ATL Stomped
Last night, the Toronto Raptors treated us to a game that featured a tale of two halves: one good first half, and one bad second one.
Last night, the Toronto Raptors treated us to a game that featured a tale of two halves: one good first half, and one bad second one.
It’s no new insight that in professional sports, winning attracts attention. Cereal boxes, tickertape parades, bedroom posters, playground impersonators, hours of televised fawning – all in honour of the big W. Losers can be relevant, but they’re relevant for losing. You may get noticed for setting futility records, but being a spectacular failure won’t make…
The Jay Triano and Bryan Colangelo combination are on the verge of a dubious honor in Raptors history. At this point, it's natural to wonder just how long these two can partner in their quest to return the Raptors to respectability.
Injecting one good-to-great defensive player as a remedy for a poor defensive unit sounds like a bad strategy, and one the Raptors have been guilty of too often.
The Jose Calderon to Indiana trade rumours don't make much sense, unless you consider Danny Granger.
How Bosh has managed to transform the public's perception of him from "good player tired of losing" to "greedy attention-seeking diva" is truly a thing of beauty. He has handled the 2010 free-agency period about as poorly as one can. Whereas Dwayne Wade and LeBron James have met with other teams without alienating their existing…