Windsor Star

Boucher continues Raptors audition at home

- PAT HICKEY phickey@postmedia.com twitter.com/zababes1

Chris Boucher has simple words of advice for youngsters. “Never give up on your dreams. Always believe in yourself,” said Boucher, who will return to Montreal as a member of the Toronto Raptors when they face the Brooklyn Nets in an NBA exhibition game at the Bell Centre on Wednesday (7 p.m., TSN, RDS2). The 25-year-old Boucher, who is battling Eric Moreland for one of the final spots on the Raptors’ roster, is a symbol of perseveran­ce. A one-time high school dropout who was working in the kitchen of a St-Hubert Bar-B- Q restaurant at 16, Boucher has taken a circuitous route to the NBA.

“I’m excited about the game on Wednesday because I never played organized basketball in Montreal,” said the 6-foot-10, 200-pounder. He did play soccer and hockey in Montreal North while he fooled around a bit with a basketball on the playground. After scoring 44 points in an AAU, he was given a chance to attend Alma Academy, which touts itself as North America’s first French basketball academy. His stay in the Saguenay opened doors for him. In a game against New Jersey’s Blair Academy, a perennial U.S. high school powerhouse, Boucher scored 29 points and impressed U.S. scouts. He attended junior colleges in New Mexico and Wyoming before arriving at the University of Oregon.

Boucher was projected as a second-round pick in the NBA draft, but a torn ACL ended his final collegiate season. He signed as a free agent with the Golden State Warriors, but played only one game for the NBA champions. He was released earlier this year and signed with the Raptors.

On the weekend, Raptors coach Nick Nurse said Boucher and Moreland are battling for a two-way spot. That’s a player who can come off the bench and provide a spark at either end of the court.

“I think I can come in and hit (the three-point shot) and I can block shots,” said Boucher, who holds the Oregon record with 110 blocks in a season.

The Raptors were swept by the Cleveland Cavaliers in last year’s playoffs but they ’re expected to be a contender in the Eastern Conference this season. For starters, the conference has opened up a bit because LeBron James, the Cavaliers’ superstar leader, has moved to the Western Conference with the Los Angeles Lakers.

With as many as 12 viable options for minutes on this Toronto Raptors club, this was only a matter of time. This was C.J. Miles’s reply when asked if his team was close to being ready to start the 201819 season, which is still a full week away.

“If we play as hard as we’re playing in practice, we’ll be fine,” Miles said the day before the Raptors’ next-to-last pre-season game with the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday.

“It’s been chippy in here the last couple of days,” Miles revealed. “But that’s the way it’s supposed to be. We’re competing and we have a lot of depth, so all the games are good and (head coach Nick Nurse) has been finding ways to make sure we’re equally matched and mixing the teams so guys are playing with everybody, so it’s been fun.” Nurse’s reaction when told of Miles’s comments seemed to suggest he might actually like the environmen­t to be more physical than they are right now, but he’s got plenty of time to ratchet things up if he so chooses.

Miles, though, saw things as chippy and he wasn’t backing down.

“It gets chippy, but it’s a little bit more than usual with your own teammates this time of year because you’re thinking about getting ready to play your first game, but it’s good, I like it,” Miles said.

On a team that will revolve around the play of Kawhi Leonard, it only makes sense that the style of play should resemble the style of game that’s closest to the one he plays. And make no mistake, Leonard is as physical as they come in the NBA. Miles said everyone has been forced to be physical because of the presence of guys like Leonard and Kyle Lowry, Serge Ibaka, OG Anunoby and Jonas Valanciuna­s. “Competitiv­e fire, man,” Miles said explaining the rise in intensity. “Everybody’s competitiv­e. No one wants to lose. Screaming at the coaches because they’re refereeing ... at the end of it it’s fun, but during it everyone’s at each other’s throats. Not to the point that it’s dangerous, but we’re playing as hard as we can in a controlled environmen­t.” Miles concedes playing time is the most likely motivator. Tough, physical play can help a guy stand out, but on this team an ability to play whenever and wherever you are asked to is almost as important.

“You have to be ready,” Miles said. “Everyone has to know what we’re doing, what we’re trying to do, different positions. The game now, there’s no positions. There’s the point guard and the centre and everyone else is just out there. It’s interestin­g to see guys move around and figure out spots and how to play with each other.”

Nurse seemed somewhat skeptical that things were as chippy as Miles described, but he does know he’s been focusing on some very specific areas of the Raptors approach. He’s looking to see some payoff during these next two days in Montreal and New Orleans (where veteran minutes will be limited).

“I wanna see some improvemen­t on things we’ve been really stressing,” Nurse said. “And there’s a number of them, mostly at the defensive end. I told you guys I was painting in broad strokes, trying to cover areas that I saw over the last few years that I thought I could do better. They weren’t very technical, they were hitting people on rebounds, contesting shots better, things like that, and we spent a lot of time on that.

“But you guys know, this is a nitty gritty league where you’ve got to get to the nitty gritty,” Nurse said. “You’ve gotta be able to show them how to cover this, cover that, this play, that play, scouting reports, all that kind of stuff you’ve got to get to and get ’em prepared. And those are some of the things we’ve done and I wanna see how that looks.” Unlikely to play in either game tonight in Montreal or Thursday in New Orleans is Norman Powell. The hard-luck guard suffered a right thigh bruise in Friday’s game. While he was able to do some light work Monday, he was held out of practice completely on Tuesday.

That does not bode well for a guy who fell out of the regular rotation last season following an injury and needs every opportunit­y possible to show his team what he can do for them.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Toronto Raptors guard C.J. Miles says the intensity has been high during the team’s training camp and pre-season.
DARRON CUMMINGS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toronto Raptors guard C.J. Miles says the intensity has been high during the team’s training camp and pre-season.
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