Penticton Herald

Raptors’ Nurse brushes aside Lakers rumour

- By LORI EWING

TORONTO — Soon after Nick Nurse sat down with media at his season-ending press conference Monday, the Raptors coach planned to meet with team president Masai Ujiri.

The two planned to rehash the season, said Nurse, with everything up for discussion. How can he coach better? How can the team play better? How can they make the roster better?

While reports last month had Nurse as a top target for filling the Lakers’ head coaching position after Frank Vogel was fired at the end of the regular season, he certainly didn’t sound like he was going anywhere.

“I don’t know where that stuff comes from, and I’m focused on coaching this team,” Nurse said.

The Lakers fired Vogel after L.A. failed to reach the post-season.

Nurse, who has two more seasons on the contract extension he signed with the Raptors in the fall of 2020, talked to reporters for 40 minutes on Monday after the team was ousted from the playoffs by Philadelph­ia in six games last Thursday.

A season that began with low expectatio­ns amid huge question marks about the roster ended with a sense of pleasant surprise. Nurse called it a “great season.” His young roster had been a revelation, enduring setbacks around COVID-19 and injuries to earn the No. 5 seed in the playoffs. They beat the league’s best teams in the regular season with hustle and hard work.

And now, Nurse is excited to get back to work with Ujiri on next season.

“If you’re trying to time it out, when you think we have another shot to win (a championsh­ip), well, I’m ready. I’m ready to get back in the hunt. Today,” Nurse said. “I coach to win.

“And I’ve always said this: Masai and I have a great relationsh­ip, I think mostly because we want to win championsh­ips. It’s about trying to figure out how to win at all, right? That’s what I sense he’s trying to do every day and that’s what I’m trying to do every day. That’s really important, that goes a long way in synergy for me.”

The Raptors don’t have much wiggle room to work with this off-season. Montreal native Chris Boucher is their one key free agent, and they have only the No. 33 pick in next

month’s draft.

But Nurse sounds satisfied to work from within.

Betting sites picked the Raptors to win around 35 games this season, but what Nurse has called a “funky” roster of predominan­tly athletic six-foot-eight players, and built around all-stars Fred VanVleet and Pascal Siakam, they finished with 48 wins, most over the second half of the season, once they’d shed a COVID-19 outbreak around Christmas.

And the young players such as NBA rookie of the year Scottie Barnes, Precious Achiuwa and Gary Trent Jr. grew by leaps and bounds, particular­ly once they understood their interchang­eable Swiss army knife roles.

“Sometimes, you’re not quite sure when there’s a lot of new faces … stuff of what it’s going to shape into,” Nurse said. “We knew we were going with this length and deflection­s and offensive rebounding and switching defence and multiple defence — we kinda saw that as the vision for the season.

“It got a little funkier only maybe because they were able to do more interestin­g, different, unique things as they went. I wasn’t sure what they were able to comprehend, and all of a sudden things started sinking in really good.”

Nurse had high praise for Barnes, who ticked “all the boxes” even before Toronto drafted him No. 4 last season.

“I talked to his college coach (Florida State’s Leonard Hamilton) and he couldn’t have said more great things about the guy, about how much he loved to play, about his personalit­y, about how great of a teammate he is … and how he thought he was maybe the best secret in the draft.

“When I met him, he was the same, and he stayed that way all year long.”

The 20-year-old averaged 15.3 points, 7.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists in the regular season, and shared point guard duties with Siakam when VanVleet sat out two playoffs games with his hip injury.

Siakam also had an excellent season, finally exorcising the ghosts of the Disneyworl­d bubble plus a shaky start to this season after offseason shoulder surgery.

“What surprised me a lot this year was he’d have a 43-minute night, 30 points, 10 rebounds, and he’d be out here at eight o’clock in the morning (the next day) and make me tired seeing him out there,” Nurse said with a laugh.

Nurse signed a contract extension to coach Canada through the 2024 Paris Olympics.

 ?? ?? The Canadian Press
Toronto Raptors head coach Nick Nurse, right, and forward Pascal Siakam argue with referee Pat Fraher on March 12 in Denver.
The Canadian Press Toronto Raptors head coach Nick Nurse, right, and forward Pascal Siakam argue with referee Pat Fraher on March 12 in Denver.

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