3 painful truths about Raptors after heartbreaking loss to Nets
By Mike Luciano
The Toronto Raptors were able to watch Fred VanVleet put up 39 points against the rival Brooklyn Nets, setting the stage for their biggest win in weeks. Unfortunately, the vengeful fingers of the basketball gods and the right hand of Kyrie Irving had other plans in mind.
The Nets took home a 119-116 victory, sweeping the season series against the Raptors for the first time in almost two decades. The Raptors have gotten 78 points from VanVleet in the last two games, a resurgent Scottie Barnes, and 16-point second-quarter leads in consecutive games. Despite that, the club is 0-2 in that span.
The Raptors are just 2-7 in December, with both of their wins coming against a Magic team that didn’t have Paolo Banchero and Jalen Suggs and a Lakers team without LeBron James and Anthony Davis. The Raptors have as little positive momentum as any play-in contender in the league right now.
This loss, in tandem with their defeat to the Sacramento Kings on Wednesday, has revealed three gut-wrenching truths about the state of this roster. Toronto was served with this trio of cold, hard facts in the last week, and they need to operate with these warts in mind.
3 painful truths about the Toronto Raptors after brutal Nets loss
3. Christian Koloko can’t get rotation minutes
This is not a “Koloko stinks” piece. In fact, Koloko is a very talented player who is one of the team’s best rim protectors. However, asking a second-round pick that fell to his spot in the draft due to his perceived raw nature to start for a playoff hopeful is putting too much on his plate.
In all four matchups this year, Nicolas Claxton has had his way with Koloko. The rookie hasn’t scored more than six points in a game in almost a month and has just one performance since November with more than five rebounds. The Raptors need to let him take a minute to catch his breath.
The Toronto Raptors must bench Christian Koloko.
Starting Thad Young is not going to be ideal against bigger lineups, but Toronto is playing four-on-five half the time on the offensive end when Koloko is out there. Maybe try putting Chris Boucher in the starting lineup? The Koloko experiment is running into a wall right now.
When everyone returns to full health, the Raptors are likely going to remove him from the rotation and allow him the chance to cut his death in the G League. He’s still very much a part of Toronto’s bench in the next few years, but getting thrown to the wolves like this is costing the team games.