Windsor Star

IT’S A POWER SERGE

Raptors get their man in big deal

- STEVE SIMMONS Toronto ssimmons@postmedia.com twitter.com/simmonsste­ve

For most of his five seasons in Toronto, we waited for Terrence Ross to become something other than disappoint­ing, confoundin­g and overpaid. It finally happened Tuesday. He became trade bait. He became the significan­t piece on another day to shine for Masai Ujiri, the executive who quieted the noise, turned down the volume and brought a sense of internal peace and external joy to a Toronto Raptors team desperatel­y in need of alteration­s.

That’s what leadership is in profession­al sport and that’s what leadership does: Rather silently and without buildup, Ujiri brought the much-coveted Serge Ibaka to the Raptors, a player he has viewed from afar with envy for many years. He has known Ibaka as a friend, as a fellow African, as part of the basketball community at large.

Now he will know him in a much more intimate way, as a teammate of sorts, as a Raptor player, as someone who can come in and shake the Raptors’ foundation at a time when shaking is needed. A real starting power forward. Not a bench guy. Not Luis Scola. Not Amir Johnson. Not like anything coach Dwane Casey has had in his coaching arsenal before in Toronto.

The kind of player who understand­s winning, who is playoff tested and playoff ready, who has a clear comprehens­ion of what April, May and June are all about in the NBA. He should make life easier for Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan. He’s a high percentage shooter. A quick defender. A large presence at 6-foot-10, although not quite the shot blocker he was in his early years.

“I’ve known this guy for years,” said Ujiri. “He’s a helluva competitor. Everybody knows who Serge is, he’s a warrior. He gives us good rim protection, he’s a good defender. He can play multiple positions.”

Ibaka led the NBA four times in blocked shots and was on the alldefensi­ve team three times.

He should also make life easier for Jonas Valanciuna­s and Patrick Patterson, one who has slightly regressed in this upand-down season and the other who will return now to where he belongs, coming off the bench instead of starting.

This would be a home run of sorts for Ujiri and the Raptors except for the unknown aspects of the deal and that includes exactly where Andy Miller, the player agent, fits in. The NBA is nothing if not an agent’s league. Miller represents pending free agents Ibaka and Lowry.

Suddenly he becomes a figure of significan­ce for the Raptors. If Ujiri and general manager Jeff Weltman have the most influence on what the Raptors do in the future, Miller’s influence cannot be understate­d here. He can go shopping with Lowry and Ibaka as his groceries this summer or he can settle in for a long ride with Lowry and Ibaka playing alongside DeRozan and Valanciuna­s.

That’s the scenario Ujiri and Casey favour. Casey is always talking about how veteran teams win in the NBA. Teams that stay together. Teams with texture and experience.

This could be one of those teams.

Ujiri doesn’t deal often or without purpose. The Rudy Gay and Andrea Bargnani trades, seemingly impossible to make, proved to be big wins for the Raptors. He turned around and traded the pretty much finished John Salmons for Lucas Nogueira and Lou Williams. Even the small trades have produced victories. Greivis Vasquez was sent to Milwaukee for Norm Powell and a first-round pick. Vasquez is basically done as an NBA player; Powell, who should benefit from the trading of Ross, is just beginning to show his capabiliti­es.

And now this deal Tuesday for Ibaka, which makes the Raptors’ starting lineup the strongest it has ever been with a bench still capable and the assumption that one of these weeks Jared Sullinger will be able to contribute. Before Tuesday’s game in Chicago, the Raptors had won four of 14.

“We’ve had a bad stretch,” said Ujiri. “We never know how (the trade) fits on paper. We fill a hole, a gap that we’ve been missing. Hopefully, this gives us that jump that we need.”

Ibaka comes in and yet I can’t forget the night the Raptors drafted Terrence Ross. The Raptors really wanted Harrison Barnes. Coach Casey was sent out to speak to media and talk up their first pick as the second round proceeded.

Casey is terrible at not telling the truth. He can’t look you in the face and lie with any conviction. It’s one of his most endearing qualities. He said he was happy to have Ross. He said so with a crooked smile.

The next 4½ years he spent trying to figure out his vastly talented, wildly athletic, forever inconsiste­nt wingman. This was his best season. Ross grew up as a basketball player in Toronto. He just didn’t grow into whatever kind of player the Raptors hoped he would become, but he was enough to entice Orlando.

Casey knows what Serge Ibaka brings. Ibaka’s career has almost been a straight statistica­l line.

Casey has a new part and a brand new starting lineup. He has two months to get ready for the playoffs. Two months to figure this team out.

I’ve known this guy for years. He’s a helluva competitor. Everybody knows who Serge is, he’s a warrior.

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 ?? JOHN RAOUX/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Serge Ibaka was traded to the Toronto Raptors from Orlando Tuesday.
JOHN RAOUX/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Serge Ibaka was traded to the Toronto Raptors from Orlando Tuesday.
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