Vancouver Sun

It’s time for Raptors to show they can finish

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

Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan came to the interview stage after their win over the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday night and they insisted that Norm Powell sit between them.

Lowry pulled out the chair for Powell, theatrical­ly, and patted him on the butt.

After the first few questions were about Lowry’s health and DeRozan’s response to double teams, Lowry interjecte­d: “Norm’s here. Ask him a question.” When someone did, Lowry clapped politely.

The Toronto Raptors are loose and confident. This can’t be good.

It’s not that the Raptors don’t have good reason to be confident. Five games into their series against Milwaukee, Toronto finally put together a night of the kind that was envisioned for this team when management loaded up at the trade deadline. They had a double-digit lead less than eight minutes in and despite some wobbles, it rarely got much closer than that on the way to the 118-93 victory.

The Raptors shot the ball exceedingl­y well, averaging 58 per cent from the field, 44 per cent from three-point range and 92 per cent from the free-throw line. With that shooting and 28 assists, a record in the Dwane Casey era, it was like the team collective­ly turned into Steve Nash.

Powell, of all people — the second-year swingman who averaged just 18 minutes per game — was the key to the whole thing, scoring 25 points that included four three-pointers, a couple of spectacula­r dunks, and a baffling breakaway layup in which Milwaukee’s Malcolm Brogdon was holding both of his arms.

That Powell had such a good night was obviously important, but it also underlined what was supposed to be the key difference between these teams heading into the series: depth. The late additions of Serge Ibaka and P.J. Tucker gave Casey an array of lineup options, and as the Raptors struggled in the early part of the series the coach got serious with the fiddling. Jonas Valanciuna­s went to the bench and Ibaka started in his place at centre, with Powell stepping in to the vacated forward spot. That look has given the Raptors a little more speed, floor spacing and outside shooting, all of which have proven useful against a young Bucks team.

So, yes, reason for optimism. But then, this is a Raptors team that never makes things easy. There is the absurd 0-9 run in series-opening games, including five on home court in the last four seasons, and there are the three Game 6 losses last year, including two on the road when Toronto had just taken a 3-2 series lead and had chances to close weaker opponents out.

After Game 5, Milwaukee coach Jason Kidd was talking about his inexperien­ced team, and how this upcoming eliminatio­n game would be a new experience for them. It would be, he said, something they could only learn by trying: “We have to walk through that door,” he said.

And then the coach mentioned his opponents know something about playing well when facing eliminatio­n.

It takes a minute before you remember he’s talking about the Raptors. Oh, yeah, they have done that, haven’t they? They did win some big games last year, twice in Game 5 when the series was tied, and twice in Game 7.

What they didn’t do was close out the series early when they had the chance. For all their struggles, the Raptors should know now that they are the better team in this series. Maybe that will help them, for once.

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