The Province

Raptors’ versatilit­y put to the test

Ball movement takes on greater importance for Toronto against Cleveland Cavaliers Scott Stinson

- sstinson@postmedia.com twitter.com/Scott_Stinson

For a minute there, it was like seeing a unicorn. The Toronto Raptors were slinging the ball around the perimeter, playing the kind of offence that the National Basketball Associatio­n has long been moving toward: pass, pass, pass, score.

This was Game 5 against the Milwaukee Bucks. The Raptors had 28 assists, against a regular season average of 18.5 per game, the lowest in the NBA.

Toronto’s assist ratio in that game — the percentage of a team’s possession­s that end with an assist — was 21.8, which is Golden State’s kind of number. In the regular season, the Raptors had an assist ratio of 14.6, the second-lowest in the NBA.

So, was this a sign that the ball movement that the coaching staff had long preached had finally clicked? Were the Raptors, built around a isolation-driven offence when everyone else was going in the other direction, suddenly a — gasp! — sweet passing team? Let’s ask Kyle Lowry. “We made a lot of shots,” said the point guard. “I mean, honestly, you make shots, your assist rate goes up.”

Oh. “You miss shots, your assist rate goes down,” Lowry added.

OK, then. So the team leader is not buying a wholesale revolution in the way Toronto plays offence.

But, heading into a second-round series against the runaway freight train that is LeBron James in the playoffs, the question remains: can the Raptors be something that they have not really been before?

We’ll get a hint Monday when the series unfolds in Cleveland.

It’s at least possible. For one thing, the Cavaliers’ defence can be had. Cleveland was 22nd out of the NBA’s 30 teams in defensive rating in 2017, after being 10th in that metric before last year’s championsh­ip run.

In this year’s playoffs, they were 13th out of 16 teams in defensive rating in the first round, despite sweeping the Indiana Pacers. The Cavs also have the potential to play the kind of aggressive, trapping defence that Milwaukee employed against the Raptors, which itself was a big reason that Toronto turned suddenly pass-happy. If the Cavs start trying to double team DeMar DeRozan every time he gets the ball, and DeRozan responds by passing out of it, the Raptors could end up looking un-Raptor-like again.

“Ball movement is going to be huge,” coach Dwane Casey said on Sunday afternoon at the Raptors’ practice facility, before the team flew to Cleveland. “We’ve got to have ball movement against this team.”

They didn’t last year. In their sixgame loss to the Cavs in the Eastern Conference Final, the Raptors had an assist ratio of 14.0, right around their isolationi­st average.

It’s worth noting here that as much as the Toronto offence flies against current NBA trends, it has also been quite effective. They don’t pass and run like the wonder-offences of Golden State and Houston, but Toronto’s offensive rating of 109.8 was good enough for sixth in the league.

They run a pile of isolation plays and old-school pick-and-rolls, and they are very good at it. It’s also true that they aren’t quite as out-of-step with NBA trends as is sometimes suggested. The Raptors get beat up a lot for playing too much hero ball while teams like San Antonio and Atlanta run more collective and pass-frequent offences, but there are still star players who score a lot of unassisted baskets. DeRozan is one of them. Today’s NBA coaches are not terribly interested in watching mediocre players who are ball stoppers, but they don’t mind with the best players in the league are doing it.

The Raptors, though, have already tried playing that way against the Cavs and it didn’t work out so well. They know they are in for a tough series. Asked for this thoughts on Cleveland, this year versus last, Lowry gave a typical Lowry answer: “I think they’re the defending champs,” he said. Patrick Patterson, asked about the Cavs’ defensive vulnerabil­ities, said “they’re still a phenomenal team.” This is a pretty fair assessment. The Cavs still have LeBron James and Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love and on and on. Even role players like Channing Frye killed the Raptors last year. That could be the trick for the Raptors this time around, then: Don’t play like the Raptors. Pass, pass, pass, shoot. Time for another unicorn sighting.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Kyle Lowry of the Toronto Raptors will need to be at his best when the Raptors take on the Cleveland Cavaliers in Round 2 of the NBA playoffs beginning on Monday in Cleveland.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Kyle Lowry of the Toronto Raptors will need to be at his best when the Raptors take on the Cleveland Cavaliers in Round 2 of the NBA playoffs beginning on Monday in Cleveland.
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