Times Colonist

VanVleet: We’ll shake hand of anyone who can beat us

- LORI EWING

When Toronto tipped off the season without superstar Kawhi Leonard, almost no one believed the NBA defending champions would have any hope of repeating.

The Raptors apparently didn’t get the memo.

Toronto opens the playoffs on Monday against the Brooklyn Nets after bulldozing through the toughest schedule of the 22 teams in the NBA bubble seeding round (7-1), earning the second-best record in the NBA (53-19) and setting a franchise record for win percentage (73.6).

Perseverin­g through a laundry list of injuries, and then a fourmonth layoff due to COVID-19, the Raptors’ season has come down to beating teams just four times. They believe they’re better at that than anyone.

“We know who we are and that we’re good enough to do it and that we’re tough,” said guard Fred VanVleet. “It’s going to be hard to beat us four times. If you can do that, we’ll shake your hand and congratula­te you. But I think we all like our chances.”

The Raptors earned the No. 2 seed like they did last year, while Brooklyn is seeded seventh.

Toronto’s all-star guard Kyle Lowry said the Raptors have built a culture of winning. That ideology didn’t disappear when Leonard went to the Los Angeles Clippers last season.

“We’ve been continuous­ly getting better every single season I’ve been here on the same page from top to bottom,” he said.

And while Lowry and his teammates hoisted the Larry O’Brien Trophy last season in the Canadian team’s historic championsh­ip run, they didn’t plan on stopping at just one.

“That feeling is unmatched,” Lowry said. “Other than my children being born, I don’t think I’ve had a feeling like that, ever. And that’s the motivation to keep doing that.”

Lowry plays with a 100-milesan-hour motor that is virtually unparallel­ed — especially at 34. He had 19.7 points, 7.5 assists and 5.0 rebounds this season, earned a spot on his sixth consecutiv­e allstar team, and led the league in charges drawn.

The undisputed leader on the floor and in the locker-room said the Raptors are “the same exact team” they were last season.

“We play hard. We go out there and we defend. We’ve got pros. We’re just trying to win every single game. That’s what we’ve always done,” he said.

“We play to provide for our families and do what we can for our communitie­s,” he added. “But we play to win championsh­ips. We play for a higher level and now we’re playing for social injustices and keeping that conversati­on going. But we’re also playing to win a championsh­ip.”

No Raptors were named to either the NBA seeding round’s first or second teams announced Saturday. Nick Nurse was fourth in voting for top coach of the eight games.

If Toronto were feeling any disrespect, they’re used to it. In fact the roster is built out of players with “chips on their shoulders,” said VanVleet.

“I think all of us at some point have had to work for it. Nothing has really been given to us. We kind of take that identity,” he said. “All of our coaches kind of fit that. It’s our identity from the top down. Whatever narrative people will write about is what it’s going to be.”

 ??  ?? Toronto Raptors’ Fred VanVleet looks for a teammate as Philadelph­ia 76ers’ Matisse Thybulle defends in their game on Wednesday.
Toronto Raptors’ Fred VanVleet looks for a teammate as Philadelph­ia 76ers’ Matisse Thybulle defends in their game on Wednesday.

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