MIAMI — A long weekend in Miami, sun shining, beautiful scenery everywhere.
It looked good on paper. Fun even.
But when the Toronto Raptors and Miami Heat play basketball, fun is a relative thing, no matter the venue. It’s fun like anything really hard is fun — vaguely satisfying when it’s over, depending on if it goes well or say, you end up needing medical attention afterwards.
Two games in October isn’t exactly a playoff series, but that’s how these rivals play.
“It’s always mayhem,” was how Raptors guard Fred VanVleet put it.
The Raptors dropped the opener in a contest that included a nasty little skirmish that livened things up and resulted in ejections, suspensions and fines.
But all you need on the road is a split and the Raptors pulled that off with a grimy effort against Miami that was in doubt until the final moments before Pascal Siakam finally got on track offensively, and Gary Trent Jr. saw the open looks from deep he’d been getting all game finally drop.
It was a Trent Jr. triple from the corner with 22.6 seconds left that sealed the 98-90 win for Toronto.
The win evened Toronto’s record at 2-2 as they head home for another tough two-game set against the Philadelphia 76ers, who eliminated Toronto in the first round of the playoffs last April.
The Raptors were down eight with 10 minutes to go in the fourth quarter and were having a hard time generating momentum offensively, although their defensive effort never lagged.
They finally got a spark when Trent Jr. hit a corner three off a set-up by Siakam and Toronto was able to eke out a mini 7-0 run from there. Nothing was easy as is standard between the two clubs known for their commitment to playing hard as a habit. Both Christian Koloko — getting his first career start in place of Scottie Barnes who sat out with an ankle sprain — and Chris Boucher, making his return to the lineup from a hamstring injury, had five fouls early in the fourth. O.G. Anunoby had four. But the Raptors kept grinding. Precious Achiuwa gobbled up a career-high 22 rebounds against his old team. Neither VanVleet nor Siakam could buy a field goal (they were 13-of-38 from the field combined) but they kept attacking and made up for it by shooting 17 free throws. That was about as pretty as the offence got.
But a quick three in transition by VanVleet and Anunoby’s first field goal of the night — another triple — gave the Raptors their first lead of the half with five minutes to play. Another three by Siakam put Toronto up by four with 3:19 to play and then Siakam found Anunoby for a dunk to push the lead to six — 91-85 — at the 2:44 mark. The Heat wouldn’t fold though a tough Siakam fadeaway with 50.4 seconds left allowed Toronto to keep some distance.
Toronto shot 39.5 per cent from the floor in the win, while holding Miami to 34.9 per cent shooting. Former Raptors star Kyle Lowry was 1-of-8 from the floor and heard it from the Heat crowd, with one leather lung shouting “retire.”
In all not a pretty night of basketball.
While Barnes was out, Nurse at least had one more option to choose from on his largely under-used bench with the return of Chris Boucher who proved himself an important enough reserved in the second half of last season that Toronto rewarded him with a three-year contract for $35 million.
He came in alongside Achiuwa in a pairing Nurse favoured last season for its defensive energy and potential for havoc, with enough scoring to keep things interesting.
They wasted little time as Toronto instantly went on a 13-2 run that started with a dunk by Achiuwa on a set-up from VanVleet and concluded with the second of Boucher’s corner threes in front of the Raptors bench that delighted everyone on it.
It was all part of the plan.
“Same thing as usual,” was Boucher’s pre-game pledge. “I just bring energy, the little things, obviously I’ve been out, so it’s easy for me to come and see what the game needs. Coach always told me to bring energy, bring a spark off the bench and that’s usually what I do.
“I’m gonna come with a lot of that and try to fix the little things.”
The Raptors needed just that as they were playing their fourth game in six nights in a tough stretch to start the season. Injuries to Boucher and Otto Porter Jr. — still out with a hamstring strain of his own — along with three tight games had seen Nurse stick with his starters for long minutes.
“We need his energy and shot-blocking and rebounding, that’s what we need,” said Nurse. “I think he’s impacted both the first and second units most of the second half of last year. Just providing the first group with a jolt of energy a lot of times and then a little bit of a scoring punch with the second unit some nights.”
And a lot of nights Boucher’s energy can get the better of him. In his 10 first-half minutes Boucher scored 10 points, was charged with four fouls, and more than once was seen standing incredulous with his palms raised to the ceiling in bafflement. The full Chris Boucher Experience, in other words.
But the little spurt he helped spark in the first quarter was important in a game that — after a brief few minutes of free-flowing offence to start the first quarter — quickly devolved into a more typical Miami-Toronto rock fight.
Nurse said that playing the same team for the second straight night would not involve a lot of extra preparation in terms of new wrinkles added on his part. He just wanted his club to execute with the energy and attention to detail they showed in the second half of Saturday night’s loss when they held Miami to 41 points, rather than the way they snoozed through the first half and allowed the Heat to put up 71.
They delivered that, but the Heat were equally motivated to tidy what they thought was a sloppy effort in letting the Raptors storm back from down 22 points in the third quarter when Koloko got in his skirmish with Caleb Martin.
The result was a fairly standard issue Heat-Raptors rock fight. Toronto held Miami to 34.9 per cent shooting while the Raptors could only muster 40 per cent in return. The little spirit they managed at the end of the first quarter in Boucher’s first shift was the difference as Toronto took a 48-43 lead into the half.
The problem with Nurse going to his bench is what he gets isn’t always as reliable as Boucher’s energy. Early in the second half Nurse turned to Malachi Flynn after Dalano Banton didn’t exactly shine in his first-half stint. The Heat promptly began running their offence so that they could try and get Jimmy Butler in a mismatch against the diminutive Raptors guard. That prompted VanVleet to try to engineer the Raptors’ defence to avoid said match-up, which worked like a charm for Miami initially. VanVleet’s heads-up play was a good response, but it’s not sustainable possession after possession — too many things can go wrong — and it requires VanVleet to be on the floor, when the point of going to the bench is to get him some rest.
After all that the Heat had flipped the Raptors’ five-point halftime advantage and led 76-71 to start the fourth quarter, with both teams shooting a meagre 36 per cent from the floor.
But all that matters is that after a long weekend in Miami Toronto is coming home even.