Just before the All-Star break, Raptors general manager Bobby Webster sat down for an interview with Eric Koreen of The Athletic. Webster’s conversation with Koreen covers a number of topics and is worth checking out in full for Raptors fans. Here are a few highlights.
On the team’s performance thus far in 2025/26:
I go back and forth between, ‘We haven’t accomplished anything’ and, ‘It’s OK to enjoy some of the moments along the way.’ Scottie (Barnes) and Brandon (Ingram) being All-Stars is great, having Darko (Rajakovic) coach the World Team, Collin (Murray-Boyles) and Alijah (Martin) (playing in the Rising Stars event), that feels like a moment to recognize it, enjoy it and then get back to work. Those are the two mindsets I’ve vacillated between.
On Barnes’ growth and opportunities for improvement:
It’s always different when you draft a player. That’s what we have the benefit of with Scottie. We’ve studied him coming out of college. We drafted him coming out of the Tampa year. He comes here. We have success early. Now you think back to Scottie as a rookie to Scottie now, and the seriousness level on a consistent basis is what stands out. That energy and dynamic play every night really stands out to me and really impacts the winning on the court. He’s gonna continue to get better. He’s only 24. I don’t think your prime in the NBA is until 27, 28. Physically, he’ll get stronger. The game will continue to slow down for him. It’s our job to surround him with the right players, to complement him.
On what it would take for Toronto to make a major win-now trade:
(The team, conference and league context) all matters. What is the main driver? Seven different champions in the last seven years suggests there isn’t a huge dynasty in the current NBA. You want to be mindful of that. You have to stick to your guns on some of it as far as not overpaying, not chasing it. That’s sort of what I alluded to: We’ve kept our draft picks for a number of years on purpose. When you do go for it, is it a three- or four-pick trade, or do we peel them off one at a time? That’s what we did last time (with the acquisitions of Serge Ibaka and Kawhi Leonard).
There’s no right way to do it. Do you do it early? Do you do it in the middle? Do you chase late? We’ve looked at all the different builds that resulted in a championship team, and there’s no preferred route other than you have got to get it right. So when you do push them in, when you do consolidate, who is that player? Where is that player in his career? Does that skill set fit with the main guys? If anything, the trades in the past few years show that everything is fungible and you have to keep that flexibility.
