Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117)

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Grade the offseason

A
0
No votes
A-
3
8%
B+
5
13%
B
6
15%
B-
3
8%
C+
9
23%
C
5
13%
C-
6
15%
D
1
3%
F
1
3%
 
Total votes: 39

HartfordWhalers
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Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#1 » by HartfordWhalers » Fri Aug 11, 2017 3:58 pm

Toronto Offseason Review

Key Losses:
Cory Joseph
Patrick Patterson

Losses:
DeMarre Carroll
PJ Tucker

Draft:
#23 O G Anunoby

Trades:
Jeff Weltman (FO) for 2018 2nd from Orlando (worst of Orlando and LAL 2nd)
Hamilton for Carroll, '18 1st (lotto protected through '23, if not 2nd), '18 2nd (see above)
Corey Joseph to Indiana for rights to Emir Preldzic (not technically a S&T for CJ Miles)

Free Agency:
Lowry 3/100m
Ibaka 3/65m
C.J. Miles 3/25
Anunoby rookie scale
Alfonzo McKinnie 2 year min contract (100k gtd)
Kennedy Meeks 1 year min
Malcolm Miller two-way contract.
Lorenzo Brown two-way contract.

Current Depth Chart: (taken from bbinsiders)
PG: Kyle Lowry, Delon Wright, Fred VanVleet
SG: DeMar DeRozan, Norman Powell
SF: C.J. Miles, Bruno Caboclo, OG Anunoby, Alfonzo McKinnie
PF: Serge Ibaka, Pascal Siakam
C: Jonas Valanciunas, Lucas Nogueira, Jakob Poeltl, Kennedy Meeks


HartfordWhalers wrote:HartfordWhalers Review

Key Losses:
Cory Joseph
Patrick Patterson
Also DeMarre Carroll
But not PJ Tucker

Deciding who was a key loss and who was just a loss for Toronto was one of the tougher choices across the board I have seen doing these. So, a quick word on how I pick them. It is about what a player has brought to a team, and not so much a statement on what they will do going forward elsewhere (Amir Johnson was an example of this, to some Celtic fans chagrin). And it absolutely matters if that production is replicable by someone else or not; if the slack will be immediately picked up internally then it is hard to call it a key loss. Also, not all key losses are a bad thing, sometimes you need to make those choices for one reason or another.

Looking at minutes per game, here is who Toronto lost:
DeMarre Carroll 26.1 (4th on team)
P.J. Tucker 25.4 (6th on team)
Cory Joseph 25.0 (7th on team)
Patrick Patterson 24.6 (8th on team)

Alternatively, looking at total minutes played here is who Toronto lost:
Cory Joseph 2003 (4th on team)
DeMarre Carroll 1882 (5th on team)
Patrick Patterson 1599 (6th on team)
P.J. Tucker 609 (13th on team)

Tucker I ruled out from being a key loss on the lack of volume during the regular season to get Toronto to where they were, especially considering the playoffs didn't have any further success. Tucker didn't offer a unique skill set such that between Miles and Carroll (yes I know he is gone), Tucker was very replicable.

Joseph seemed the opposite and thus the most clearly a key loss to me. He soaked up the most minutes overall, and the drop off is to a very young and unproven backup pg (FVF or Wright). While not an efficient scorer, Joseph was the type of guy you could count on to not cost you games, and sending him out for what ultimately became Emir Preldzic's rights seems a poor use of assets.

Patterson snuck into the key losses due to his ability to space the floor alone, and offensive versatility for a team that lacked that and relied primarily on mid range scoring. Yes, technically Tucker's 40% 3 point shooting was better than Patterson's 37%, but Tucker's was a small sample and career outlier. Carroll actually hit slightly more 3's a game, but at a much lower 34% rate.

Carroll is still a plus defender who has the type of body that you want to match up against Lebron as a big sf grown into the pf position. That alone seems like something worth keeping if you are trying to get out of the East. Who will guard Lebron now? I don't like the options nearly as much when looking at: DeMar DeRozan, Norman Powell, C.J. Miles and Serge Ibaka. OG Anunoby as a rookie might be the best bet which stresses the issue nicely. If Tucker were still there, he would be a decent option (after all, no one is a Lebron stopper) and maybe then Carroll might not be a key loss. But losing both of the players made one a key loss for me. And Carroll hitting 1.5 3's a game (4th on team on season, 3rd if you discount Ross as he was gone) helped provide some spacing even if it at 34% it isn't the best offensive option.

Losses:
See above

Draft:
I'm sure this pick is liked elsewhere, but I'm skeptical. Here is what I said pre-draft when he was getting debated at the back end of the lottery and if not the high teens:

When you combine the injury with questions about what his game/position really are it doesn't shock me. There is the pesky fact that he cannot even hit a ft consistently in two years and shot poorly from 3 his second year in more shots, and then suddenly that small sample freshman year shooting from 3 looks like a mirage and you have a guy with a broken shot and bad results. Add in no handle, bad passing skills,and you have a pf/sf tweener that can guard the perimeter but cannot score from either place necessarily in the NBA, and doesn't rebound like a pf either. And guarding the perimeter relies on athleticism that a year long injury might impact.

The safe outcome of OG is an energy bench tweener that is similar to a Quincy Acy type and just not all that incredibly valuable. Maybe thats too harsh, I like Acy more than most, so a Harkless or Aminu, but without the outside shooting.

Yeah, I'm fine with OG falling although if someone wants to take the flip side and argue that he could be the next Kawhi and just needs his shot entirely different I will listen.

OG seems like a guy that should get picked at 27-30 to me, and everyone will call it a steal for the Spurs.


Normally I like to pitch an alternative pick, but at #23 it felt like everyone had flaws. So, my pitch is doing a Carroll deal with #23 instead of the '18 1st. Maybe that gets rejected. Maybe it requires a ton of 2nds added to do it. But I'm not convinced in the pick anymore than I am that Semi Ojeleye wouldn't have been an equal pick and was available 10 picks later. And Philly was trying to trade up with their 2nds before using the OKC 1st to do so. So a trade s what I would have liked.

Trades:
A very nice 2nd from Orlando for a front office guy must fans have never known about feels a nice move. It is lessened by not being able to trade with Orlando for a year however. What if a Vucevic for Val deal were to make sense? Still, that seems a small fault on a nice win.

I loved the Carroll deal for the Nets and hated it for Toronto (and for Sac and Indy and everyone else that didn't do it but should have). Carroll still can play. Moving him just to clear tax room will always feel like a basketball loss. But sometimes you win on finances and have to take that as ownership has goals that need to be taken into account. But did Toronto do that?

Toronto had to make tough choices and they picked:
Lowry 31m a year = yes
Ibaka 21.6m a year = yes
Carroll 15m a year = no to the tune of a 1st and a 2nd and eating 3m in deadweight
Miles 8.3m a year = yes
Tucker 8m a year = no
Joseph 7.6m a year = no
Patterson 5.5m a year = no

To rearrange what Toronto did requires either:
1) Pay the tax
2) Not keeping one of Lowry/Ibaka
3) Still dumping Carroll

Lets look at actually paying the tax. Keeping Carroll would have been 6m more salary than bringing in Miles and stretching Hamilton next season, so we are talking about 9.25m in tax plus the lost payouts.
If Toronto had dumped #23 and Bruno, in favor of two rookie minimum salaries they would have shaved 2.4m off that 6m and be down to ~5.5m in luxury tax. And trading #23 and Bruno for 2nds/cash could have brought in cash to cut that further.
If you are bringing back Lowry and Ibaka at top dollar, I wouldn't cheap out the way they did versus just keeping Carroll. An extra playoff round could make up the lost money and you only have so many windows to sneak into a Finals loss to the Warriors.

Barring that, how much worse would it have been to keep Carroll and Patterson and the 1st and the early 2nd and let Ibaka walk? I'm thinking thats my second choice. Toronto is the new Atlanta, a 45-50 win team that won't ultimately get anywhere and needs to figure out how long it can hold that plateau before descending and how best to leverage their older players as they leave. Getting thin and expensive and giving up a future pick seems like it is setting up for a less than graceful fall.

Along those lines, getting nothing for Joseph seems suboptimal. Was there really no team that would have given a 2nd and cap space? Maybe not but it feels like there should have been. Unfortunately Toronto really financially boxed themselves into all these decisions and had to take the best salary dump they could find on moving over 22m in salary for just next year. Thats never going to be easy.

But they didn't resolve it long term either. The team just feels older, thinner and more reliant on suddely very expensive Lowry/Derozan/Ibaka. When Powell is a free agent what do they do?

Free Agency:
Covered already, but Toronto looks perfect for leaving as GM. Superficially fine but capped out, aging, and already being forced to make tough decisions and declining as a result most likely.

Either staying the course more expensively or starting to blow it up made more sense to me, but they stayed close to what has worked. Without Lowry the team would be in an entirely different space, and that did feel premature. Still, I would be putting out Lowry trade feelers in December even.

Current Depth Chart: (taken from bbinsiders)

Needs:
Everything to break perfect in the playoffs so they can sneak further
Jonas to look good
OG Anunoby to look solid and keep the cheap talent influx incoming
A long term plan

Additional Thoughts:
This review felt particularly negative for a team that brought back its two best free agents at deals that were reasonable even if a lot of money, and managed to achieve their financial goals. Toronto has been masterful in a lot of moves so maybe the need for a move in the future isn't as bad as I think it is, Lowry ages gracefully and Ibaka reverses his steady decline.

I try to include a trade in each of these, and here I'm going to go for chaos:
Lowry and Valanciunas for Drummond, Jackson and Johnson
~43m going each way, with each team shaking it up.

Projected Win/Loss: 46-38 Maybe too pessimistic but maybe not?

Off-Season Grade:C- This felt exactly like a C-.


Slava wrote:Slava’s Toronto Raptors Review

Key Losses:

Patrick Patterson
PJ Tucker

Patterson will be missed here. He ranked 9th amongst PFs in RPM last season and featured in 3 out of the Raptors’ 5 best line ups by net rating for 5 man units with at least 50 minutes of run in the regular season.

Tucker played himself into a very good contract and likely a better situation in Houston so it was unlikely Toronto could afford to bring him back either while also paying Lowry and Ibaka. Toronto would be hoping that Siakam, Nogueira etc can step into the void left at the back up PF minutes when Ibaka slides to center and more likely Anunoby will be groomed into it as well.

Losses:

Corey Joseph
DeMarre Carroll

Tucker was brought in to replace the role expected of Carroll, which he did with much élan. Health not permitting Carroll never got going in Toronto, so with the cash squeeze, the salary dump was inevitable.

The loss of Joseph leaves them a little light at back up PG, especially with Lowry getting older and having a knack for picking up a niggling injury or two late in the season but they have Wright who Casey may or may not trust and he also made a statement about running Derozan at back up PG, which seems ill-advised to say the least but the idea appears to be to round out a 3 guard rotation between DD/Lowry and Powell to shoulder the bulk of the burden at the two guard spots.

Draft:

I love the Anunoby pick and he was probably my favorite non-lottery prospect in this draft. If not for the ACL tear he might have gone much higher. He has the fleetness of a wing and the frame of a PF which likely enables him to be an absolutely ideal fit as a difference maker in modern NBA defensive schemes. His shot is a work in progress and that will likely determine the level of playing time he will receive in his rookie year but if long term health is not an issue he will turn into a much envied asset around the league.

It would however be imperative that he doesn’t show any long term effects of the ACL surgery as Toronto has a pick going out to Brooklyn next year and no very good means of adding to their reserves at least for a year into their 3 year window.

Trades:

I never understand why organizations would trade picks for an executive who is not even a GM or a coach so Toronto did well to produce a minor asset out of thin air here.

Raptors did reasonably well to get out of Carroll’s contract with the luxury tax squeeze after paying their starting back court and Ibaka with a lotto protected 1st and a 2nd. I’m just surprised it happened with the Nets after Ujiri’s famous “**** Brooklyn” episode. So cheers to professionalism.

I would have thought an asset would be required to dump the ~$15M owed on Joseph so that was a good deal as well.

Free Agency:

It kind of became logical to pay Lowry after paying Derozan last summer. Ujiri did quite well to keep the contract length at 3 years and not gamble on Lowry’s health and motivation well into his 30s.

Same with Ibaka here, albeit a little younger (atleast on paper) he was showing more signs of wear and tear from his lofty status as a stretch 4 who was also an absolute terror on defense in his prime. He should still have enough left in the tank for 3 good quality years and eventually make a move to full time center.

CJ Miles is a good pick up as well as the starting 3 to space around DD isos or Lowry/Ibaka pick and pops. More importantly the contract duration lines up with their timeline.

Current Depth Chart: (taken from bbinsiders)

The 2nd unit looks kind of shaky. In line up sans Lowry last season, the Raptors were 6.5 pts per 100 possessions worse off on offense and 1.6 worse off on defense. Now with the loss of some experienced depth, expect that gap to widen. Line ups with DD as the nominal PG could do even worse.

Needs:

Good health for Lowry, Anunoby and Ibaka
An inevitable trade for one or both young centers to replenish the depth
Some reliable production from the reserve unit

Additional Thoughts:

You kind of get the feeling that Ujiri has chosen to tread water owing to lack of any other options. A tear down rebuild was not an avenue, having given a massive contract to Derozan and the extremely loyal fan adulation and involvement they receive each year from playoff runs. They would need a break to make the conference finals as I think they are not better than either Cleveland or Boston as presently constructed. With a couple of breaks going the other way, Wiazards might have their number and Spoelstra might be able to out coach Casey in the playoffs with a lesser talented roster.

Projected Win/Loss: 49-33

Kevin Pelton wasn’t very kind to them but I’ll be more generous. Playing in the morass of the East, they should be able to pad the wins.

Off-Season Grade: B+

Getting a Valanciunas trade done with someone like Atlanta or Chicago would have helped push this even higher.


bondom34 wrote:Bondom34's Review

Key Losses/Losses:
Patterson and Tucker will hurt a bit to me, Joseph is replaceable. I do think the defense takes a bit of a hit here, but Wright seems pretty ready for bigger minutes. I question wing defense a good bit, and I'm not sure the big rotation is good enough defensively right now.

Draft:
If he's healthy OG could be a help toward previously mentioned wing defense, but the question is how much a rook can handle and if he's healthy. I like the pick though, good pick up and good value.

Trades:
Miles to me was a good get given Joseph was no longer needed, should be a solid starter even though not spectacular. They also did a good job of moving some money they just couldn't handle any more with Carroll and given how poorly he played at times, I like the move for them as well.

Free Agency:
I'm not going to lie, I thought both Ibaka and Lowry would have gotten longer deals than this so in that regard I absolutely love both of these deals for the Raps. Kept the core but didn't lock it up for the full 4 or 5 years. Miles as stated earlier was a good get too, I was overall really pleasantly surprised how well all these did.

Needs:
Another defensive big (maybe a Val trade?) and maybe a wing defender if OG's not ready just yet.

Additional Thoughts:
I thought they did a really solid job of not using up too much long term cash and shedding enough salary to make this offseason a full success. I think some of the losses will certainly hurt and do actually expect a slight step back, but given track record I could see Ujiri pulling a move to improve this roster to where it was a year ago. I have to think Val is gone at some point, and the really could use a defender at the 4/5 after Ibaka and maybe an extra wing who's reliable right now. This offseason wasn't a full on success to me, but it was better than average and very solid.

Projected Win/Loss:48-34

Off-Season Grade: B


cl2117 wrote:cl2117’s Toronto Raptors Review

Key Losses:
Patrick Patterson
DeMarre Carroll

Splitting the "key losses" and the "losses" was indeed hard for the Raptors. I put them into 2 categories.

Depth loss: Patterson (key),Joeseph
Asset loss: Carroll (key), Tucker

Patterson ends up being the key depth loss because, unless they are projecting a much larger jump for Siakam than I am, they've got a hole for themselves at PF with his departure. It's also a more painful loss because of what a reasonable deal he ended up signing. His defensive versatility and shooting will be missed (particularly if Siakam steps into his minutes).

For the asset loss it goes to Carroll. Having to give up a first and a 2nd to get out of the rest of his contract stings. Particularly because it could be argued that he is a key on court loss as well given what he brought defensively in a conference that goes through LeBron. How frequently to do you have to pay to dump a key on court player? He will be replaced by CJ Miles though, which is why I still class it as an asset loss as opposed to depth loss, but both may be apt.

Losses:
Cory Joseph
PJ Tucker

I have Cory Joeseph as just a loss as opposed to a key loss since Delon Wright seems poised to take over as a backup PG. I think that's a downgrade, but not huge. The big thing is what will happen if Lowry misses time. I think then it changes the complexion of Joeseph's loss as Wright will struggle with heavy minutes and they've no depth.

Tucker just wasn't around long enough to be a key loss. They paid the price of a rental for him and he ended up being one.

Draft:

I think OG is a really good value pick at #23. It's unfortunate that he may miss significant time next season because I think his defense could actually be incredibly useful in the wake of Demarre's departure. I think his defensive potential is really appealing and love his athleticism, but if I had one criticism it's that I don't like his ceiling based off his offensive limitations.

I don't think that's a knock on the pick because they're picking at #23 and there aren't too many obvious high-ceiling prospects available that aren't also lottery tickets. But my concern for the Raptors is trying to identify how they'd take the next step as a team after now committing all this money to bring their guys back. It's going to have to be through the draft most likely and that'll require taking some risks.

Trades:

I love FO trades, especially when you're on the receiving end of the assets.

I'm surprised they couldn't get more for Cory. I know moving him was necessary for their other moves, but surely 2nds and space was a possibility? I think Joseph could be on the Pat Beverly level of backup PGs with a floor of competent backup.

I don't like the DMC trade for the Raps. As I said in the losses, it just feels like a really bad situation where you're paying to dump a guy who can actually contribute for you. I know that he was falling out of the rotation and it might have been the prudent organizational move to just move on, but that just makes the value feel particularly poor.

Free Agency:
Before I criticize what they did in FA, I'd like to point out that I don't really have an alternative solution that is guaranteed to make them better now or in the future.

At the end of the day they spent $165m to bring back Ibaka and Lowry and have the same exact core as last year. That feels like moving towards the treadmill. Hard ceiling barring a Cinderella story run through the playoffs, not many young assets that look like they'll break out to take them to the next level, no pick next year.

I don't mind the Lowry or Ibaka deals at all. I like that they're 3 years to increase flexibility. I just don't think it's done anything other than maintain the status quo while losing future assets (DMC deal, Joseph).

CJ Miles is a nice pickup at the price they got him, but the round robin of dumping DMC and moving Joseph makes it feel like they actually didn't add much if anything in the grand scheme of things.

I don't take umbrage with any of the deals, but wonder whether maintaining the course they're on was the best decision.

Current Depth Chart: (taken from bbinsiders)
Depth feels like a strong word.

Needs:
OG to really outperform expectations
Kyrie to be dealt out West
To make a call on their future before they board the treadmill

The biggest takeaway for me from their off-season is that they've put themselves in a spot where they have very few avenues to drastically improve. OG is a good value pick, but not likely to be a breakout player. They need him to buck those odds because I just don't see many other options for them to get better than last year's squad.

On the plus side for the Raps the Kyrie drama has really saved them to some extent in my eyes. They seemed like a team that can't get out of the ECF in the best case scenario, but now that the Cavs may become more vulnerable than ever they still have a puncher's chance of going further. I think they're still on the level of the Wiz and C's, but just can't see them getting past last year's version of the Cavs. Kyrie moving changes all of that and potentially validates bringing the gang back for another go rather than moving towards a rebuild/reload strategy.

That reprieve may only be brief though. I think they've taken a step back after this summer so even though they may still be competitive with the C's and Wiz, how long that will last is debatable. They need a clear path to follow for a post-LeBron world.

Additional Thoughts:
I think the Cavs drama benefits the Raps the most in the East. Everyone has a better chance at knocking them off, but the C's are going to get flack for not making a move for PG/Butler now that Cleveland is mortal, whereas the Raptors get an improved chance of advancing in this year's playoffs without having improved their team.

Projected Win/Loss: 48-36

I think they take a step back after last year. Injuries are going to show holes in their depth, but when healthy they'll still be at the top of the East.

Off-Season Grade: C-

I think the did slightly worse than maintaining the status quo. The fact that they had to give up future assets just to rearrange a roster that isn't much better is what gets them the minus as opposed to a straight C.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#2 » by Rapcity_11 » Fri Aug 11, 2017 4:36 pm

I've noticed a pattern with pretty much all Raptors previews in that people don't realize that the current team is better than both:

A) The team pre-Ibaka and Tucker trades
B) The team post trades but with Lowry hurt

Obviously they're weaker as a full roster playoff team. But these slightly pessimistic win totals make little sense, considering the state of the East. Less than 50 wins as a projection doesn't make sense to me.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#3 » by Troubadour » Fri Aug 11, 2017 4:42 pm

I liked the off-season given the limitations we had. Getting CJ Miles was a great surprise. Elevating Norman Powell makes me feel a lot better about the contract he's about to get.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#4 » by loserX » Fri Aug 11, 2017 4:52 pm

This was a tricky one for me to assess. But here goes:

Best move: bringing back franchise player Kyle Lowry...and on a 3-year deal. Lowry is the best player on an upper-tier EC team and a local hero; it was not so long ago that a team outside the US couldn't even dream of signing a player of this calibre. And they did it *without* getting pinned to a 5-year max that would have hamstrung the team for a couple of mega-buck years at the end. Great move that will make the fans happy on all fronts.

Worst move: I guess letting Patterson walk, given that he only ended up getting the MLE. If he would have taken that deal from TO, they should have kept him, especially with Ibaka moving to C. (It's possible that he wouldn't have, of course.)

That's what made this difficult; I actually liked each of their moves in a vacuum. Bringing back Ibaka and Lowry on 3-year deals? Great job. Saving a kajillion dollars on tax by dumping Carroll? He wasn't worth it, so made sense. Drafting Anunoby to replace him? Risky yet sensible. Dumping a redundant CoJo and using the savings to sign CJ Miles? I liked that parlay too.

And yet the summer somehow ends up being less than the sum of its parts. This is a win-now team that instead of improving decided to basically run it back, but cheaper, and turn some key roles over to prospects who may not be ready. Is that a great offseason?

Their bench is loaded with risk; I'd like to see at least one more trade where an extra centre is moved to shore up other positions with someone more reliable, starting at PF.

I guess I'll give the team a B for getting all the big stuff right. But their position is a lot more precarious than it was.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#5 » by Trader_Joe » Fri Aug 11, 2017 6:45 pm

I am more with HW on this.

I think they had some key losses (to a certain extent) in Joseph, PP, Tucker, DMC .and it seems each loss was done to save money (assuming they had a chance to resign PP or Tucker)

They did keep Lowry, despite a scare they might not, so I give them credit there. As for keeping Ibaka, I'm not sure where he would have gone if not Toronto and I'm not sure he's the difference maker he once was or best fit next to JV as he might be best at C these days. They also showed they are in cost-cutting/avoiding mode with the Joseph and Carroll dumps, which might be a disappointment to the fans.

They look to be stuck on the treadmill unless Powell explodes or OG and other young guys develop quickly and better than expected.
It will be interesting to see what they do with JV, if anything. I also think the bench needs more proven players. I think this team is closer to setting up for the next rebuild than they are contending, and I think this season in particular will decide their course of action.

C- for me.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#6 » by ill-Will03 » Fri Aug 11, 2017 7:36 pm

I think Toronto is a far better team to start this season as they were when they started last season. We needed to give our young guys minutes to see what we have in them instead of letting them just expire on the bench. We're hoping for big strides from Paskal, Jak and Delon and from FIBA and summer league they look to have all improved quite a bit.

We essentially have the same team but got a legit PF this time and we got playing time to let Norm loose, which I believe is a win in itself.

overall id say B+
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#7 » by GeorgeMarcus » Fri Aug 11, 2017 8:05 pm

No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#8 » by Duffman100 » Fri Aug 11, 2017 8:30 pm

SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.


Having someone like Miles who can actually hit shots and giving more time to Powell should be a boost.

But our bench is very young and unproven. Counting on a jump from Powell and that Wright, Siakam and Poeltl become solid bench players for 82 games. Tough.

I see us from 46-52. The East is really bad.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#9 » by Mystical Apples » Fri Aug 11, 2017 8:40 pm

Quality depth and multi-position players are underrated components of regular season success. Lowry's age and redundancy at center are issues too (limiting Ibaka's flexibility).

D / 45 wins / 6th EC
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#10 » by SmartWentCrazy » Fri Aug 11, 2017 9:05 pm

I gave them a C+.

I like the length of both the Ibaka and Lowry deals. I liked the Carroll trade, as I think he's pretty close to being kicked. I disliked making the Carroll trade while simultaneously letting both Patterson and Tucker walk.

Overall, their talent level is worse to begin this season than it was to end last season. I can't give a good grade to a team that got worse while still looking to compete now.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#11 » by LiSTWithLani » Sat Aug 12, 2017 4:56 pm

SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.

I think that we're talking about how we started last season.
Our Roster was (If I'm not mistaken):

Valanciunas/ Poeltl/ Noguiera
Siakam/ Patterson
Carroll/ Ross/ Caboclo
DeRozan/ Powell
Lowry/ Joseph/ Wright/ Van Vleet

vs:

Valanciunas/ Poeltl/ Noguiera
Ibaka/ Siakam/ Caboclo
Miles/ Anunoby/ Meeks
DeRozan/ Powell/ McKinnie
Lowry/ Wright/ Van Vleet

We are so young on the bench, Casey failed to play our young guys substantial minutes for years, it's time to see what we've got in them.
Patt/ Carroll were let downs. Joseph was good for us, but his replacement was behind him all along and PJ was only with us for a few months, but the toughest loss IMO.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#12 » by HartfordWhalers » Sat Aug 12, 2017 5:20 pm

lstern wrote:
SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.

I think that we're talking about how we started last season.
Our Roster was (If I'm not mistaken):

Valanciunas/ Poeltl/ Noguiera
Siakam/ Patterson
Carroll/ Ross/ Caboclo
DeRozan/ Powell
Lowry/ Joseph/ Wright/ Van Vleet

vs:

Valanciunas/ Poeltl/ Noguiera
Siakam/ Meeks/ Caboclo
Miles/ Anunoby/ McKinnie
DeRozan/ Powell
Lowry/ Wright/ Van Vleet

We are so young on the bench, Casey failed to play our young guys substantial minutes for years, it's time to see what we've got in them.
Patt/ Carroll were let downs. Joseph was good for us, but his replacement was behind him all along and PJ was only with us for a few months, but the toughest loss IMO.


You skipped Ibaka!

The season starting to season starting difference basically comes down to:

Ibaka/Miles/Anunoby/Wright versus
Patterson/Carroll/Ross/Joseph

I might still have the second batch. I'm going to need some convincing.

Carroll beat Miles in RPM and BPM (where Miles is negative). I have Carroll as the better player, and for all the talk of Carroll is done, Miles is just half a year younger. And a worse player.

So, I don't have Ibaka > Patterson by more than Joseph > Wright (or FVF because I'm nto convinced this is Wright's), Carrol > Miles, and Ross > OG

Granted its not a lot worse, but I think it is worse even than the start of last season.


So...
Toronto end of last season >> Toronto start of last season >= Toronto start of this season

Which doesn't want to make me grade higher than a C-, especially when the team surrendered a future 1st and a high 2nd and took on a stretched 1m a year for 2 more years to get back to there. But they were in an incredibly tough spot and that goes into the grade ad is why it was not worse.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#13 » by RonaldArtest » Sat Aug 12, 2017 10:05 pm

Trader_Joe wrote:I am more with HW on this.

I think they had some key losses (to a certain extent) in Joseph, PP, Tucker, DMC .and it seems each loss was done to save money (assuming they had a chance to resign PP or Tucker)

They did keep Lowry, despite a scare they might not, so I give them credit there. As for keeping Ibaka, I'm not sure where he would have gone if not Toronto and I'm not sure he's the difference maker he once was or best fit next to JV as he might be best at C these days. They also showed they are in cost-cutting/avoiding mode with the Joseph and Carroll dumps, which might be a disappointment to the fans.

They look to be stuck on the treadmill unless Powell explodes or OG and other young guys develop quickly and better than expected.
It will be interesting to see what they do with JV, if anything. I also think the bench needs more proven players. I think this team is closer to setting up for the next rebuild than they are contending, and I think this season in particular will decide their course of action.

C- for me.

Regarding the players lost:

It was believed that the offer to Tucker was a higher dollar amount than what he eventually agreed to. Although the tax situation might make that a moot point. So an effort was made to retain, he simply chose another opportunity.

I think shedding Carroll was certainly based around money saving, but his level of play almost definitely was a factor. A big disappointment on both sides of the floor, and there have been moments where cohesion (or lack thereof) with his teammates was pretty evident. Moving him for a 1st around the 20-24 range is the price you pay for correcting a mistake, but the team is better off for Masai making this move. Both financially and on the court, as Powell is well deserving of more PT, and Miles is a better spot up 3-pt option.

Patterson, who knows? There could've been concerns about his health. He wasn't dialed in this past season, and never capitalized on his opportunity to be the teams starting PF.

Joseph slightly regressed in some areas last season, but to his credit stepped up when Lowry was injured. Wright is a capable back up PG who might surprise this year. Losing Joseph might've been a deal made for financial savings, but it's also because the front office probably don't think the drop off from CoJo to Wright is that drastic.

Not only did they retain Lowry and Ibaka, they're both on short team-friendly 3 year deals. Gives the team a window now, but doesn't cripple them in 4-5 years down the line.

And drafting OG should turn out to be one of the steals of the draft. I think the grade should be B to B+, given the situation heading into the offseason with all the question marks, and where they're at right now. 45-50+ wins shouldn't be difficult for this team.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#14 » by dalton749 » Sat Aug 12, 2017 11:11 pm

I'm expecting somewhere in the 52 wins range.

I think many people are forgetting that we have yet to see a healthy Lowry play with ibaka in the lineup, so that should essentially be seen as an offseason addition.

Losing the corpse of Carroll should be seen as a plus, and miles can replace most of what Ross used to provide.

The key thing here is that Powell will finally be getting big minutes, and that's a huge win. A core of Lowry/derozan/Powell/ibaka is good enough to beat up on a weak east.

I also think delon wright will show to be an improvement over Joseph through out the season. Toronto loves the two pg lineups, and wright has the size to effectively defend shooting guards, as well as the play making ability to allow Lowry to play off ball, where he is very effective.

Siakam might be the X factor on this team. If he can replace a decent amount of what Patterson provided, Toronto will battle for the 1 seed again.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#15 » by Troubadour » Mon Aug 14, 2017 3:42 pm

SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.


Addition by subtraction with Powell over Carroll. Miles can actually shoot.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#16 » by Rapcity_11 » Mon Aug 14, 2017 4:46 pm

SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.


The East is clearly worse. There's like 7 teams that the top teams in the East should beat every time.

Orlando
Brooklyn
Indiana
Chicago
New York
Atlanta
Philly (if and when Embiid misses time)

Also, see my post above.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#17 » by giberish » Mon Aug 14, 2017 4:48 pm

Rapcity_11 wrote:I've noticed a pattern with pretty much all Raptors previews in that people don't realize that the current team is better than both:

A) The team pre-Ibaka and Tucker trades
B) The team post trades but with Lowry hurt

Obviously they're weaker as a full roster playoff team. But these slightly pessimistic win totals make little sense, considering the state of the East. Less than 50 wins as a projection doesn't make sense to me.


You're assuming that Lowry is back - and back playing at the level of a top-10 player in the league. That was the key to Toronto's strong start. They currently have the same forward depth problem they had to start the season while Lowry is another year older coming off an injury. If Lowry is just back to being very good but still a clear step down from last year then they're worse then the early season team - and don't have the flexibility to improve the roster mid-season.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#18 » by Rapcity_11 » Mon Aug 14, 2017 4:52 pm

giberish wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:I've noticed a pattern with pretty much all Raptors previews in that people don't realize that the current team is better than both:

A) The team pre-Ibaka and Tucker trades
B) The team post trades but with Lowry hurt

Obviously they're weaker as a full roster playoff team. But these slightly pessimistic win totals make little sense, considering the state of the East. Less than 50 wins as a projection doesn't make sense to me.


You're assuming that Lowry is back - and back playing at the level of a top-10 player in the league. That was the key to Toronto's strong start. They currently have the same forward depth problem they had to start the season while Lowry is another year older coming off an injury. If Lowry is just back to being very good but still a clear step down from last year then they're worse then the early season team - and don't have the flexibility to improve the roster mid-season.


Why wouldn’t I assume that? It’s his age 31 season. With his skillset and style of play, there’s no reason he can’t be as good as last year. And even if he isn’t, he probably won’t miss 20 games.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#19 » by Trader_Joe » Mon Aug 14, 2017 5:23 pm

Rapcity_11 wrote:
SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.


The East is clearly worse. There's like 7 teams that the top teams in the East should beat every time.

Orlando
Brooklyn
Indiana
Chicago
New York
Atlanta
Philly (if and when Embiid misses time)

Also, see my post above.

That doesn't make them better necessarily. It might inflate their win total, but relative to the top teams in the East (CLE, BOS, WAS, MIL), I don't see how they improved. None of those teams you listed were threats to the Raptors last year.
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Re: Toronto offseason in review (HW/Slava/bondom34/cl2117) 

Post#20 » by Rapcity_11 » Mon Aug 14, 2017 5:30 pm

Trader_Joe wrote:
Rapcity_11 wrote:
SuperDario wrote:No disrespect to Raptors fans but I don't understand how the team is better than last year in any significant way. 48-34 sounds about right.


The East is clearly worse. There's like 7 teams that the top teams in the East should beat every time.

Orlando
Brooklyn
Indiana
Chicago
New York
Atlanta
Philly (if and when Embiid misses time)

Also, see my post above.

That doesn't make them better necessarily. It might inflate their win total, but relative to the top teams in the East (CLE, BOS, WAS, MIL), I don't see how they improved. None of those teams you listed were threats to the Raptors last year.


We’re talking things like wins/point margin. So it matters.

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