? It doesn’t matter. The two are inexorably linked. And in mid-June, when over a million people attended the Raptors’ championsh­ip parade, they were celebratin­g Toronto as much as they were celebratin­g a sports team.

Ujiri is our pick this year for the city’s No. 1 Most Influentia­l person because he was, more than anyone else, the architect of our new identity. Several other Raptorrela­ted Torontonia­ns appear throughout this year’s list, including the team’s most famous superfan, Drake (No. 3), its point guard Kyle Lowry (No. 6), MLSE chair Larry Tanenbaum (No. 13), head coach Nick Nurse (No. 16) and Shannon Hosford (No. 35), the Raptors’ chief marketing officer who rolled out the “We the North” campaign, turning a sports team motto into a national tagline. Even the 26-year-old Raptors assistant coach Brittni Donaldson makes an appearance in our “rising stars” category.

As Trevor Cole illustrate­s in his excellent profile on page 58, Ujiri is a fascinatin­g leader, as humble as he is ambitious—and unabashedl­y enthusiast­ic about Toronto. A week or so before Kawhi Leonard announced he was leaving for the L.A. Clippers, Ujiri announced that he was going to stay in Toronto, despite overtures from competing basketball teams, because he loves it here. “I identify with this place,” he said, “and I love it.” The feeling is clearly mutual.

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