Regina Leader-Post

Raptors’ poor starts are in the team’s DNA

There’s no explaining their playoff record, but at this point there’s no denying it, either

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com twitter.com/ Scott_Stinson

DeMar DeRozan was talking about cars.

“You ever had an old Regal?” he asked, rhetorical­ly, to a room full of reporters.

A Buick Regal, he meant. An old clunker, a beater — the kind of car that has to cough and belch for a bit before the engine comes to life.

The Toronto Raptors guard continued the analogy about the old Regal, after it has had some time to get from a rattle to something resembling a purr: “Once you get going, then it can feel like a 2016 Lexus,” he said. “That’s just us.”

The Raptors have coughed and belched off the start, as they tend to do. They cannot for the life of them win the first game of a playoff series, having now dropped the opener in nine straight first-round series with Saturday’s 97-83 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks. They generally do not start games well either, having trailed after the first half-dozen minutes of a game far more often than they’ve been ahead over the last two seasons.

It is a problem that has plagued this team when they are at full strength, and when DeRozan was hurt last year and when Kyle Lowry was out this year. It was an issue when the starting lineup included Luis Scola, and then when it included Patrick Patterson and now that it has Serge Ibaka.

It is, as head coach Dwane Casey said on Monday, “our biggest mystery” — not that he hasn’t tried to solve it.

“We’ve done everything,” he said. “We’ve looked at the numbers, statistics, matchups, rotations, groups that were in there…” The coach trailed off a little, in that way that you sort of throw up your hands when you’ve looked and looked at the evidence and haven’t found any kind of useful revelation.

Like, if they could identify the actual problem, they would have fixed it by now.

“It’s in our DNA,” he said. “Slow starts and hard finishes.”

For Ibaka, who has only been a Raptor for two months, it’s just as much of a mystery.

“I don’t know why,” he said. Everybody seemed ready to bring playoff intensity, Ibaka said, and as Toronto’s most playoff-savvy player, with more than 90 postseason games on his resume, he would know.

But then, Saturday happened. The Raptors were down by seven points to the Bucks about halfway through the first quarter, and by the time that first frame finished, they were down eight.

Toronto, which has played very strong defence since the late arrival of Ibaka and P.J. Tucker, instead gave up 30 first-quarter points to a young Bucks team playing in a loud and hostile environmen­t. As he pondered this, Ibaka, in his wonderful accented English, became somewhat philosophi­cal: “Sometimes I ask myself, why?” he said. “Why?”

“Maybe you guys can tell us,” he said to the roomful of media. We could not.

If there is a little bit of solace, it’s that the Raptors know what to do now.

“For whatever reason, we are better with our backs against the wall,” Casey said.

Toronto came back to win more games in which they were trailing by double digits than any other team in the NBA this season, a statistic that DeRozan cited. This is, admittedly, a fact about which the Raptors can only be somewhat proud. The best teams in the league — Golden State, San Antonio — don’t have as many big comeback wins because they do not fall behind by many points very often.

But Casey was correct when he noted that, at the least, the Raptors’ ability to come back says something about rising to the challenge. So perhaps it is for the best that the team has no edge left to concede. They had their chance to make this series easy, but that opportunit­y is past. It’s a fight now, which is kind of their thing.

“It’s taxing,” Casey said. “It’s hard on your body.”

“We know what it takes,” DeRozan said.

Even with the new guys in town, they are back in the same spot. Hello desperatio­n, my old friend.

“That’s a hard way to live,” Casey said.

It is that. But the Raptors are living that way — again.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto Raptors forward Serge Ibaka, seen dunking on the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday in Toronto, says he doesn’t understand why the team is slow to start in important games, or why the team consistent­ly loses the first game in playoff series....
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Raptors forward Serge Ibaka, seen dunking on the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday in Toronto, says he doesn’t understand why the team is slow to start in important games, or why the team consistent­ly loses the first game in playoff series....
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