Posted in

Raptors get back to playoffs, will face Cleveland Cavaliers

Raptors get back to playoffs, will face Cleveland Cavaliers

This will be fourth time franchises have faced each other, but first without LeBron James, Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan.

Get the latest from Ryan Wolstat straight to your inbox

Article content

The Toronto Raptors are heading back to the NBA playoffs.

Advertisement 2

Article content

It’s been a while, but an easy 136-101 win against a Brooklyn Nets team fielding nothing close to a legitimate NBA roster for the regular-season finale got Toronto back in for the first time since 2021-22.

Article content

Article content

The Raptors improved to 46 wins, 16 more than last season, but had to wait a few minutes to find out who they’d be facing as Boston versus Orlando went right down to the wire.

RJ Barrett led with 26 points, Brandon Ingram added 25 and Scottie Barnes had an 18-point, 12-rebound, 12-assist triple-double. “It’s a relief,” Barnes said afterward of returning to the post-season.

With nothing to play for, Brooklyn held out nearly every meaningful player on it roster and finished with 20 wins. The Nets desperate for some lottery luck.

Cleveland star James Harden will now face the Raptors in the NBA playoffs.
Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden, right, drives to the basket against Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green in a game on April 2. He will now face the Raptors in the first round of the NBA playoffs. Jeff Chiu/AP file

Read More

AN OLD FOE IS NEXT

The Raptors have only faced 11 different teams in the playoffs, but will now run into the Cleveland Cavaliers for a fourth time.

Article content

Advertisement 3

Article content

Toronto’s win, along with an Atlanta loss in Miami and an Orlando collapse against a Boston team resting all of its best players, meant instead of the most likely scenario — Toronto facing the New York Knicks for a third time — that it’s another series with Cleveland. The Magic had a chance to win after rallying late, but couldn’t finish off the comeback despite a late Jalen Suggs three-pointer.

This time, there will be no LeBron James, Kyle Lowry or DeMar DeRozan, but for the third time in four meetings, the series will kick off in Oho.

Toronto fell to James and Cleveland in three straight years, 2016, 2017 and 2018, before James left for the Los Angeles Lakers.

The Cavs have made many changes since, including blockbuster trades for Donovan Mitchell and, this year, James Harden, as well as drafting big man Evan Mobley one pick before Toronto selected Barnes in 2021.

The Raptors beat Cleveland all three times they played this season, though that was before Harden got there. While a formidable foe, this is a much better matchup on paper for the Raptors, who have been torched by Knicks stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, and have lost 13 straight to New York.

Advertisement 4

Article content

Meanwhile, Mitchell shot a season low against any opponent — 34.2% — from the field in two meetings with the Raptors this season, while Harden went just 10-for-27 in his game with the Clippers against Toronto (but still dominated late to win the game).

The Raptors would have finished sixth and faced New York had Atlanta beaten Miami.

FINISHING WITH STYLE

Barnes closed out the regular season in style, picking up his ninth career triple-double. That leaves him seven behind Kyle Lowry’s franchise record. It’s the third for Barnes this year, tying Lowry for second-most triple-doubles in a season by a Raptor, one off the high Barnes set in 2023-24.

Barnes looked like the best player on the floor, and nobody on Brooklyn had any answers for him.

That was also the case for trying to deal with Jakob Poeltl.

Playing against an overmatched, under-experienced and undersized group of Nets, Toronto’s centre pretty much did what he wanted on offence. The big man was a load down low, a good sign considering he’d been off and on recently.

Advertisement 5

Article content

SHEAD THE IRON MAN

When the Raptors drafted Jamal Shead out of Houston in the second round in 2024, the franchise knew it was getting a solid character player who would always give his all. Shead was the reigning NCAA defensive player of the year, the Big 12 player of the year and defensive player of the year, and the second-winningest player in Cougars history. He was also one of the most durable competitors in college basketball, setting a school record with 38 games played as a sophomore before not missing a single contest in either of the next two years.

Shead played 10 more games (75) than any other Raptor last season, and this time around he suited up for all 82, two more than Barnes and Sandro Mamukelashvili. Nobody had played 82 games for Toronto since Poeltl in his rookie campaign in 2017-18. Shead becomes just the 17th of 308 all-time Raptors to achieve the feat (Morris Peterson did it four times, Alvin Williams and DeMar DeRozan twice each).

Barnes and Mamukelashvili set new career highs for games played, while Ingram only played more in his rookie season. Quickley played at least 70 for only the third time in six seasons.

@WolstatSun

Article content

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *