Schröder leads new-look Raptors to season-opening win over Timberwolves
Ice cold water was dumped over Darko Rajakovic instead of champagne or sports drink to celebrate his first-ever win as a head coach in the NBA.
It may have been a fitting way to mark a new era for the Toronto Raptors.
Dennis Schröder had 22 points and seven assists as Toronto fended off the visiting Minnesota Timberwolves 97-94 on Wednesday in both teams’ season opener. It was Schröder’s first regular-season game with the Raptors and Rajakovic’s first patrolling Toronto’s sideline.
“We got all the ice ready for him and put it over him and I think it’s a special moment for him,” said Schröder, adding that Rajakovic was screaming before the ice bath even touched him. “Great experience for all of us in the locker-room.
“We just want to keep getting better every single day and try to get as many wins as possible.”
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Schröder became the first player to score over 20 points in his Raptors debut since Kawhi Leonard had 24 to kick off the 2018-19 season. Schröder signed a two-year, $26 million US contract with Toronto on July 12, effectively replacing beloved veteran Fred VanVleet as the Raptors starting point guard.
“No no no we’re not starting that,” chuckled Schröder at the comparison to Leonard, the centrepiece of Toronto’s title run in 2019. “I’m just glad to get a W. They won the championship in 2019, we’re just trying to get that winning culture back on our side
“I think Darko’s been doing a great job since training camp, telling everybody to move the ball, ball movement, body movement, and I’m just glad we won the game.”
Toronto fired head coach Nick Nurse on April 21 after a disappointing 41-41 regular-season record and a 109-105 loss to the Chicago Bulls in the play-in tournament. VanVleet, the Raptors longtime leader on the court and in the locker-room, also left after signing a lucrative free-agent deal with the Houston Rockets on July 7.
O.G. Anunoby added 20 and had six rebounds for the Raptors, while Scottie Barnes scored 17 with eight rebounds, five assists and five blocks.
“I mean, every year is a new team,” said Anunoby. “But it’s definitely a new team. We’re all just excited for right now and as the season goes on just keep going on.”
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Rajakovic was hired on June 13 and the differences between his and Nurse’s coaching philosophies were apparent by the end of Wednesday’s first quarter.
Nurse relied heavily on his starters last season with Siakam leading the NBA with 37.4 minutes per game and VanVleet’s 36.7 fifth. Rajakovic spread out the playing time with Toronto’s bench players subbing in midway through the first quarter.
“Scoring and defence and rebounding and assists,” said Rajakovic of what he expects from his reserves. “I have so much belief and trust in this roster and guys coming off the bench.
“We’ll need them every single night.”
That strategy paid off in the dying seconds of the quarter when Barnes fed backup centre Precious Achiuwa for an alley-oop dunk that tied the game 25-25. Achiuwa finished with eight of the Raptors’ 16 points from the bench.
my goodness, <a href=”https://twitter.com/PreciousAchiuwa?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@PreciousAchiuwa</a> 😮💨 <a href=”https://t.co/p1Ch80iWAj”>pic.twitter.com/p1Ch80iWAj</a>
—@Raptors
Another obvious difference between Nurse’s coaching and Rajakovic’s was pace. Toronto had 34 fast-break points to Minnesota’s 12 on Wednesday, far outstripping the Raptors average of 17.7 fast-break points per game last season.
“I liked it, but I thought we still needed to play faster,” said Rajakovic, his hair still wet from the ice bath. “There were moments that we were coming past half-court, and then we did not get into offence early enough and quickly enough.
“That’s something that we are still going to work on. … we cannot just be watching each other.”
Anthony Edwards, Rudy Gobert and Karl-Anthony Towns each had a double-double for Minnesota (0-1). Edwards led with 26 points and 14 rebounds, Towns scored 19 with 10 boards, and Gobert had 15 points and 13 rebounds.
Toronto first-round draft pick Gradey Dick made his NBA debut with 9:05 left to play in the first half. At 19 years 339 days old, Dick became the fourth youngest Raptor to play in a regular-season game. Only Tracy McGrady (18 years 160 days), Bruno Caboclo (19 years 61 days) and Chris Bosh (19 years 219 days) were younger had younger debuts.
The Raptors travel to Chicago on Friday in a rematch of last year’s play-in game when the Bulls halted Toronto’s chances of making it into the post-season.
Raptors exercise option on Barnes’ rookie contract
Barnes is going to be with the Raptors for at least one more year.
The Raptors exercised the fourth-year team option on the rookie scale contract of the swingman on Wednesday.
Barnes is now signed through the 2024-25 season.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
The 2021-22 NBA rookie of the year shot .456 from the field last season and scored 20 or more points in 18 games, including a career-high 32 points in a victory March 10 against the Los Angeles Lakers.
Barnes had 15 double-doubles and became the youngest player in franchise history to post a triple-double with 11 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists Nov. 4 at Dallas.
Barnes was picked fourth overall by Toronto in the 2021 NBA Draft. He is the first draft pick in Raptors history to accumulate 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and 500 assists in their first two NBA seasons.