Times Colonist

Expectatio­ns high for Raptors

GAME DAY: DETROIT AT TORONTO, 4:30 P.M.

- LORI EWING

TORONTO — The Toronto Raptors walked off the Air Canada Centre floor last season to a standing ovation and rousing cheers.

They had just been ousted by the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference final, but the moment was the culminatio­n of the Raptors’ most successful season in franchise history.

They’ll carry lofty expectatio­ns when they step back on the court against the visiting Detroit Pistons in their seasonopen­er today. Suddenly, it seems, nothing but a long playoff run will be good enough.

In typical fashion, the Raptors aren’t making any bold prediction­s — coach Dwane Casey says continued growth is key, even if it’s not “as exciting and sexy as outlandish prediction­s.”

And the Raptors talk about valuable lessons learned over the roller-coaster post-season.

“You kind of get the blueprint, when you understand how difficult it is,” said DeMar DeRozan, who signed a hefty fiveyear contract worth $139 million US in the off-season. “You really understand how hard you have to play when you have the opportunit­y to close out a series . . . little things like that, just understand­ing the blueprint, is really going to help us.”

The Raptors remain young, with nine players under the age of 25, but brought back the core of the squad that won a historic 56 games in the regular season, and took two games off Cleveland before bowing out in the conference final.

“We may not win as many games as we did last year, but that could make us a better team going into the post-season, and that’s what we’ve got to keep in mind,” DeRozan said. “We can’t get caught up in comparing us to last year.”

The most significan­t changes are the loss of athletic big man Bismack Biyombo, who left for Orlando in the off-season, and the addition of Jared Sullinger, who signed with Toronto in the summer but was to undergo surgery on his foot Monday and could be sidelined for as much as a quarter of the season.

A healthy DeMarre Carroll would make a big difference. The Raptors never saw the best of Carroll, who had knee surgery in January and played in just 26 regularsea­son games, never quite at full health.

“If I can get through a healthy year, you’ll see the best of me,” Carroll said. “My main objective is to try to help this team defensivel­y, and keep that same defensive mindset, the physicalit­y mindset, try to help Demar and Kyle [Lowry] to some extent so when we get to the playoffs, they’re not exhausted.”

Jonas Valanciuna­s also missed 22 games in the regular-season. He was outstandin­g in the post-season before being derailed by an ankle injury that proved costly to Toronto.

The Raptors’ cornerston­es of DeRozan and Lowry are newly minted Olympic champions, helping the United States to gold. That experience in Rio was the “best graduate course” in basketball, said Casey, and the Raptors could reap the rewards.

“I can just see the confidence,” said the coach.

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