News Raptors Team Notes

Have the Toronto Raptors finally repaid their karmic debt for the Kawhi shot?

Syndication: USATODAY

John E. Sokolowski, USA TODAY Spo

On the anniversary of the best moment in Toronto history, will the Raptors be blessed yet again by the basketball gods at the NBA Draft Lottery?

6 years ago today, May 12 2019, Toronto experienced the greatest moment in the city’s history. Four bounces of a ball on a rim and the swoosh of a net not audible due to the chasmic uproar of screaming that started before the ball was fully through the nylon.

Kawhi Leonard made a buzzer-beater shot that changed the trajectory of sports culture in the city of Toronto. It seems like we’ve been paying for it ever since.

As the joy of the championship era settled and the reality of the next era of Raptors history set in, it felt more and more each day like we sold our soul to the basketball gods in exchange for that shot. Whether you believe in karma or not, the peak of that shot and the championship that followed led into an era more depressing than ever before. We had reached the mountain-top, breathed in the sweet air of success, and were now addicted. The basketball gods expected their payback, though.


6 years ago today… Kawhi hit the shot and sent the Sixers home #WeTheNorth pic.twitter.com/qAPMte2pqm

— Raptors Republic (@raptorsrepublic) May 12, 2025

A pandemic, the bubble season, the Tampa season, the short levity of drafted Scottie Barnes, followed by the return into the pits of tanking basketball. Six years of losing basketball — is that enough payback? Are the gods satisfied enough to let the Toronto Raptors off the hook and let them have a bit of success again?

I guess we will see tonight, as the NBA Draft Lottery and its four measly ping pong balls determine the immediate future of the Toronto Raptors franchise.

The Raptors have a 7.5% chance of pulling the No. 1 Overall pick in a year when Cooper Flagg is the presumed top prospect. They have a 31.9% chance of getting a top-four pick — the same fate that was given to them in 2021 when they were able to draft Scottie Barnes No. 4 overall. Right now, the odds have them at No. 7 overall after a season of questionable tanking methods.

A few rolls of the tankathon machine have the Raptors going both ways — sometimes they leap up, and other times they roll back in the draft. No one can accurately predict where those ping pong balls will land.

If the Toronto Raptors get the No. 1 pick, Cooper Flagg is the obvious answer. A generational talent who wowed the NCAA during one year with Duke would turn into a franchise-altering piece for whoever is lucky enough to get him. Getting the first pick would certainly feel like the karmic debt of the Kawhi shot is in the past, and the Raptors could sure use some good juju going into next season.


Masai Ujiri will represent the Toronto Raptors at the NBA draft lottery pic.twitter.com/lcIxebdHww

— Esfandiar Baraheni (@JustEsBaraheni) May 12, 2025

Masai Ujiri and Bobby Webster will be at the Draft Lottery tonight to represent the team. Last they spoke to the media after the NBA season, they were hopeful about the draft regardless of where the Raptors ended up. The Raptors’ decision-making duo has a pretty good history of scouting draft talent, especially this past year when they scooped five promising picks in Jamal Shead, Ja’Kobe Walter, Jonathan Mogbo, Ulrich Chomche and Jamison Battle.

The NBA Draft Lottery is Monday at 7:00 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/12/24428774/toronto-raptors-draft-lottery-nba-cooper-flagg
 
The city of Dallas cannot keep getting away with this

NCAA Basketball: Final Four National Semifinal-Houston at Duke

Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

My reaction to being bamboozled by the city of Dallas on Draft Lottery night twice in sixth months.

Not to be overly dramatic, but the Draft Lottery could not have gone any worse for the Toronto Raptors. Like, what the actual [expletive] was that?

For my sanity and well-being, I did not watch the lottery live. Well, in all honesty, it was one of my best friends’ birthdays, and he planned a dinner, so I was occupied. I assumed the Raptors would hold par at pick No. 7 and be done with it, so there I was, sipping too much wine than is probably acceptable for a Monday night while other Raptors fans experienced the crash out of the century. At around 7:30, I assumed the entire ordeal would be over and decided to check on how the Raptors did. I shouldn’t have looked.

The first tweet I saw was a fake account telling me that the Raptors got the No. 1 overall pick, producing a gasp. It took me all of .2 seconds to realize I had been Centel’d, before continuing to scroll to the next tweet: Blake Murphy’s matter-of-fact declaration that Toronto had drawn the ninth pick. NINTH. Leave it to Blake to kill my buzz (kidding, hehe love ya Blake).

It took another few scrolls for my worst fears to be realized. Not only had Toronto fallen to the No. 9 pick, but the No. 1 pick went to DALLAS. The Dallas Mavericks. The “made the actual worst trade decision in sports history” Dallas Mavericks. Sickening. I felt like I was experiencing Deja Vu.

Dear reader, if you know me, you know I am a fan of a little basketball league called the Women’s National Basketball Association. A league in which one of the best basketball prospects of all time entered this season as the number one draft prospect — a player I had been following her entire college career, Paige Bueckers.

On a fateful December Night, I settled in to watch the WNBA Lottery. While my Toronto Tempo were not yet participating, I was hopeful Bueckers would end up in Los Angeles, personally. Yet, it was the Dallas Wings that snuck up in there and secured the No. 1 pick despite not having the largest odds to do so. Crushing, fr. A Bueckers jersey in the Sparks’ classic gold and purple????? Instant add to cart. It was not meant to be.

This time around, I had more skin in the game, as the Toronto Raptors were on the block. With the 7th-best odds, they only had about a 7.5% chance to get the No. 1 pick. Not nothing, but not the best either. Hell, I would have taken a top-four pick and been happy, or even just the 7th pick and been happy. After years of this team’s half-tank effort, I wasn’t expecting too much and knew Washington or Charlotte had a better shot at that coveted first pick.

What I certainly was not expecting was to be BAMBOOZLED by the city of Dallas a SECOND TIME in six months. Tell me how the Mavericks franchise completes the world’s most EGREGIOUSLY DUMB TRADE, tries to gaslight their fanbase into thinking it was the right thing to do, and gets rewarded IMMEDIATELY with Cooper Flagg. After they JUST got Paige Bueckers?!?!?!? Make it make sense, because it doesn't.

The Mavericks only had a 1.5% chance at drawing No. 1, on top of it. That makes the Raptors’ 7.5% odds look AMAZING. The Mavericks didn’t even have a chance to tank before being rewarded with the No. 1 pick in a year with Cooper Flagg as a prospect. It’s infuriating.

I’m a conspiracy theorist about two things in this world: All-Star Voting and Draft Lotteries. There’s no way the All-Star voting process is not rigged to benefit the league’s most profitable players. In the same vein, there is something SO fishy about Dallas getting both Bueckers and Flagg in the same year. Different team ownership aside, just generally WTF.

What does Toronto need to do to get some good juju? Are we literally in basketball purgatory until we get graced with Juju Watkins on the Toronto Tempo? That has to be the endgame, right? Why do the Raptors keep getting the most terrible luck? I mean, all it took Dallas was trading Luka Doncic, meanwhile the Raptors have dealt with a relocation to Tampa Bay, being sued by the Knicks, a betting investigation, too many injuries to list, and the Drake/Kendrick fallout. WE DESERVED a top-four pick! Certainly more than Dallas did!

Give me a few weeks to crash out about the No. 9 pick, and I will be fine, but I will not get over the Mavericks getting the top pick. I would be less mad about the 76ers getting it, and that’s saying a lot. They can’t keep getting away with this.

If I had a nickel every time the city of Dallas was awarded a generational No. 1 draft pick, despite fraudulent team decisions, I’d only have two nickels — but it’s weird it happened twice, right?

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/13...avericks-wings-bueckers-flagg-toronto-raptors
 
Raptors still paying karmic price for Kawhi shot as they fall in 2025 Draft

2025 NBA Draft Lottery


Lottery dreams crushed: Instead of moving into the top-four range, the NBA gods punished the Raptors by bumping them to the 9th pick.

The Toronto Raptors fanbase tuned in to the NBA lottery “show,” filled with hope, but the dream quickly turned into a nightmare. Raptors’ President Masai Ujiri was in attendance to represent the team for the festivities, hoping to bring some good luck charm and potentially bring home a top-four pick. The Raptors have a 31.9% chance of landing a coveted top-four pick. Instead, the NBA gods punished them by bumping them not one, but two spots back with the 9th pick overall.


The Raptors get the 9th pick in the 2025 NBA Draft. Not much of a reaction from Masai Ujiri. pic.twitter.com/oxWoiiIm0c

— Libaan Osman (@libaanstar1) May 12, 2025

The Raptors entered the draw with a modest 7.5% chance of landing Cooper Flagg and a 7.8% chance of getting Dylan Harper. These two prospects could significantly alter any team’s timeline, and in the Raptors’ case, allow Ujiri, who likes to play “the middle,” the opportunity to split the difference between “competing” and “roster building.” They also have an 8.1% and 8.5% of landing either the 3rd or the 4th overall pick, and Ace Bailey, Tre Johnson, and VJ Edgecombe would be a significant bench upgrade.

It probably would have been fine had the Raptors stayed at 7th overall since they have the 7th-worst record—a 19.7% chance of happening. It’s already infuriating for the fanbase to move back one spot—a 34.1% chance of moving back to the 8th pick overall—but dropping two spots to 9th? But at least we’re not conveying the pick to the San Antonio Spurs.

I guess if there’s any consolation, the Raptors have had success picking 9th — Isaiah Thomas selected Tracy McGrady back in ‘97, Bryan Colangelo picked DeMar DeRozan in ‘09, and Ujiri tabbed Jakob Poeltl back in ‘16.


Masai Ujiri on the Toronto Raptors getting the 9th pick in the 2025 NBA Draft:

“Tracy McGrady. DeMar DeRozan. Jakob Poeltl. We’ll be fine. I guarantee you we’ll be fine.”

— Libaan Osman (@libaanstar1) May 13, 2025

The biggest winner of the night was the Dallas Mavericks, who defied all odds by taking the #1 overall pick despite a meagre 1.8% chance of moving to the top. This fete also marks the first time Dallas has won the lottery in their franchise history. The rich got richer, too, with the Spurs moving up six spots to take the 2nd overall pick. San Antonio will likely be Dylan Harper’s potential new city.

While the Raptors’ night was disappointing, it wasn’t as bad as the Utah Jazz and the Washington Wizards’. Both teams fell outside the top four and ended up with the 5th and 6th overall picks, respectively.

Here’s how the “lottery” went down:


The full 2025 NBA draft Lottery results ⭐

Where did your team land? pic.twitter.com/UjRZDQYF3I

— NBA on ESPN (@ESPNNBA) May 12, 2025

For the second straight season, the Raptors had a chance to commit fully to the tank but, confusingly, went against the grain just enough to be a treadmill mediocre team. The result? The Raptors were not being bad enough that they had to cough up their 2024 lottery pick to the Spurs, and this time, the Raptors failed to secure enough ping pong balls to get into the top-four range. Could the Raptors still be paying off their karmic debt in exchange for Kawhi’s magnetic four-bouncers six years ago?

Masai Ujiri, GM Bobby Webster, and the entire draft evaluation team will now focus on finding gems with the 9th and 39th picks in this coming draft.


This year’s picks.

Presented by @TorontoStar pic.twitter.com/olBPb295ON

— Toronto Raptors (@Raptors) May 12, 2025

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/13...flagg-dylan-harper-karmic-price-kawhi-leonard
 
Toronto reportedly in the mix for NBA Superstar trade

NBA: Playoffs-Milwaukee Bucks at Indiana Pacers

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Reports came out that a certain Greek Freak may be packing his bags this offseason.

Before Giannis Antetokounmpo signed his current contract with the Milwaukee Bucks, there were rumours that Masai Ujiri was trying to get him to Toronto. The “Greek Freak” is one of the best NBA talents, and getting him on your roster immediately boosts a team into championship contention. Yet, he decided to stay in Milwaukee to bring a championship home to the franchise that drafted him, which he accomplished in 2021. From there, several moves from the Bucks front office went down in an attempt to build another championship team around Giannis.

When the Bucks won the Damian Lillard sweepstakes after the star requested a trade out of Portland, it seemed like Giannis was in Milwaukee to stay. Two seasons into the Giannis/Dame experiment, and not only has it not panned out the way it was expected to, but it has crashed and burned.

It’s no one’s fault, except maybe the universe’s, as the thing that has brought the Bucks’ immediate championship hopes to a screeching halt has been injury. First, it was the deep vein thrombosis (blood clot) that sidelined Lillard at the end of the regular season. A serious and life-threatening condition, players with blood clots often miss extended time to get rid of the clot, address the problem, and then recondition back into game form. Lillard was back on the Bucks court in a month.

Three games later, Lillard would suffer a season-ending Achilles injury, requiring surgery and sidelining him for these playoffs and likely most of next season. Rehabilitation for this injury is usually about a year.

With Giannis in the prime of his career, it seems like a move is imminent given all of these situations. Nothing has been explicitly said by Giannis’s team or the Bucks, and the Bucks would likely only move him if he asks. Has the star’s patience finally dwindled, especially given the prognosis of Lillard?

Now, it’s being reported that the Greek Freak has an interest in Toronto as a potential landing spot. Per Scoop B, Giannis wants to stay in the Eastern Conference, with Brooklyn and Toronto being top of mind. According to the report, Toronto is a place that other stars would want to join Giannis in — we all know it’s a great NBA market. Despite a few podcasts about the struggle of having to spend 10 minutes in customs, players who come to Toronto generally enjoy their time here.

Toronto could check all of Giannis’s “boxes,” per the report. As an international market with a publicly praised medical staff and front office, it’s a great landing spot for an international player like Giannis.

Now, do the Raptors pursue this?

With a star of Giannis’s calibre on the table, absolutely. The Raptors would likely not move off of Scottie Barnes, but pairing the two would be wildly awesome. Everyone else would have to be on the table for a trade. It’s Giannis.

Getting him, pairing him with Scottie Barnes — an immediate championship contender in a VERY weak Eastern Conference. Now might even be the best time to make the jump. Think about what is going on in the East right now: Tatum and Lillard are both out next year, Embiid’s knees are dust, and Flagg is going to the Mavericks. The Villanova Knicks are on their way to the Eastern Conference Finals against the Pacers. A Giannis/Scottie Raptors team could beat either of those ECF teams.

Surely, Masai needs to explore it. There has been mutual interest both ways in bringing Giannis to the Raptors for years, and now could be the time to jump.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/15/24430972/toronto-raptors-giannis-trade-bucks-offseason
 
An NBA team is trying to hire Raptors’ President Masai Ujiri

NBA: Miami Heat at Toronto Raptors

Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images

As is the case every once in a while, another NBA team is trying to hire Toronto Raptors’ leader Masai Ujiri.

Toronto Raptors President and Vice Chairman Masai Ujiri is one of the NBA’s most sought-after executives. He has built this franchise into a world-renowned place for players and staff alike to build basketball careers. Ujiri is also the reason the Raptors were able to win a championship — his move to bring Kawhi Leonard to Toronto was the perfect finishing puzzle piece to the Raptors’ winning team.

He’s also a global ambassador of the game, helping bring basketball to millions worldwide through Giants of Africa. You rarely get a high-level NBA executive who brings a mixture of business savvy and humanity to a league that sometimes feels like it’s drowning in the throes of capitalism.

It’s not surprising, then, that Ujiri tends to be head-hunted by other franchises. This time, it seems like the Atlanta Hawks are interested in bringing Ujiri onto their staff, per Marc Stein.

The Hawks have had a rough go of it these past few years, having a blip of playoff success before falling right off back into the irrelevancy of not being a contender but not being in the mix for high-picks. They cleaned house of their front office staff after the 2025 season, promoting internally for the role of General Manager and now searching for a President. According to Stein this week, Ujiri is on their wish list.

Others on their hit list have included Bob Myers, former Golden State Warriors executive, as well as several top agents around the league.

Luckily for Toronto fans, Ujiri seems pretty committed to his role here, stating back in April at end-of-season availability that he believes the team is heading in a winning direction. Toronto has always seemed like the perfect market for Ujiri — it brings his interests of high-level basketball and reaching a global audience together, especially as the NBA’s sole international franchise. He wouldn’t move just anywhere for any job, and it seems like Toronto is where his heart is.

Rumours like this have also been historically tied to being leverage for contract negotiations. The more sought-after you are, the more your current employer may be willing to put on the table for you. Despite loving his job and this market, Ujiri is a businessman at heart. With Ujiri’s contract expiring in 2026 amid a flurry of ownership changes at MLSE (the board that owns the Toronto Raptors), including the eventual departure of Larry Tannenbaum, Ujiri’s future here may be questioned. Ujiri and Tannenbaum have always been close, and it’s been speculated on before that it has been Tannenbaum who has been the guy to close Ujiri’s deals in the past. Masai has been vocal that there is no bad blood between him and the rest of the MLSE bigwigs, despite speculation. Yet, you never know what is going on behind closed doors. All of this to say, true interest from other markets may make MLSE sweeten the deal for Ujiri in future contract negotiations.

Regardless, Ujiri seems to be focused on the Raptors for now. He was their representative at the NBA Draft Lottery last week, looking somewhat hilariously disappointed when Toronto fell to No. 9 in the draft order. It was extremely relatable, Masai. Never change.

When asked how he felt about the Raptors’ draft placement, Ujiri had a short answer: “Tracy McGrady, DeMar DeRozan, Jakob Poeltl,” all Toronto Raptors players drafted ninth overall in previous NBA Drafts. Ujiri has always had a knack for scouting talent regardless of draft placement, and he doesn’t seem perturbed at this latest pick.

Curious how perturbed he is at Dallas getting the No. 1 pick, but that’s something I’ll have to ask him next time I see him.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/16/24431118/toronto-raptors-masai-ujiri-atlanta-hawks-marc-stein
 
How to start preparing for Toronto Tempo tip-off

NBA: Miami Heat at Toronto Raptors

Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images

The Toronto Tempo are officially one year away from entering the WNBA as a team, and you should already be preparing.

Last May, it was announced that Toronto would be launching the WNBA’s 14th team, tipping off in 2026. Since then, we have learned that the team will be named the Toronto Tempo, have been able to buy merch, and events have already started in anticipation. Yet, if you’re thinking about the on-court product (same), you should be tapping into the WNBA NOW to see potential future Tempo players.

The league's 29th season tipped off on May 16, and it only speeds up from here. A 44-game season from May until September, with playoffs into October. There are currently 156 roster spots in the league, but not all of them are being used. An ongoing Collective Bargaining Agreement negotiation that has the potential to boost the WNBA into the modern era. A tightly contested race for a championship in what will likely be the last season these teams look the way they currently do. A LOT is going on in the WNBA this season.

Free agency pandemonium welcomes the Tempo to the league​


For us here in Toronto, we’ve been watching from the inside looking out, not able to fully participate in the action. Now, in 2025, it feels like we are standing in the doorway observing the chaos from afar, about to dive in. Due to the expiring CBA, many players were able to work out their contracts so that they end after the 2025 season, allowing them to renegotiate their deals under the new league standards. That means that two-thirds of the league will be free agents next January. There are pros and cons to this, of course, the biggest probably being pro: the Tempo will have a ton of free agents to pursue ahead of their first season, and con: their expansion draft may be a little dull.

As the Golden State Valkyries experienced last year, an expansion draft will likely take place around December 2025. Different to the Valkyries’ experience though, Toronto will share this draft with Portland’s expansion team, also tipping off in 2026. The other major difference will be the fact that there will be so many free agents, the pickings may be a little slim for Toronto and Portland.

One interesting rule of expansion in the WNBA, though, is that each team can draft one unrestricted free agent. They can then “core” that player, holding their negotiating rights and paying them the league’s max salary. We don’t know if those rules will stand after the new CBA is signed, but if it does stay, the Tempo have a great pool of players to choose from.

While all of these certainties are up in the air, there are a few things Tempo fans can expect in the next 12 months. First, expect the team to hire their head coach by October-ish, if not before. This gives the coach ample time to hire staff and prepare for the expansion draft and free agency. Next, the expansion draft would likely happen in December, with free agency following in January as it has for many years past. Another thing that happens in December is the WNBA Draft Lottery. If the same rules hold up, Toronto will not be able to receive a lottery pick in their first season and will likely pick around the No. 6 spot in the 2026 draft. Given that Georgia Amoore was drafted No. 6 this season, there is still a ton of talent to be picked up at that spot, so don’t be too stressed.

Get to know the WNBA now​


While many Toronto Tempo fans have been following the WNBA for years, others have not, and that’s okay! Welcome! The first thing to know about the WNBA is that it is VERY different from the NBA. Different style of play, different rules, different culture.

Let’s start with the different styles of play. The WNBA tends to lean more classic in basketball style than the NBA, which has shifted into a three-point shooting favoured system in recent years. Shooting is a priority in the W, but all players also need to be proficient at defence, operating close to the basket, and at least have a decent handle to make it in this highly competitive league. With only 11-12 roster spots per team, and currently only 13 teams, only the best of the best players make it. The result is that players are extremely skilled in the fundamentals, are versatile players, and play all year-round in the WNBA as well as overseas leagues or American offseason leagues to boost their stock as players.

As for rules, the general rules of basketball are pretty similar in the WNBA and NBA, especially as of the past few seasons. The WNBA has added the coach’s challenge, done away with the possession arrow (thank goodness), and has expanded its playoffs to be more similar to how the NBA does it. Yet, things like conferences don’t matter as much in the WNBA. With 13 teams and an uneven number of teams in each conference, it can’t matter too much. The biggest difference is team make-up, given there is currently a 12-player roster limit, and the league’s hard salary cap makes it so that many teams will only carry 11 players to give them more flexibility.

The culture of the WNBA is where things get very different from the NBA. A smaller league means a smaller community of players, coaches, and media. It’s not uncommon for media to have higher levels of access to players in the WNBA than the NBA, and that relationship is a little different. For so long, WNBA players essentially had to be their brand-builders, and that meant getting their messages out to the media a bit more. Up until recent years, WNBA stars hadn’t transcended into popular culture yet, so there was also a similar level of just basic human experience — WNBA players have the same struggles, challenges, and experiences as the average person watching at home. They have kids to raise, bills to pay, and they weren’t the mega-stars the NBA players are. Now, that’s evolved quite a bit in recent years as the sport has exploded into pop culture, but it’s still the same in many ways.

The other big cultural difference in the WNBA is the inclusion and activism aspect. These players are huge advocates for themselves and their communities, and not just in a performative way. They protest, they speak up, and they take action. In turn, they foster a pretty inclusive environment for fans and spectators (mostly, the past few years have been slightly different). The WNBA has become a home for fans of all different races, communities, and identities, because the players reflect those aspects of their fans as well. Sure, we poke fun at the fact that the players date/marry each other, but in turn, that makes the league a welcoming place for fans who don’t feel included in other sports leagues.

How Toronto can get involved NOW​


Well, the first thing is just watching the games, even before Toronto starts playing. WNBA League Pass is pretty affordable and is accessible in Canada. It plays every single game, and you can watch games on demand once they finish. The only games that will be blacked out on League Pass are ones being shown on Canadian broadcast networks like TSN or Sportsnet. That way, you start to become familiar with the other teams in the league, the big names on the court and off the court, and how the games look. When Toronto signs some of these players next year, you already know their style and history.

There is also a WNBA game happening in Canada for the third year in a row, but this year it is a regular season game instead of a preseason game. The Seattle Storm and Atlanta Dream will be playing on August 15 in Vancouver, BC after the WNBA held games in Toronto and Edmonton in past years. West Coast fans can go get a taste of what the atmosphere will be like next season.

The Toronto Tempo have also started to put on events to build hype as the countdown to tip-off dips below one year. They held watch parties for the NCAA Championship Game in Toronto and Vancouver in April, and will hold another event in Toronto this coming weekend. Tempo Live, as they are calling it, will be a two-day street festival-type event with a ton going on. Happening at Stackt Market on May 24-25, the Tempo will be hosting panels on every intersection of women’s basketball, from fashion to music and more. Along with that, there will be merchandise for sale (no shipping fees!) as well as some on-court fan activities and activations. It’s a great way to meet other fans, get a sense of the community, and start celebrating the WNBA’s first international franchise.


Big news, Toronto. Tempo LIVE is here. We’re taking over @stacktmarket for two days of merch, hoops, music, speakers, and more.

Mark your calendar May 24 & 25. pic.twitter.com/zPUhvr4Wh4

— Toronto Tempo (@TempoBasketball) May 5, 2025

If you’re not already tapped into the WNBA... you’re late! Come join us!

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/19/24433247/toronto-tempo-expansion-wnba-portland-golden-state
 
The Toronto Raptors could go off-book with the No.9 draft pick

NBA: Draft Combine

David Banks-Imagn Images

After the “draft lottery”, we rounded up the top mock drafts online to get a feel for the Raptors’ 9th pick in this coming draft.

Now that the “lottery” and the NBA Draft Combine are over, various mock drafts are starting to see some changes based on where the teams landed after the lottery and the prospects whose stock went up or down based on their Combine appearance.

The draft process is still in the early stage, but so far, the first 6 picks remain stable, although the order can go many different ways once you get past Dylan Harper. At the end of the day, Cooper Flagg, Harper, Ace Bailey, VJ Edgecombe, Tre Johnson, Kon Kneuppel, and Jeremiah Fears are all expected to be gone by the time the Raptors are on the clock.

From here, the net is wide open. Khaman Maluach is the most popular choice for the Raptors among draft pundits, but teams ahead of the Raptors can potentially reach for him, like the Washington Wizards with their 6th pick. A couple of intriguing European guards who went through the NCAA could be an option too, in Kasparas Jakucionis and Egor Demin. There are also a couple of young European up-and-comers in Noa Essengue and Nolan Traore. It does feel like the Raptors will end up with an international prospect, unless someone like Tre Johnson falls, or the Raptors reach for Collin Murra-Boyles or Carter Bryant.

Let’s look at the mocks (as of May 20, 2025).

Tankathon: Khaman Maluach​

39th pick: Alex Toohey​

Update: May 20, 2025​


Illinois’ Kasparas Jakucionis moved into the top 8 on Tankathon’s latest mock draft, making Maluach available for the Raptors at the 9th pick. Meanwhile, SportsNet’s Michael Grange reported that Alex Toohey will work out for the Raptors.


Australian NBL prospect Alex Toohey told me that he has workout with the Raptors scheduled. Big playmaking wing who models his game after Bojan Bogdanovic, Joe Ingles and others.

— Michael Grange (@michaelgrange) May 14, 2025

NBADraft.NET: Nolan Traore​

39th pick: Milos Uzan​

Update: May 16, 2025​


Nolan Traore going to the Raptors at 9th is the highest we’ve seen recently, but he entered the current draft cycle as supposedly one of the top prospects of this draft class. Currently, Traore is around the late lottery to mid-1st round range. Had he crossed over, joined an NCAA team, and put up solid stats, there’s a conversation to be had about whether Traore should be a top 8 pick in this draft.

Yahoo Sports (O’Connor): Khaman Maluach​

39th pick: Miles Bird​

Update: May 19, 2025​


New Yahoo Sports’ NBA Draft guru Kevin O’DraftExpert mused that “a team that can afford to be patient, such as the Raptors, could be in for a great reward down the line.” O’Connor ain’t wrong with that take, as Maluach is one of the biggest mystery boxes in this draft.

No Ceilings: Carter Bryant​

39th pick: Maxime Raynaud​

Update: May 13, 2025​


The guys at No Ceilings marked the Raptors’ draft position as the “should we keep it or move it” debate range. With Maluach off the board on their mock draft, it’s between Bryant and Collin Murray-Boyles, with Bryant’s offensive upside earning him a nod here.

Check out No Ceiling’s 2025 NBA Mock Draft V7

NBA Draft Room: Khaman Maluach​

39th pick: Adou Thiero​

Update: May 16, 2025​


The fellas at NBA Draft Room feel like Maluach is the Raptors’ pick of destiny and the first center off their board. There are not a lot of surprising picks ahead, with the exception of Kasparas Jakociounis, who they have going to the Brooklyn Nets.

The Athletic (Vecenie): Khaman Maluach​

39th pick: Darrion Williams​

Update: May 14, 2025​


Sam Vecenie is convinced that Khaman Maluach is the Raptors’ pick for the 9th spot, using Jakob Poeltl’s potential free agency the following summer and Ujiri’s ties to the growth of basketball in Africa.

Bleacher Report (Wasserman): Noa Essengue​

39th pick: Labaron Philon​

Update: May 19, 2025​


Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Wasserman has Noa Essengue going to the Raptors. BR’s Zach Buckley posited that “Essengue already feels pretty Raptors-y. “We can’t blame him, as Essengue fits the raw 'Vision 6’9” mystery box prospects that Masai fancies.

USA Today - FTW (Kalbrosky): Derik Queen​

Update: May 13, 2025​


FTW’s Bryan Kalbrosky is one of the few remaining draft pundits still holding on to their Derik Queen mid-lottery stock, but that could change when we see his next mock draft. Queen appears to be sliding due to the subpar Draft Combine showing, but his skill set is intriguing at the very least. Perhaps the main driver for this Derik Queen pick is having Maluach going to the Nets at 8th.

Check out Bryan’s post-lottery mock draft for USA Today FTW

SBNation (O’Donnell): Tre Johnson​

Update: May 12, 2025​


SBNation’s Ricky O’Donnell’s post-lottery mock draft is probably the most intriguing one thus far, as he’s got major shakeups everywhere once you get past Cooper Flagg and Dylan Harper. He’s got Maluach moving as high as the Jazz’s pick at the 5th spot, and Queen is staying home with the Washington Wizards’ 6th pick. That meant someone from the consensus top 7 pick would slide down, and that’s Tre Johnson on O’Donnell’s mock draft. Johnson being available at the 9th makes him a no-brainer best player available.

CBS (Boone): Kasparas Jakucionis​

Updated: May 18, 2025​


CBS’ Kyle Boone chose a tall point guard despite Maluach and Queen being available on his board. Perhaps Boone is telling us that the Raptors’ biggest need is a point guard. Or maybe, Jakucionis is his BPA regardless.

CBS (Parrish): Khaman Maluach​

Updated: May 18, 2025​


CBS’s Gary Parrish thinks that Maluach is the best prospect available at the Raptors’ spot, and I won’t resist that argument, considering how his mock draft went down.

CBS (Finkelstein): Khaman Maluach​

Updated: May 19, 2025​


Per CBS’s Adam Finkelstein, “The Raptors have quite a bit of committed salary in the next few years, and for all the pieces they’ve recently invested in, his archetype is missing.” We’ll forgive Finkelstein for the Ulrich Chomche disrespect.

CBS (Salerno): Khaman Maluach​

Updated: May 18, 2025​


Maluach still needs time to develop, but going to Toronto would be a great situation for him. Coach Darko Rajakovic will shower him with plenty of hugs and make sure he smiles.

ESPN (Givony/Woo): Collin Murray-Boyles​

Update: May 19, 2025​


The draft experts at ESPN have Collin Murray-Boyles as the BPA at this point, and think that “The Raptors could go in many directions with this pick.” With Maluach off the board on their most recent mock, it makes sense, but there are other prospects worth looking like Kasparas Jakuciounis, Egor Demin, and Noa Essengue.

The Ringer (Mann): Kasparas Jakucionis​

Update: May 12, 2025​


The Ringer’s J. Kyle Mann thinks Jakucionis can help the Raptors’ offence. Despite the uptick in passes, assists, and overall player involvement, the Raptors’ offence looked robotic and wonky for the most part. Can Jakucionis help fix Coach Darko’s problem?

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/21/24429325/toronto-raptors-draft-lottery-pick-maluach
 
Toronto Tempo take exciting next step ahead of WNBA launch

IMG_3705.0.jpeg

Tempo Live weekend at Stackt Market | Amanda Lee Coffey

The WNBA’s newest expansion team officially welcomed fans into the mix over a weekend-long activation.

The 365-day countdown to the Toronto Tempo officially joining the WNBA is on, and the team celebrated big over the weekend. Tempo Live, a multi-day activation designed to bring the community together, introduce the city to the team, and get fans excited, seemed to be a huge success. Fans had the opportunity to purchase merchandise, participate on the court, and attend various talks designed to bring together different aspects of the sport and community.

It all started Friday night with a toast to the team, one year before they will officially hit the court. Tempo President Teresa Resch was joined by newly announced co-owner and “Chief Hype Officer” Lilly Singh, Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow, and Toronto Deputy Mayor Ausma Malik, who all shared their excitement at the growth of women’s sport in the city of Toronto. Guests could check out the activities put on, including the signing of a banner that will eventually hang in Coca-Cola Collesseum when the Tempo start to play.

Despite the on-and-off rain all weekend, the event seemed to go pretty smoothly on Saturday and Sunday. The one talk I was able to catch was the Basketball x Fashion panel, hosted by Makeway Co. founders Abby Albino and Shelby Weaver. They spoke on the importance of inclusion when trying to push the limits of fashion in the sports world. A traditionally male space, everyone on the panel had a unique perspective on how we can not only include women in the world, but also empower them to have the confidence to take it as their own.

Other talks included one on the intersection of basketball and food, and basketball and art as well. Local artists had stations around Stackt Market where they were working on pieces live for fans to watch.

The other big component was the Tempo Court, where they held a variety of activities all weekend. Lay-Up Basketball, a foundation that removes barriers for youth to be involved in basketball, held a skills session on the court, and later in the day, groups could reserve the space to play games of pick-up.

It was the first time that the team and the community came together to celebrate this new era of basketball in Toronto. The events were curated in a way that brought many people who have been building the women’s sports identity of this city long before the WNBA awarded us a team together. It was a way for the fans to come and interact with various members of the team’s staff and see changemakers in action in a variety of different ways. For me, it was a reminder that the basketball community in Toronto is rich and diverse, and filled with people who have such compelling stories to tell, no matter what their medium is.

It was one of the first times the fact that Toronto is getting a WNBA team felt real. As someone who has been hoping (and let’s be real, actively campaigning) for this team for a long time, it felt like the beginning of a celebration that will last years. It was nice to be able to engage in the women’s basketball community in person, instead of having to watch while my American colleagues have all the fun in their markets. A basketball team is nothing without its fans — they create the identity of the team — and being able to see them show up for this team for the first time was special.

It doesn’t stop here, either. Things are about to pick up big time for the Toronto Tempo as we head into the 365-day countdown. The team’s staff is growing, and will continue to grow as the summer goes on. A head coach will likely be hired before the current WNBA season finishes, if not shortly after, to allow that coach time to settle before the Draft Lottery and Expansion Draft take place (likely in December). From there, free agency will be pandemonium in January as the WNBA will see about 2⁄3 of players become free agents as the current Collective Bargaining Agreement expires and a new one is hopefully signed soon.

In the short term, a lot of exciting things will happen with the team as well, including the negotiation for Canadian broadcast rights, and the continuation of identity building for the team (mascots, anyone?), court and jersey designs, and more.

Things are ramping up for the Toronto Tempo, and before you know it, we will be cheering on the team inside the arena.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/27/24437424/toronto-tempo-live-event-wnba-expansion
 
This Duke star would fit perfectly with the Toronto Raptors’ needs

2025 NBA Draft Combine

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

New on Raptors Draft Watch: Toronto could solve its center dillema for the next decade by targeting Khaman Maluach in the 2025 NBA Draft.

From where Khaman Maluach was over a year ago, his freshman campaign at Duke was impressive. His brooding presence in the paint deterred opposing teams from venturing into the area when he was in the vicinity, as his towering 7’0.75” height and elongated 7’6.75” wingspan made it hard for adventurers to get to the rim and finish with ease.

Despite looking raw offensively, Maluach shot 71.2% from the field, including 77 dunks in the season, which is good enough to rank him second among all freshmen in Blue Devils history. His success at Duke led to many accolades, including the ACC All-Rookie Team, ACC All-Tournament First Team, NCAA East Region All-Tournament Team, and NABC South Atlantic All-District Second Team.

Mock Draft Range​

Best rank: 5 / Worst rank: 17​


(Per Hoopshype’s Aggregate Mock Draft 6.0)


Truly believe Khaman Maluach has the ability to dominate the paint on both ends of the floor. Unreal physical tools with a nice blend of mobility and hip movements.

An obvious lob threat at all times, but also has great touch inside the paint on hooks or push shots. Defensively… pic.twitter.com/M8dF3lGiJ2

— Global Scouting (@GlobalScouting_) May 20, 2025

Strengths​


Khaman Maluach is the consensus best center in this draft, based on the synergy of his youth, size, mobility, defensive upside, and budding offence — essentially having the potential to be a modern-day big who can protect the paint, defend in space, and space offensively. Imagine a “big” that can roll, pop, space, and hit the middy on the offensive end. Oh, and be a constant vertical threat for a lob. Sounds enticing!

While the numbers haven’t been eye-popping at 1.3 blocks per game, Maluach’s timing and instincts in going for the block — whether as the primary or help defender — project to translate well at the NBA level. He has also shown at times that he can guard shot creators outside the paint. While he is often blown by on the initial action, Maluach’s recoverability allows him to make up for his inexperience, thanks to his solid foot speed, quick lateral movement, and, of course, his length.


THE Khaman Maluach possession pic.twitter.com/rRkMAUMmem

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 26, 2025

Offensively, Maluach is a pretty good vertical target. He excels in rolling to the basket and catching “-oops” or lurking around the dunker’s spot as a vertical release valve. Despite not having elite “hops,” Maluach’s length, soft mitts, touch, huge catch radius, and quick and compact “catch and lay/dunk” form enable him to get the ball to the basket quickly while he’s around the basket.

Another thing that’s worth noting in Maluach’s game is his ability to roll to the open space on PnR actions swiftly. He’s got an outstanding balance of economical footwork, quickness in rolling, and identifying the path to an open space. They say, “Availability is the best ability.” In this case, Maluach is good at making himself available for these types of passes. It’s a skill set similar to Chris Boucher, who seems to have a magnet for the ball, as it often finds him, whether he’s getting open on a half-court offense or the ball bounces his way.

Maluach’s shooting form (76.6% from the free throw line) shows promise that it can somehow translate into middies and, potentially, pick-and-pop opportunities.

Weaknesses​


Defending pick-and-roll has always been a big learning curve for young bigs, and Maluach isn’t an exception. He’s much suited as a “drop” big for now while getting reps on reading the offense’s options manifesting right under his nose. Just like most young bigs, Maluach is prone to making mistakes on his coverage — choosing between the ball-handler and the roller in drop coverage, and when to and not to switch.

One of the most underrated aspects of being a center is the ability to anchor the five-man group’s defense. Sure, being able to block or deter shots at the rim is a prerequisite skill set, but that’s not the end-all and be-all as the team’s center: the ability to anchor the team’s defense while on the floor is critical to the role’s success. Maluach is still learning the job, or in essence, learning basketball as we speak. It’s too much to expect him to protect the paint while reading the offense unfold, call out the screens and actions, and direct his teammates simultaneously.

Maluach’s inexperience also shows up when he picks up quick and unnecessary fouls at times. Part of this is his tendency to rely too heavily on his physical tools and instinct to defend, and part of this is his failure to execute the scouting report, as evident in his blown assignments and incorrect defensive reads.

Offensively, Maluach’s got a long developmental curve to go through, as he’s constrained outside of lobs and putbacks as-is. His fleet-footedness hasn’t translated into post moves where solid footwork can help, but developing a baby hook while being able to turn on either shoulder could be an asset for him.


NEW ON THE FLOOR AND CEILING SUBSTACK

7-foot-2 Khaman Maluach was credited with zero rebounds in Duke’s Final Four loss to Houston.

I broke down his game on the glass and, more broadly, on defense #nbadraft ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/qNXXp6XkQL

— FLOOR and CEILING (Wilko) (@wilkomcv) April 9, 2025

Strength is a must for Maluach to be successful on both ends of the floor. He’ll be dealing with bigger and stronger players at the next level, and we’re not just talking about the bigs in the NBA. Offensively, he’ll need to develop his bag further, whether by improving his moves in the post or setting effective screens for his teammates. I won’t penalize Maluach for his performance against Houston, as it’s his inexperience, lack of strength, and the moment aligning together which resulted in that performance. Wilko made a great breakdown of the game from Maluach’s perspective.

I also have some reservations about his “lift.” Maluach didn’t fare well in the vertical jump part of the combine, measuring subpar at 24 inches standing vertical, along with a 30-inch max vertical jump. This data explains why, despite the dunks and alley-oops, Maluach doesn’t appear to be a jump-out-of-the-gym athlete. His dunks looked like he had enough elevation to dunk the ball with ease, which is largely attributed to his high length, height, and light frame.

In comparison, I reviewed the NBA Draft Combine’s data and examined starter-level bigs with similar vertical jump statistics to those of Maluach. I was able to find less than a handful:

  • Rudy Gobert (25”/29”)
  • Demarcus Cousins (23.5 “/27.5”)
  • Kelly Olynyk (24”/30”)
  • Chris Kaman (23.5”/30.5”)

Nikola Jokic didn’t participate in the Draft Combine, but it’s safe to assume that he should be on this list.

I don’t think it’s a red flag — or at least not yet, but it doesn’t look good that he’s on the low end of this data. If anything, this should give teams that draft him the idea that Maluach should be developed as a “skilled big” rather than relegating him to a traditional rim runner, which would elevate his game at the NBA level.

Maluach’s athletic profile reminds me of Raptors 905 legend Makur Maker, who is almost identical in his measurements, including their vertical jumps. Maker was hyped as a modern versatile big that can handle the ball, face up, and hit his perimeter shots, but while he’s displayed a variety of skill sets that would make a scout drool, the only consistent thing that he did is be very inconsistent while showing shades of his talent now and then. Could we be getting a younger and center version of Makur Maker on a blank slate?

Raptors Fit​


Khaman Maluach 3-point star shooting drill at the NBA draft combine pic.twitter.com/E5C91IaDk5

— Jonathan Givony (@DraftExpress) May 13, 2025

Jakob Poeltl could be entering the final year of his contract if he doesn’t pick up his player option. He’s currently playing his best basketball these past two seasons, and he’ll be 30 years old before the season starts. The Raptors’ payroll is about to swell starting next season, thanks to the big contracts of Scottie Barnes, Immanuel Quickley, Brandon Ingram, and RJ Barrett. Ulrich Chomche is more of an experiment right now, so the Raptors are thin in the frontcourt.

While having Chomche and Khaman Maluach in the Raptors’ pipeline to potentially succeed Poeltl, both developmental prospects are so raw that they may not be able to see minutes on a team looking to compete for a playoff spot. Sure, Maluach might get some minutes here and there, especially on a back-to-back. Still, his inexperience and level of play make it challenging for a coach to give him consistent 15-20-minute playing time next season. If anything, the Raptors can get a veteran big man this summer to back up Poeltl, and that could mean more frequent trips to Paramount Fine Foods Centre.

That said, drafting Maluach likely won’t help the Raptors should they make it to the playoffs, and they are just one veteran big acquisition away from semi-permanently adding someone like Maluach to the Raptors 905. However, suppose the Raptors remain patient and develop him to get as close as possible to his best-case scenario. In that case, the Raptors could be looking at their starting center for the next decade.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/28...raft-watch-khaman-maluach-nba-prospect-rookie
 
5 Players the Toronto Tempo could realistically sign for 2026

WNBA: Dallas Wings at Atlanta Dream

Jordan Godfree-Imagn Images

The Toronto Tempo will head into free agency next year with a ton of options to build their inaugural roster.

The Toronto Tempo are preparing to head into their first WNBA free agency at the end of 2025 and heading into 2026. It’s an intriguing year for two WNBA expansion franchises to be coming into the league — nearly 2⁄3 of the WNBA will be Unrestricted Free Agents after this current season is over. This is because of the timing of the WNBPA (Players’ Union) and the WNBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) expiring, and players wanting to be able to sign new contracts with the new CBA in mind. It’s also a bargaining tactic — players can say they just won’t sign if their needs aren’t met. With the boom of women’s basketball and a ton of money on the table, it would be terrible if the league had to delay their 2026 season.

Outside of all of that, the Toronto Tempo and the Unnamed Portland WNBA team will be in the mix in free agency. Similar to this past year, when the Golden State Valkyries prepared to enter the league, there will likely be an expansion draft ahead of free agency for the two new teams. With so many free agents, Toronto and Portland may not dip into the expansion draft as much, but it’s there for them to get an idea of the market.

From there, they will head into free agency in hopes of attracting some talent, and Toronto has the benefit of being the league’s first international team to help persuade players to come. Expect a lot of visits to show off Toronto’s allure as a home base, as many players like the idea of living in a vibrant, diverse city.

The Tempo are already making moves, announcing the hire of their General Manager, Monica Wright Rogers, earlier this year. Wright Rogers has experience with the Phoenix Mercury as their Assistant General Manager, and quite honestly, is just a pure hoops fan. Her experience of the game as a player, WNBA champion, and front office executive, paired with an absolute love of the game, makes her a great leader for this team. Players will want to come play for her here in Toronto.

This week, the Tempo also announced the hire of their Assistant General Manager and Senior Vice President of Basketball Strategy, Eli Horowitz. Horowitz served as Assistant General Manager and Vice President of Scouting and Analytics for the Los Angeles Sparks for seven years before this hire. Wright Rogers and Horowitz will be tasked with building this team amid a CBA negotiation, expansion draft, unprecedented free agency period, and the rapid growth of the WNBA.

There are a lot of factors to think about when predicting who Toronto could sign: Cap space, of course, but also the reputation of expansion franchises not being title contenders off the jump could deter some more high-level or veteran talent. The taxes issue that NBA players seem to be hot on right now might not be as much of a factor, given that WNBA players would be in Toronto for less time during the year. Still, it will be interesting to see who has an interest in coming to the league’s first international team.

With all of that being said, here are 5 players the Toronto Tempo could realistically sign in 2026:

Jordan Horston (G) - Seattle Storm​


Jordan Horston was drafted 9th overall to the Seattle Storm in the 2023 WNBA Draft, quickly becoming a solid role player for the team. Her contract is currently suspended this season as she recovers from an ACL reconstruction, but her timeline seems to match up with being able to play in 2026. If Horston is made available in the expansion draft, she is someone Toronto should absolutely look into.

At 6’2, Horston brings size and length as a guard, playing with solid physicality and an ability to get to the basket. In her rookie season, she got a ton of playing time given Seattle was in a rebuilding year, and was able to fast-track her development as a young player, earning herself an All-Rookie Team nod.

In 2024, Horston finished the WNBA season with a 94.4 defensive rating, in the 89th percentile league-wide. Her strength and size again help her as a defender, and with more minutes in Toronto, she has a high ceiling as a young player.

Laeticia Amihere (F) - Free Agent​


It seems a little inevitable that Toronto will make at least one Canadian signing, and Laeticia Amihere would be perfect. The long forward attended Golden State Valkyries training camp this season, scoring 20 points for the team in a preseason game before being shockingly cut from the team. The Valkyries had a particular vision for their roster, and despite Amihere certainly being good enough to be on the team, apparently did not fit the vision.

She is talented enough to be on a WNBA roster, though, and the Tempo would not only gain a solid player but an instant fan favourite. Amihere grew up in Mississauga, Ontario, before heading to South Carolina to play for Dawn Staley in college. She is a National Champion and was drafted No. 8 overall in the 2023 WNBA draft. She comes with both overseas experience, having played in Australia and also Olympic experience with Canada’s National Team.

Amihere is a player who brings energy when she steps on the floor. She can rebound, finish at the basket, and draw fouls, often quietly approaching a double-double when given enough minutes to get into rhythm.

Karlie Samuelson (G) - Minnesota Lynx​


Getting Karlie Samuelson up in Toronto would be a huge swing, but she would be an integral part of the team from the jump. After playing at Stanford, Samuelson jumped around the WNBA for years while also playing overseas, until she was finally signed to a guaranteed contract in 2024 with the Mystics. After one year in Washington, she was traded to the Minnesota Lynx, where she now serves as the team’s 6th woman.

Samuelson is a sharpshooter and brings a steadiness to her team thanks to her unique journey and plethora of experience. Toronto could bring her in as a leader to a likely younger team, giving her a big role on the roster. She is a free agent, and if Minnesota can’t afford to keep her along with their other stars under the new contract, Toronto could be an option to pay her well.

Rae Burrell (G) - Los Angeles Sparks​


Another potential big swing as a prospect, Rae Burrell would fit into Toronto extremely well if she were available. The No. 9 overall pick in the 2022 draft, Burrell spent her rookie season on and off the Sparks roster, but earned her place for 2023. She is developing into a great player who would benefit from the bigger role Toronto could give her.

With more playing time, Burrell could boost the offence of the Tempo, showing promise as a three-point shooter and defender. She is expected to have a big season in 2025 after playing extremely well at Unrivaled during the offseason, but a knee injury has her sidelined until mid-June at least. It will be great to see how she looks near the end of the season and into the offseason, but on paper is a great target for the Tempo.

DiJonai Carrington (G) - Dallas Wings​


You can’t tell me Carrington would not THRIVE in Toronto, just on a completely base non-basketball level. She gives city girlie 100%. Not only that, but she’s a great player and the 2024 Most Improved Award winner. A lockdown defender, Carrington’s ability to disrupt a team’s biggest perimeter threat is why she has earned a solid place in the league.

She finished 2024 with a 92.6 defensive rating, landing in the 93rd percentile league-wide. That earned her a starting role with Connecticut, and she is now adjusting to a new team in Dallas. Another player who would instantly become a huge part of Toronto’s system, the allure of Toronto Life, plus a leading role could bring a league favourite to the Tempo.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/5/30...-carrington-samuelson-burrell-horston-amihere
 
Every Championship team since 2019 has been constructed just like the Toronto Raptors were

NBA: New Orleans Pelicans at Toronto Raptors

John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Now five years removed from the Toronto Raptors 2019 championship and nearing the sixth new championship team since then, it’s clear that every championship team of the 2020’s is similar to that 2019 squad.

As we approach the final chapter of the 2024-25 NBA season, we’re left with two teams vying for the championship. Two teams with nothing in common, or so it seems.

First, there is the Oklahoma City Thunder: defensive juggernaut, harassing the world’s best players into consistently off nights. Meanwhile, Indiana is led by a run-and-gun ball movement offence that no one has found a way to slow down over an entire series. Yet, despite the stylistic differences on the court, I see two teams with almost identical roster constructions.

Both teams prioritized depth over superstars, instead opting for a singular offensive engine with quality role players at their side. Nearly every champion this decade has opted for a similar roster construction.

Sound familiar, Raptor fans?

With each passing season, the elite teams of the NBA look more like the 2019 Raptors than the superteams of past generations. Gone are the days of the Mid-2010’s Golden State Warriors and Cleveland Cavaliers, or the Big Three-era Miami Heat and Boston Celtics.

Instead, title teams seem to be built in the image of Toronto’s lone championship team, and while I won’t be the first to declare that the superteam era is dead, the 2019 Toronto Raptors deserve more credit for shaping the future of NBA roster building.

That Raptors championship team was the first of its kind. The league was coming off a decade of “big threes” that began with the 2008 Celtics big three of Garnett/Pierce/Allen and culminated in the Durant/Curry/Klay/Draymond Warriors. Toronto had a superstar in Kawhi Leonard, but didn’t have a clear number two or three to be considered a big three.

Pascal Siakam was the secondary creator and scorer, averaging 19 points per game in the playoffs, but wasn’t considered a top-20 player by most experts, let alone a top-10 player and superstar. The third leading scorer was Kyle Lowry, who again wasn’t a superstar. Instead, offering elite defence, playmaking and tertiary scoring. Marc Gasol and Danny Green rounded out the starting five as high-quality role players, and the Raptors often used an 8-man rotation with Serge Ibaka, Fred Van Vleet and Norman Powell coming off the bench.

At the time, superteams were built around star talent in the starting lineup and hoping to find enough quality bench minutes to give the starters rest. The 2019 Philadelphia 76ers arguably had the best starting five in basketball, but were playing James Ennis and Mike Scott 38 minutes per game off the bench against the Raptors. What separated the Raptors was the fact that they had eight high-quality NBA players, all eight arguably being top-100 players in the league at the time.

Fast-forward to 2025, and our two finalists have followed the same model as the 2019 Raptors. The 2025 Thunder’s offensive engine is Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, with Jalen Williams as a quality second option who isn’t a Top-15 player. Chet Holmgren fills the Kyle Lowry role as a versatile third scoring option, while Isaiah Hartenstein and Lu Dort are high-quality starters akin to Marc Gasol and Danny Green. And similar to the Raptors, the Thunder have a nine-man rotation with supercharged role players Alex Caruso, Cason Wallace, Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins.

Similarly, the Pacers have Tyrese Haliburton as a superstar offensive hub, while Pascal Siakam is playing the same role for Indiana now that he played for the Raptors in 2019. Myles Turner is this team’s Kyle Lowry, Aaron Nesmith and Andrew Nembhard are high-level starters, and Indiana, like the Raptors then, has one of the best three-man benches in the league with Bennedict Mathurin, Obi Toppin and T.J. McConnell.

Nearly every champion this decade has been built in a similar mould to the 2019 Raptors. Each team with a superstar, a secondary option, and a two-way versatile third scoring option and high-level starters alongside them. Listed out, it looks like:

Superstar and offensive engine (Kawhi Leonard):

2021 Bucks: Giannis Antetokounmpo

2022 Warriors: Stephen Curry

2023 Nuggets: Nikola Jokic

2024 Celtics: Jayson Tatum

High-level second option who isn’t a superstar (Pascal Siakam):

2021 Bucks: Khris Middleton

2022 Warriors: Klay Thompson

2023 Nuggets: Jamal Murray

2024 Celtics: Jaylen Brown^

Two-way third option (Kyle Lowry):

2021 Bucks: Jrue Holiday

2022 Warriors: Andrew Wiggins

2023 Nuggets: Aaron Gordon

2024 Celtics: Derrick White

Elite role-playing starters (Marc Gasol and Danny Green):

2021 Bucks: Brook Lopez and P.J. Tucker

2022 Warriors: Draymond Green and Kevon Looney

2023 Nuggets: Michael Porter Jr. and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope

2024 Celtics: Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis (when healthy)

Starter quality bench players:

2021 Bucks: Bobby Portis and Pat Connaughton

2022 Warriors: Jordan Poole, Gary Payton II and Otto Porter Jr.

2023 Nuggets: Bruce Brown, Jeff Green and Christian Braun

2024 Celtics: Al Horford, Sam Hauser and Payton Pritchard

^ A case could be made that Jaylen Brown is a superstar player, but when comparing to past superteams, he is closer to the Pascal Siakam level of player than a 2016 Kyrie Irving or 2011-12 Dwyane Wade.

The lone championship team since the 2019 Raptors that doesn’t fit this mould is the 2020 Los Angeles Lakers, who never had a clear third scoring option and Anthony Davis certainly qualifies as a second superstar. However, that team also won during the COVID bubble after a long layoff, which is the all-time anomaly occurrence that we will (hopefully) never see again.

The league has firmly transitioned away from the superteam era into the weakest link era. Depth is more important than ever, even at the expense of elite second and third options. In the moment, the 2019 Raptors were seen as the lucky beneficiaries of a Kevin Durant injury that ended the superteam Warriors; however, with each passing year, it’s clear that the Raptors were trailblazers in roster construction and have quietly become the model for championship teams.

Kurt Cobain once said that when Nirvana wrote Smells Like Teen Spirit, he was “basically trying to rip off the Pixies” and that Surfer Rosa was one of his foremost musical influences. Surfer Rosa went Gold, selling 100,000+ copies and Smells Like Teen Spirit went diamond, selling 10,000,000+ copies. Sometimes in life, being the trailblazer doesn’t pay. For the Raptors, the 2019 team may get lost to history, while the teams they influenced go down as all-time greats – such is life. Let the record show, though: the 2019 Toronto Raptors shaped the current generation of roster building in the NBA.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/6/2/...acers-raptors-championship-kawhi-siakam-lowry
 
Listing everything I would give up for Giannis to come to Toronto

NBA: Playoffs-Milwaukee Bucks at Indiana Pacers

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

As a Toronto Raptors fan, here is everything I would or wouldn’t give up to have the Greek Freak come play here.

Trade talks are too much about money, we need to start getting the fans involved. As a community, we need to be able to sacrifice stuff if we so choose to have a good basketball team. Logical, right? If I am willing to give it up, why shouldn’t it count?

The Toronto Raptors and Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo have been paired together in various trade whispers over the past few weeks. Here is everything I am willing to personally sacrifice (or not) for the Greek Freak to come play for the Raptors.

What I am willing to give up for Giannis:​

  • 5 hot days of the summer: only if they are replaced with crisp spring days, where you need a hoodie but aren’t cold, you know?
  • 2-hour TTC free transfers: Good basketball requires sacrifice, and I rarely have the patience to take the TTC twice in two hours anyway.
  • Sneaking onto the GO Train or Streetcar: Look, I would pay for the GO Train more if 1) the service was better and 2) I was taking it to see Giannis every night.
  • King West: I feel like I don’t hit the level of attractiveness needed to be accepted by the King West faithful.
  • Cactus Club: I’ve never been there, anyway.
  • Shake Shack: LOOK, this is a huge personal sacrifice given we JUST got it here, but for Giannis...
  • The joy of hearing the knife-sharpening truck come down my street: Idk if this is too East-End specific or not, but I LOVE the knife-sharpening truck lol
  • The Dairy Queen on Broadview St.: it’s too tempting anyway.
  • Lining up for random stuff: Toronto loves to line up for free stuff, but I would gladly save my legs to cheer Giannis on in Jurassic Park instead.
  • The Well: I’m too poot for that place anyway.
  • Drake: Team DeMar, that’s all.

Things I WILL NOT give up for Giannis:​

  • The Patios that go into the street: Life-changing aspect to Toronto life.
  • Greektown: Giannis needs somewhere to eat, and I am willing to take him on a hop down the Danforth on a search for the best Gyro wrap.
  • Bike Lanes: I enjoy public infrastructure and a safe biking culture.
  • Shanghai 360: Feeding me on Raptors game days about 60% of the time. I don’t want to starve.
  • Thrift Stores: But we need to stop charging more than $20 for items, it’s getting egregious.
  • Being able to claim SGA as our own: Hamilton is the 905 and not the 416, but I will claim SGA every day for the rest of time. Close enough.
  • Drinking in public parks: It’s a vibe, and cheap. Sorry Giannis.
  • Uber Eats: I hate cooking, it’s really that simple.
  • The ice cream truck that’s always at the park (no matter what park): Nothing says summer like a post-run twist cone, and I will not give that up for you, Greek Freak.
  • Caribana: Gradey Dick would never recover and neither would I.

Source: https://www.raptorshq.com/2025/6/4/24443088/giannis-toronto-raptors-trade-rumors-bucks
 
Back
Top