TheGeneral99 wrote:LoveMyRaps wrote:Sign Kevon Looney for the MLE
Can we afford to do that?
Would love Looney as a back up, but I think he will have a ton of interest from contending teams.
He's already agreed on a 2y 16mil with the Pels.
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TheGeneral99 wrote:LoveMyRaps wrote:Sign Kevon Looney for the MLE
Can we afford to do that?
Would love Looney as a back up, but I think he will have a ton of interest from contending teams.

Scase wrote:So unless I'm missing something, according to spotrac we're only 1.4m away from the first apron as currently constructed?
WuTang_OG wrote:Scase wrote:So unless I'm missing something, according to spotrac we're only 1.4m away from the first apron as currently constructed?
i think its due to those unlikely incentives for IQ, RJ
The Toronto Raptors are deeper. In the current NBA, that could very well mean better.
The Raptors completed the bulk of their off-season work in 24 hours after free agency opened on Monday.
Their splashiest move was signing centre Jakob Poeltl to a three-year contract extension that kicks in for the 2027-28 season. It will pay him $84.5 million through the 2029-30 season when Poeltl will be 34 and in his 14th campaign.
But even that move was almost inevitable once the Raptors made clear that even if they were going to make a trade for Kevin Durant, for example, it would be to add him to a competitive roster that included the steady Austrian. They were not going to include Poeltl in a deal for Durant (or anyone other big fish) and then have to find not just one, but two quality bigs in a market with precious few of them.
There was logic to the thinking.
Toronto added some semblance of depth at the centre spot with the addition of Sandro Mamukelashvili, a 26-year-old entering his fifth NBA season who offers a lot the skills that Poeltl doesn’t — the ability to stretch the floor and attack closeouts, mainly. The Raptors hope Jonathan Mogbo can develop these traits over time.
So, with opening night somehow only three months away, the Raptors' potential lineup looks like this (projected starters in bold):
Centre/bigs: Jakob Poeltl, Collin Murray-Boyles, Jonathan Mogbo, Sandro Mamukelashvili, Ulrich Chomche (two-way contract), Colin Castleton (non-guaranteed).
Wings: Scottie Barnes, Brandon Ingram, RJ Barrett, Gradey Dick, Ochai Agbaji, Ja’Kobe Walter, Jamison Battle (contract guaranteed July 10), Garrett Temple, AJ Lawson (non-guaranteed).
Guards: Immanuel Quickley, Jamal Shead, Alijah Martin (not yet signed, but likely on a two-way deal to start the season), Chucky Hepburn (two-way contract),
If we’re optimistic, it’s a more competitive team than the Raptors put on the floor a year ago.
There is at least some depth at the centre spot: Shead has a year of experience under his belt and showed encouraging signs as a competent backup point guard and Ingram — providing he is healthy — should provide a significant injection of overall talent. A season from Quickley that is uninterrupted by thumb sprains, tail-bone bruises and torn elbow ligaments — a triple crown of fluky injuries that ruined the first half of his season — should enable the sixth-year guard to show the five-year, $175-million contract he signed in the summer of 2024 is representative of his worth. Imagine, say, 19 points and seven assists a game while shooting at or close to 40 per cent from three on decent volume? That would be nice.
And getting a year from Barnes where he can better integrate his alphabet soup of skills and continued progress from Barrett would provide more feel-good developments.
Whether it all comes to pass or not, who knows?
But the Raptors do seem to be on board with, or at least slightly ahead of the curve on the new trend in roster building that has proven successful when done right, and may become the norm as the effective hard cap created by the league’s first- and second-apron rules makes it more difficult and unwise to spend your way out of roster problems.
The two recent NBA finalists are proof, as both the Indiana Pacers and eventual champion Oklahoma City Thunder relied on rotations that ran 10 deep at different stages during the Finals. Previously, elite teams rarely played more than eight players in the post-season.
It’s both a product and a path to the kind of scrambling, high-pressure defensive style both teams relied on, and which the Raptors used so effectively in the second half of last season, when they posted the NBA’s third-best defensive rating (albeit against a historically weak schedule).
The Raptors are positioned to play that way even though they have some big-ticket players on their roster — Barnes, Ingram and Quickley will combine to earn $119.3 million, which sounds like a boatload of cash to civilian ears, but in NBA math represents about 70 per cent of the salary cap.
WuTang_OG wrote:Scase wrote:So unless I'm missing something, according to spotrac we're only 1.4m away from the first apron as currently constructed?
i think its due to those unlikely incentives for IQ, RJ
S.W.A.N wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:Scase wrote:So unless I'm missing something, according to spotrac we're only 1.4m away from the first apron as currently constructed?
i think its due to those unlikely incentives for IQ, RJ
This is correct.
But it not a bad spot to be as long as we don't suck hard

WuTang_OG wrote:Guaranteed (Total is 15) , + 3 x 2-ways
IQ - Shead
RJ - JKW - Temple
BI - Dick - Ochai - Battle
Scottie - CMB - Mogbo
Poeltl - Mamu
/14
Chomche - 2 way
Chucky - 2 way
Alijah Martin #39 ... either will get a 2 way or a guaranteed spot
Castleton - non guaranteed
Aj Lawson - non guraranteed
Raps have a 2-way spot open and a guaranteed spot open before summer league. Good flexibility
WuTang_OG wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:Guaranteed (Total is 15) , + 3 x 2-ways
IQ - Shead
RJ - JKW - Temple
BI - Dick - Ochai - Battle
Scottie - CMB - Mogbo
Poeltl - Mamu
/14
Chomche - 2 way
Chucky - 2 way
Alijah Martin #39 ... either will get a 2 way or a guaranteed spot
Castleton - non guaranteed
Aj Lawson - non guraranteed
Raps have a 2-way spot open and a guaranteed spot open before summer league. Good flexibility
IQ - Shead - Chucky*
RJ - JKW - Martin* - Temple
BI - Dick - Ochai - Battle
Scottie - CMB - Mogbo
Poeltl - Mamu - Chomche*
━━━━━━━━━━━━━
14 Guaranteed
3 x 2ways
Martin gets the 2-way.
They could keep Lawson as 15th guy and wait to waive him by January https://www.spotrac.com/nba/player/_/id/74329/aj-lawson
Alijah Randall Edwin Martin (born December 26, 2001) is an American professional basketball player for the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association (NBA), on a two-way contract with the Raptors 905 of the NBA G League. He played college basketball for the Florida Atlantic Owls and the Florida Gators.
manjusaka wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:
Raps have a 2-way spot open and a guaranteed spot open before summer league. Good flexibility
IQ - Shead - Chucky*
RJ - JKW - Martin* - Temple
BI - Dick - Ochai - Battle
Scottie - CMB - Mogbo
Poeltl - Mamu - Chomche*
━━━━━━━━━━━━━
14 Guaranteed
3 x 2ways
Martin gets the 2-way.
They could keep Lawson as 15th guy and wait to waive him by January https://www.spotrac.com/nba/player/_/id/74329/aj-lawson
I can’t find the source but his wiki page says he is already got the two ways.Alijah Randall Edwin Martin (born December 26, 2001) is an American professional basketball player for the Toronto Raptors of the National Basketball Association (NBA), on a two-way contract with the Raptors 905 of the NBA G League. He played college basketball for the Florida Atlantic Owls and the Florida Gators.
WuTang_OG wrote:
bluerap23 wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:
Makes sense in theory but if the Raptors really want to have defence first mentality the SL won't last long. RJ as 6th man makes most sense.
YogurtProducer wrote:bluerap23 wrote:WuTang_OG wrote:
Makes sense in theory but if the Raptors really want to have defence first mentality the SL won't last long. RJ as 6th man makes most sense.
Or at least give him the yank early in the 1st and have him come back early.
But then again, Ingram running ISO with a bunch of dog defenders in the bench could be great to (like Lowry + bench was years ago).
bluerap23 wrote:

bluerap23 wrote:YogurtProducer wrote:bluerap23 wrote:
Makes sense in theory but if the Raptors really want to have defence first mentality the SL won't last long. RJ as 6th man makes most sense.
Or at least give him the yank early in the 1st and have him come back early.
But then again, Ingram running ISO with a bunch of dog defenders in the bench could be great to (like Lowry + bench was years ago).
Yeah I feel like we can put together some really nice balanced lineups without the top 5 together.
Shead, RJ, Ingram, CMB and Mamu
IQ, Walter, Gradey, Scottie, Yak

DreamTeam09 wrote:You guys put too much faith in fit & roles. Ochai n Walter are better defenders therefore they should be starting. Or you can put the bigger better offensive player out there & have the opposing team defender actually have to play some defense. You guys acting like RJ is Lou Williams or Jamal Crawford, he doesn't get hunted on defense & offensively he's way better than his counterparts on the team
ConSarnit wrote:DreamTeam09 wrote:You guys put too much faith in fit & roles. Ochai n Walter are better defenders therefore they should be starting. Or you can put the bigger better offensive player out there & have the opposing team defender actually have to play some defense. You guys acting like RJ is Lou Williams or Jamal Crawford, he doesn't get hunted on defense & offensively he's way better than his counterparts on the team
What about RJ possibly getting squeezed in terms of touches? We’re going to be adding a #1 option in Ingram and that’s going to move everyone down the pecking order. Of all the starters RJ is the least portable because of his shooting and middling defense. This doesn’t mean RJ is a bad player but he’s most likely to get squeezed for touches and he doesn’t provide the skillset you’d want in a supplementary player (3pt shooting and defense). The fewer touches RJ gets the less effective he becomes.
I’m not saying have him come off the bench but he should be the first sub out because we could use his scoring and creation off the bench (I don’t really trust any of our bench guys with creating good offense for themselves of others). You give RJ more minutes with someone like Sandro and against backup bigs and his drive game could really be effective as a key bench weapon. More minutes with the bench for RJ could be a way to optimize what he’s good at. With the starters he risks getting marginalized considering Ingram is likely absorbing a lot of his on-ball touches.
