Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lowry’s 24, bench help Raptors clinch

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WASHINGTON — For a team that had been 0-23 when trailing at halftime in road playoff games, the Toronto Raptors sure went about ending that drought and advancing in the playoffs in an unusual way: The second unit, led by Fred VanVleet, created the comeback.

Using a tremendous effort at both ends of the court from reserves, and 24 points from Kyle Lowry, the Raptors came back to beat the Washington Wizards 102-92 in Game 6 on Friday night and end their Eastern Conference firstround

series.

“Those guys have some ugly possession­s, but most of the time, they figure it out,” Toronto Coach Dwane Casey said about his bench players,

who overwhelme­d Washington’s in points, 21-6, and rebounds, 15-3, in the second half. “We trust them. We trusted them all year.”

Toronto fell behind by 12 points in the first quarter and by 53-50 at the end of the second.

The Raptors’ first lead did not come until the third quarter, and they were back down by five points entering the final period.

Never in franchise history had the Raptors won after trailing at halftime in a postseason away game, the team said, citing the Elias Sports Bureau.

“It’s a different year. It’s a different team,” VanVleet said. “We’ve just got to keep our composure going forward and leave the past in the past.”

With star guards Lowry and DeMar DeRozan, who had a personal series-low 16 points, resting to begin the fourth, VanVleet steered the turnaround, and the Raptors outscored Washington 29-14 in the last quarter. Bothered by a bad right shoulder, VanVleet had played a total of three minutes in the series until Friday, but he was just what Toronto needed in this game, with 5 points, 4 assists and 4 rebounds.

“On the road, in a hostile environmen­t, I just wanted to be another support guy out there, that can ease the starters a bit,” VanVleet said. “You know, me running the team and playing defense and stuff, I can do those things in my sleep.”

It allowed DeRozan to play only 33½ minutes total, and Lowry 31½, compared with more than 40 each for Washington’s All-Star guards, John Wall and Bradley Beal, who looked tired by the end.

“It was great to have our full bench back. Freddie back out there with the guys,” DeRozan said. “Just a testament to what they did all year.”

Pascal Siakam had 11 points and eight rebounds and used his length to hound Wall, while VanVleet was a pest to Beal.

Jakob Poeltl and C.J. Miles each scored seven. It was VanVleet’s three-pointer with center Marcin Gortat in his face that tied the game at 78, and Miles’ three with about 8½ minutes remaining that gave Toronto its first lead of more than a single point, at 84-80.

 ??  ?? Toronto Raptors guard Kyle Lowry AP/ALEX BRANDON celebrates during the second half Friday night against the Washington Wizards in Washington.
Toronto Raptors guard Kyle Lowry AP/ALEX BRANDON celebrates during the second half Friday night against the Washington Wizards in Washington.
 ?? AP/ALEX BRANDON ?? Toronto Raptors guard Kyle Lowry shoots between Washington Wizards center Marcin Gortat (13), forward Markieff Morris (second from right) and forward Kelly Oubre Jr. (right) during the first half of Game 6 of Friday’s first-round playoff series in...
AP/ALEX BRANDON Toronto Raptors guard Kyle Lowry shoots between Washington Wizards center Marcin Gortat (13), forward Markieff Morris (second from right) and forward Kelly Oubre Jr. (right) during the first half of Game 6 of Friday’s first-round playoff series in...

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