Brandon Ingram doesn’t have any limitations heading into training camp. Ingram was acquired in a mid-season trade with the Pelicans but didn’t make his Raptors debut last season due to an ankle injury.
“He’s one of the few guys who can go get his own shots but also can go get a pretty efficient shot on his own. I think that’s something that we’ve lacked a bit in prior years,” GM Bobby Webster said, per Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun. “He’s like a hooper’s hooper. I think people that watch him and people that have seen film on him (recognize he has a) high, high level of skill. Three-level scorer, not all that interested in what’s going on off the court. Not all that interested in what people say about him. We had another guy that was sort of like that (in Kawhi Leonard). But this guy, he just loves playing basketball. I think it’s fun to watch him. It’s fun to watch him warm up. “It’s fun to watch him play. So we’re excited to see.”
Here’s more on the Raptors:
- They enter camp slightly over the luxury tax line and Webster indicated it won’t be difficult to get below it. “The likelihood that this team is the exact same team by the end of the year is probably zero … I don’t see that as the urgent piece,” Webster said. However, if they have a strong season, ownership won’t hesitate to end up over the threshold. “If we don’t come out and we’re not competitive and we’re having (a down year again) then it forces us to evaluate it,” Webster said. “But I don’t think it’s exacerbated by any other outside timeline or financial pressure. I think we are fortunate to be one of the biggest, most lucrative markets in the NBA and so I don’t see the financial piece, affecting us.”
- The GM doesn’t have a “postseason or bust” mentality following a 30-win season, according to Michael Grange of Sportsnet. “If you have a specific goal in mind, a specific [number of] wins … I just don’t know if that’s the best way to build, especially a young group,” he said. “These guys, when they lock in, that day-to-day improvement is what ends up resulting in being in the playoffs or being in the Play-In (Tournament). We won 30 games last year. So I don’t think there’s any sort of illusions of expectations of this number of wins or this playoff seed. We’ll see.”
- There’s room for them to outperform outside expectations and become one of the league’s feel-good stories, according to Eric Koreen of The Athletic. However, the potential of this roster remains a mystery, Koreen notes, as not many teams would trade positions with the expensive-but-unproven Raptors.
- In order for the Raptors to exceed expectations, they need their regulars to improve their shooting percentages, particularly from behind the 3-point arc, Grange opines. They also can’t afford a long-term injury to Jakob Poeltl, since he’s the only starting-caliber center on the roster.
- Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president Keith Pelley oversaw Europe’s entry at the past four Ryder Cup matches. He’s looking to bring his experiences from the golfing world to help build the culture for the Raptors and NHL’s Maple Leafs, according to Chris Johnston of The Athletic. “As much as I love the game, and I love the NBA, and I love Major League Soccer, I’m the CEO of MLSE, so the people that are going to make the key hockey decisions, the people that are going to make the key basketball decisions, are basketball-oriented people and are hockey-oriented people,” Pelley said. “My role is to be a sounding board. My role is to try to create a culture and a chemistry within that organization that builds a culture of winning championships.”