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Raptors’ playoff jitters predictable but can be overcome

Written By Unknown on Saturday 19 April 2014 | 17:56

MAMASA TERKINI - All week the Raptors had been talking about how they couldn’t wait for it: The hype, the noise, the buzz of playoff basketball. They couldn’t wait to stand amid the white-out of a sellout at the Air Canada Centre and revel in the spectacle. But they also couldn’t know how they’d handle the moment of their franchise’s first post-season game in six years. And now they do: Wholly predictably.
The home team played hard enough in their 94-87 Game 1 loss to the Brooklyn Nets, but they also played with the jittery hesitation that the first steps on a big stage can bring. The tell-tale stat: They coughed up 11 first-half turnovers and 19 all told, this from a team that averaged a respectable 14 a game during the regular season.
And if they had their flashes of brilliance, including a 17-point, 18-rebound gem from 21-year-old centre Jonas Valanciunas, they were ultimately shown up by Brooklyn’s relentless, veteran calm. When Paul Pierce, the 36-year-old Nets forward who has played more playoff minutes than the entire Toronto roster combined, methodically reeled off nine points in the final three minutes, he appeared amused in the knowledge he was sticking a knife in the heart of the home crowd’s big occasion.
But buck up, Raptors Nation. As head coach Dwane Casey was saying after it was over: “If our fans are disappointed, they’re not truly fans. They’re come-lately fans ... It’s one game ... Let’s get educated on basketball.”
Indeed, the franchise’s brief post-season record book suggests playoff-debut flops aren’t portends of certain death. Vince Carter went 3 for 20 from the field in his back in 2000 and the Raptors — well, they got swept by the Knicks that year, but as then-Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy was recalling recently, the games were all tough and close.
And Chris Bosh was hamstrung by early foul trouble in his maiden run back in 2006, and in that instance the Raptors — well, they ultimately lost the series to another incarnation of veteran Nets. But it could have gone either way, sort of.
So let’s just say DeMar DeRozan joined esteemed company with Sunday’s 3-for-13 no-show. When DeRozan had faced questions about his team’s collective greenness this week, he had scoffed; navigating the NBA’s championship tournament wasn’t exactly “rocket science,” he said. Perhaps not. But it sometimes can seem like repeating history.
Sam Mitchell, who coached the Raptors the previous couple of times they were in the playoffs, was remembering this week how his team, led by a newbie named Bosh, was “overwhelmed” by a 2006 home Game 1. On Saturday, Casey said essentially the same thing. The spotlight, the rare appearance on ESPN, it all fed into a flop. “As expected,” said Casey.
Still, if Sunday’s butter-fingers act was out of character for the home team, certainly it went with the tenor of the day. Raptors general manager Masai Ujiri cranked the thermostat on the series before the ball was tipped, punctuating an otherwise stock pep-rally speech before the throng in Maple Leaf Square with an emphatic conclusion. It went: “F--- Brooklyn!”
Several MLSE employees who’ve known Ujiri for years, when told of the comment, couldn’t believe he’d said it. Ujiri’s mostly a soft-spoken gentleman. But he’d said it. There was video to prove it. And he wasn’t ducking it.
“I love Brooklyn ... Just trying to rile up the fans,” Ujiri said shortly after, by which time Twitter had exploded in a mix of shock and admiration for his brashness.
Later, when the growing fuss required a hastily called halftime press scrum, Ujiri offered up a not-so-apologetic apology: “You know how I feel. I don’t like (the Nets). But I apologize.”
The Raptors, totally coincidentally, will not be staying in Brooklyn when the series shifts there later this week. They prefer the hotel stock in Manhattan.
There was plenty to love about Ujiri’s slightly reckless use of the language. Said Casey: “He’s a fiery guy ... That should represent how we all feel.”
Certainly it flipped the home team’s identity on its head. The Raptors, who never imagined at the season’s outset that they’d be a 48-win three seed, came into the playoffs as the series underdog. To a man they could have added Just Happy To Be Here to their tattoo collections. The Nets, meanwhile, whose $190-million salary and luxury tax bill is the highest in NBA history, have always fancied themselves as championship contenders, never mind the 44 regular-season wins.
The home team’s best hope might have been to catch Brooklyn looking past them — which is what the Nets were doing tanking for a second-round matchup with the Miami Heat, against whom the Nets are 4-0 this season. But it took two words for Ujiri to recast his team as the condescending, cocky ones.
As the Raptors slogan goes, “We The North” — and also, the semi-apologetically obnoxious.
That’s fine, so long as the players back it up. There’s pent-up demand for some Toronto team, any Toronto team, to be an unrepentant alpha dog. As Raptors fan Mario Kappos said before the game, this as he stood among the face-painted, full-throated throng not far from Maple Leaf Square wearing a Canada flag as a cape emblazoned with the words “Why Not Us?”: “I believe in this team. Why not us?”
The Raptors, at least, made a case for optimism. They turned it over 19 times and drew precisely one foul to Brooklyn’s half dozen in the fourth quarter and they still were as close as three points with a little less than four minutes to go.
The Nets, mind you, could roll out similar rationalizations. Brooklyn missed 19 straight three-pointers before Pierce made the one that began his late onslaught; the visitors, 11th in the league in three-point shooting this season, finished 4 for 24 from deep. And they won.
But if DeRozan shows up, if Amir Johnson chooses to attend, if Terrence Ross avoids foul trouble and finds his range — it’s not rocket science. In some ways it’s as simple as a roll call. Playoffs or otherwise, big forum or small, ideally the franchise’s fieriest guy shouldn’t be wearing the suit and tie.http://www.thestar.com
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