10 Things I Dig and Don’t Dig about the Toronto Raptors’ Offseason
It's 28 days till the 2021/22 NBA season, so before all the shemozzle begins, let's chat 10 things I dig and don't dig about the Toronto Raptors' offseason.
It's 28 days till the 2021/22 NBA season, so before all the shemozzle begins, let's chat 10 things I dig and don't dig about the Toronto Raptors' offseason.
VanVleet isn't Lowry, but he sure can do a lot of the same stuff.
From going undrafted, to playing an integral part of a championship squad, to becoming the heir apparent to Kyle Lowry. Has Fred VanVleet ever encountered a challenge he didn't like?
The Raptors elected to facilitate a Lowry sign-and-trade instead of using their cap space, and they deserve criticism for how the offseason panned out.
It's officially official. Kyle Lowry is no longer under contract with the Toronto Raptors.
The Raptors may be missing Kyle Lowry, but the team is looking to prove that the DNA of the franchise remains the same.
Few in the history of sports have done a better job using compartmentalization as a means to lead.
The Toronto Raptors are adrift, and it may be for the better, but it doesn't make losing Lowry any less painful.
There's moves to be made but many of them are for the sake of it and should be avoided.
They did it before, and they can do it again.
A championship run for Chris Paul won’t merely impact his own individual legacy—it will add to Kyle Lowry’s, too, and any small guard subject to the fires of archaic narrative.