Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

V-Vleet, Raptors aren’t smiling now, `but they might be soon'

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TORONTO--Fred VanVleet had a face that only a country of hockey fans could love.

A bandage covering stitches under his right eye. Swelling near the side of his nose. Fresh dental work to repair a damaged tooth.

His day off in the NBA Finals consisted of a trip to the hospital and then the dentist, necessary stops after he was hit in the face and bloodied late in Game 4, when he had to leave the court with part of his tooth somewhere still on it.

The play hurt, but the Toronto Raptors have a team of guys who would take the pain.

“Yeah, we got some tough guys,” VanVleet said.

And they’ve overcome tough situations.

The Raptors were down and almost out in the Eastern Conference finals, in danger of falling into a hole from which no NBA team has ever recovered. But they pulled out Game 3 of that series against Milwaukee to kick off a powerful postseason run, and the only thing that might slow them down is stopping to collect the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

Toronto can do that Monday by beating the Golden State Warriors at home in Game 5.

“It’s going to be a battle, it’s going to be hard, but at the same time if we stay together and do everything we’re supposed to do, we have a chance. We have a good chance to put ourselves in a position to win,” Raptors forward Pascal Siakam said.

The first trip to the NBA Finals in franchise history appeared it might have to wait at least another year when the Raptors fell behind in the second overtime of Game 3 of the conference finals. Kawhi Leonard’s leg seemed to be hurting, Kyle Lowry had already fouled out and a victory would have given Milwaukee a 3-0 lead that has been insurmount­able in the NBA.

The Raptors recovered to win and have barely looked back, winning seven of eight games against the Bucks and Warriors, the No. 1 seeds in each conference. Coach Nick Nurse had seen the possibilit­ies from his team even before the comeback started, first with how the Raptors played so well in Game 1 of the conference finals after needing seven

grueling games against Philadelph­ia in the previous round, and then by the way they shrugged off a blowout loss in Game 2.

“So that’s probably a moment of where I thought the team had something inside them to keep on going,” Nurse said.

What Toronto didn’t have at that point was a reliable offense beyond Leonard.

Veterans Lowry, Danny Green and Marc Gasol had struggled to make shots. The bench was contributi­ng only sporadical­ly.

 ?? ( AP) ?? RAPTORS guard Fred VanVleet applauds from the bench after receiving several stitches from an elbow to the face from Golden State Warriors guard Shaun Livingston during the second half of Game 4 of basketball’s NBA Finals, Friday, June 7, 2019, in Oakland, Calif.
( AP) RAPTORS guard Fred VanVleet applauds from the bench after receiving several stitches from an elbow to the face from Golden State Warriors guard Shaun Livingston during the second half of Game 4 of basketball’s NBA Finals, Friday, June 7, 2019, in Oakland, Calif.

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