Edmonton Journal

Now Ujiri will make his imprint on Raptors

- ERIC KOREEN

TORONTO — Masai Ujiri committed to nothing, which was no surprise: He had no incentive to do so.

You never get the unfiltered truth in the NBA. However, the Toronto Raptors general manager, giving his postmortem on a promising season that devolved into a five-alarm fire, had even less of a cause for honesty than usual. His roster had just been exposed for the whole league to see, and his coach, whether the blame should fall on Dwane Casey or not, was unable to stop, or even slow, the unravellin­g. There was nothing to be accomplish­ed by Ujiri criticizin­g the players or any part of the organizati­on. The collective value of this unit was already low enough without its architect — or, at least, the person who chose not to disassembl­e it — piling on.

“You guys know me: There’s no knee-jerk reaction here,” Ujiri said. “We’re going to be patient. I think that’s going to be our nature of building here.”

What followed was an avalanche of hedging and tire-pumping: Ujiri was going to evaluate the status of Casey over the next few weeks, believed Kyle Lowry could hold up physically over an entire season, thought Jonas Valanciuna­s made some promising steps and could thrive in today’s faster NBA, felt that Terrence Ross’s third season was something less than catastroph­ic, and so on.

Really, there were only two firm declaratio­ns: He is done swearing before each postseason begins — commission­er Adam Silver, Raptors adviser Wayne Embry and Ujiri’s wife all scolded him for it — and that the Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainm­ent board has cleared the Raptors to purchase their own D-League team, something that is badly overdue. Ujiri did not commit to the Raptors having their own affiliate for next season, but said he was “hoping and pushing” for it. And that was it.

Whether or not he ever comes out and says it, though, this summer will definitely give us more insight into what Ujiri believes about this team and this league. Up until now, Ujiri has been short on philosophi­cal declaratio­ns. Beyond committing to developing young players on the end of the bench, something he said in his introducto­ry news conference in June 2013, and showing he has a preference for versatile athletes with endless wingspans — he tried to acquire a first-round pick in 2013 to draft Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, and used the Raptors’ pick in 2014 on the previously unknown Bruno Caboclo — Ujiri has been very measured during his time in Toronto, save for all of the unprintabl­e words.

That is why Ujiri kept last year’s team together, committing for as short as possible to the group in the process. He wanted to give that team another platform to try to grow.

“The questions you guys would be asking me now if (we) had gotten a veteran or if (we) had gotten some kind of player would be, ‘Well, Jonas did not play so much,’ or ‘This person did not play so much’ and so we don’t know (about them). I didn’t want to be put in that situation,” Ujiri said. “I want to know our players.”

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