Tuesday, June 25, 2019

J-Speaks: Raw Emotions from 2019 NBA Draft from Williamson, Morant, and Barrett


While it was no surprise of who the Top 3 selections were in the 2019 NBA Draft this past Thursday night, perhaps what was surprising were the emotions that came from the trio of players, whose emotions from not just themselves but their families that represented all the hard work, sacrifice, commitment and energy it took for their children are in position to achieve a childhood dream and set up themselves and their respective families financially for life. 
With the No. 1 overall pick, the New Orleans Pelicans selected the most hyped collegiate prospect since four-time Kia MVP now of the Los Angeles Lakers LeBron James went No. 1 overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers in Zion Williamson out of Duke University. 
The selection of the out of this world talent from Spartanburg, SC, which was basically a lock when the Pelicans won the 2019 NBA Draft Lottery back in May completes a emotional and incredible year where the 6’ 7’’ 285-pound power forward was under the microscope from the minute he stepped onto Duke’s campus. 
Unlike a lot of players who would have wilted or had their ups-and-downs under that consistent attention, Williamson thrived under it and all the hard work that he has put in since he was five years old all came out when NBA Commissioner Adam Silver called his name, he stood and hugged his mother Sharonda Anderson for what seemed like about a minute (five seconds according to an article in Friday’s edition of New York’s Newsday
Williamson cried when being interviewed by ESPN’s Maria Taylor saying of his mother, who was his basketball coach until age 14 supported his dream of playing basketball from as mentioned a very young age, “I didn’t think I’d be in this position.” 
“My mom sacrificed a lot for me. I wouldn’t be here without my mom. She did everything for me. I just want to thank her.” 
“She put her dreams aside for mine. She always looked out for the family and friends before herself.” 
One of the ways Mrs. Anderson looked out for her son is as mentioned she was his basketball coach until the early part of his teen years. 
During those years, she instilled in Williamson a commitment to working hard on his game and never letting the naysayers get him off course. She also instilled in him the importance of respecting your teammates and understanding that the success of the teams he played on and individual success comes from the connective tissue of being both a good teammate and good person. 
Those lessons she taught him, along with waking up at 5 a.m. to do shooting drills at age 9 is how he became the No. 1 player in the country as the Consensus National Player of the Year, a goal he set at age 5. Developed a solid friendship first with the No. 2 overall pick in the draft by the Memphis Grizzlies in guard Ja Morant out of Murray State University, who he played AAU Basketball with for the South Carolina Hornets, even though back then he was a very shy kid, and his teammate at Duke in RJ Barrett, the No. 3 overall pick by the New York Knicks. 
To put into perspective the kind of teammate Williamson was at Duke, he said no to a lot of things where he would the center of attention like magazine covers and interviews. 
In fact, ESPN’s College Basketball studio and play-by-play analyst said during the draft on Thursday that when he was going to be interviewed for a piece on him being the leading candidate for the 2018-19 John R. Wooden Award, sponsored by Wendy’s, which he ultimately won, he talked about Barrett instead of himself. 
That was a perfect example of Williamson’s ability to play and blend in with the rest of his teammates both in high school and at Duke, no matter what their stature on the squad is from the best player to the last man on the bench. As ESPN’s College Basketball analyst and former Blue Devil Jay Bilas said of the 18-year-old Williamson, “uncommon maturity.” 
“A lot of guys worry about stats. Who can score the most? Who’s going to be an All-Star. This kid you can tell he’s not worried about that.” ESPN NBA studio and color analyst Chauncey Billups said on Thursday. “You can tell his teammates at Duke love playing with him.” 
“He’s very supportive of guys, even if he was on the bench. When Barrett or [Cam] Reddish made a huge play, Williamson was the first one celebrating. And that’s a big, big deal when you talk about somebody with this type of magnitude that comes with it.” 
A perfect example of Williamson’s uncommon maturity is back at Spartanburg Day High School, he took a creative writing poetry elective in his senior year. He told ESPN’s host of “NBA: The Jump” Rachel Nichols in an interview prior to Thursday’s draft that he took that class in large part due to the impression made on him by the teacher of that class, where he would always see in the hallways of school and the positive energy he always gave off. 
At first Williamson did not think much of the opportunity but when he really brought a great mindset to the class and how the teacher of the course said to him that whatever he wrote in here would remain in the class. This class his teacher told him was his “safe haven.” 
Speaking of a player with uncommon maturity and work ethic, that is the best way you can describe Morant, who the Grizzlies as previously mentioned took No. 2 overall.   
Morant was an unranked recruit coming out of high school that was not highly recruited. In fact, he was discovered in an auxiliary gym, which led him going to Murray State. University where he shined averaging 24.5 points, No. 2 overall in Division I; a Division One leading 10.0 assists and 5.7 rebounds, while registering a Division One leading three triple-doubles. 
What made the 2018-19 “Associated Press” First-Team All-American the electrifying, scorer, and passer, who scored 38 points in a game against the Alabama Crimson Tide this past season was the legendary drills his father Ronnie “Tee” Morant put him through in their backyard. 
Those drills consisted of jumping tires, agility drills, making off the dribble jump shots to shooting jumpers after making crossover attempts through cones. 
It is thanks to that hard work, developing a belief in himself that he is as good a basketball player as anyone in the nation and the support from his family that Morant went from an unknown to the player the Grizzlies hope can get them back to the heights they were when they were in the Conference Finals earlier this decade. 
“It started with me,” Morant said to Taylor on Thursday night about how he got to this point. “I feel like if you don’t believe in yourself than who will?”
Morant added, “I had the right people around me, my family coaches always lifted me up and pushed me to work hard and be the best player I could be.”  
On top of that he had his aforementioned father “Tee,” who played with Hall of Famer and the all-time NBA leader in threes made Ray Allen at Hillcrest High School in Dalzell, SC put his basketball dreams on hold to help his son get to the next level, which he did. 
The biggest lesson he taught his son is perseverance, especially when the naysayers speak their mind about what they think of his son’s game. 
Ja said that his dad was his first so-called hater who let him know that he was not good enough that he lacked this or he lacked that. 
That made the young Morant work harder and stay focused on getting better each time he practiced and when he got into game action, and it did pay off. More than anything it showed that when Morant gets criticized by the print or broadcast media, which he will, he has the necessary ability to shake it off and simply get in the gym and work to the point he will be ready to answers his skeptics on the hardwood with his game and not so much his mouth. 
“Basically, hard work, fundamentals, dedication to everything, you know,” Mr. Morant said to Taylor about how he made his son into the basketball player he is today. “And I mean, once he told me that he loved it, and showed me he loved it, I wanted to pump everything in me inside him so he can reach the highest point.”
“Praise God. Praise God, he worked hard for it.” 
Having a strong work ethic and a commitment to working at being a great basketball player or doing anything great in general is one thing. It is another to want to go and be part of a team where they have been bad for quite a while. 
Of all the places that RJ Barrett wanted to begin his NBA career he wanted to go to the Knicks, who have not made the playoffs since the 2012-13 season. 
Since the 1999-00 season, the Knicks have won only two postseason series and missed the playoffs in 14 of the last 18 seasons, including the last six in succession. 
In that time period, Knicks fans have been through many draft nights that have consisted of many tears and too many disappointing choices to count. 
When Barrett shook Commissioner Silver’s hand on Thursday night after being selected No. 3 overall by the guys from the “Big Apple” there were cheers by Knicks fans at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY, home of the Brooklyn Nets cheered. Even the most famous Knicks fans in now Oscar Award-winning director Spike Lee stood and applauded. 
The Knicks are not only getting a great player in Barrett, who averaged 22.6 points, an ACC record for a freshmen, with 7.6 rebounds and 4.3 assists in his lone season for Blue Devils head coach Mike Krzyzewski in 2018-19, they are getting a player who was adamant and open about wanting to play at Madison Square Garden, “The World’s Most Famous Arena.” 
“New York is ‘The Mecca,’ you know,” Barrett said when asked by Davis about why he wanted to embrace playing in New York City. “You see Madison Square Garden, and it’s always packed every single game. That’s what I love to play in, you know.” 
“I love to play in intensity and playing for the crowd and get everybody excited, and excitement. And I also want to win.” 
On top of that, Barrett is a player who wants to be great and expects to be a great player, which is something he has been preparing for since the age 12 when he told his father Rowan Barrett, who played is college basketball at St. John’s University and is the Vice President and General Manager of the Canada’s national team that he wanted to make basketball his career. 
Barrett, whose mother Kesha, a native of Brooklyn, NY wrote all of his goals on a whiteboard when he was a pre-teen and he accomplished all of them saying to Taylor by, “Just working every day, you know.” 
“My parents took a lot of time out of to make sure I was okay and made sure I’m good. So, really working hard.”  
He added, “My dad is a very hardworking man, more than anybody you’ll ever know. I just appreciate that a lot.”
A big part of that preparation was playing for the Canadian National team, where he played against grown men in his late teens. 
It was during this part of his life Barrett would watch Knicks games with his grandfather, who was a huge Knicks fan and they would watch games together. He would always tell his grandson that one day he was going to play for them. 
“That was crazy,” Barrett said on Thursday. “That was one of the reasons why I was crying, because we used to watch the Knicks growing up and he would always tell me I was going to be a Knick. I’m sad he can’t be here to see it. But I’m just very happy, man.” 
Someone else who has played a huge part in Barrett’s development as both a player and person is his Godfather Steve Nash, a fellow Canadian and two-time Kia MVP who played his NBA career for the Phoenix Suns, Dallas Mavericks and Los Angeles Lakers. 
For Zion Williamson, Ja Morant and RJ Barrett, Thursday night was the crowning moment as far as their basketball lives are concerned. They were drafted into the NBA respectably by the New Orleans Pelicans, Memphis Grizzlies and New York Knicks as the No. 1, No. 2, and No. 3 overall picks in the 2019 NBA Draft. 
This moment was also a crowning achievement for their parents and their hard work and sacrifices to see their kids achieve their dream, which made them even more proud as they showed and expressed with tears on Thursday night.
“He’s worked since [age] 5 for this moment, and when you know it’s coming, you just got to wait for it to happen,” Ms. Anderson, Williamson’s mother said to Taylor, adding, “And to watch his hard work payoff we’re so happy for him. We’re so happy.” 
Morant said to Taylor that when he got drafted by the Grizzlies on Thursday that it meant a lot not just for him but his father Mr. Ronnie “Tee” as well. 
“I don’t want to get a little emotional up here, man. But I just want to thank him for everything he’s done for me. He made me who I am today, and just thankful for it all.” 
Perhaps the reach for he Kleenex moment of the 2019 NBA Draft was when Mr. Barrett said to Taylor while his son RJ, one of now 27 Canadians to have entered the NBA, 18 of them in the last decade put his head on his dad’s right shoulder while crying, “You know your children make goals and they go out and achieve them. YO have to be proud very proud.” 
He added, “I’m proud of you son.” 
Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 6/20/19 3 p.m. edition “NBA: The Jump: Draft Special from the Green Carpet,” on ESPN with Rachel, Nichols, Chauncey Billups, Mike Schmitz, Adrian Wojnarowski, Bobby Marks, Amin Elhassan, Jay Bilas, Brian Windhorst, and Kendrick Perkins; 6/20/19 7 p.m. “2019 NBA Draft,” on ESPN, presented by State Farm with Rece Davis, Chauncey Billups, Jay Bilas, Adrian Wojnarowski, Brian Windhorst, and Maria Taylor; 6/21/19 Newsday stories, “RJ Already A Fan Favorite,” by Steve Popper and “No. 1 Overall: It’s Zion,” by Barbara Barker; 6/21/19 3 p.m. edition “NBA: The Jump,” on ESPN with Rachel Nichols, Kendrick Perkins, and Brian Windhorst; 6/24/19 3 p.m. edition “NBA: The Jump” on ESPN with Rachel Nichols, Dave McMenamin, Scottie Pippen, and Chiney Ogwumike;  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_New_York_Knicks_seasons.”

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

J-Speaks: Warriors Back-to-Back Champions No More


Last Thursday night was going to be the final game for the then back-to-back defending NBA champion Golden State Warriors at Oracle Arena in Oakland, CA. They hoped that game, which was Game 6 of the 2019 NBA Finals was not going to be their last game of this season and their run as reigning NBA champs. Thanks to one half of the “Splash Brothers” it looked like they were headed for a winner take all Game 7. Their chances for a three-peat though diminished with the loss of their All-Star shooting guard; a strong fourth quarter by the visitors’ reserve guard and a missed game-winner by the other half of the “Splash Brothers” played a big role in the conclusion of one of the best runs of winning in NBA history. 
A potential three-point field goal missed on the Warriors final possession by two-time Kia MVP of the two-time defending NBA champion Warriors Stephen Curry and Toronto Raptors reserve guard Fred VanVleet scoring 12 of his 22 points in the final period, going 5 for 11 from three-point range were two main reasons the Raptors won Game 6 of the 2019 Finals 114-110 on Thursday night, to win the series 4-2 and capture their first Larry O’Brien trophy in franchise history. 
The Warriors were put in a position to push this series to a seventh and decisive game back in Toronto, Ontario thanks to perennial All-Star Klay Thompson, who had a game-high 30 points, hitting 4 for 6 from three-point range and 10 for 10 from the charity stripe. They also got a strong performance from 2015 Finals MVP Andre Iguodala who had 22 points on 9 for 15 from the field, including 3 for 6 from three-point range. Fellow All-Star Draymond Green had his sixth triple-double of these playoffs, his second of this Finals series with 11 points, 19 rebounds, 13 assists with three steals and two block shots. That made up for Curry off shooting night where he was just 6 for 17 from the floor, including 3 for 11 from three-point range. 
Unfortunately, the Warriors, who were without Kevin Durant, who ruptured his right Achilles in the team’s 106-105 win in Game 5 last Monday night lost their hot hand in Thompson, who was 9 for 15 shooting in the contest when he landed awkwardly on his left knee after getting fouled on a two-handed dunk attempt by the Raptors Danny Green with 2:22 left in the third quarter. 
Thompson was helped off the floor and walked partially down the tunnel towards the Warriors’ dressing room looking to be done for the night, but in shocking fashion re-emerged to shoot the two free throws because if he did not come back to shoot the foul shots, he could not come back. He took the two free throws before leaving the game for what was revealed via an MRI that Thompson tore the ACL in his left knee. 
“More than what-ifs is just feeling bad for the players involved. Injuries are always a part of the NBA season-any professional sport, injuries play a huge role,” Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, whose team is now 6-2 in elimination games under his watch said after the loss. “It’s just the nature of these kind of injuries, the severity of these injuries. And we’ll know more about Klay. But we can sit here and say, well, if this hadn’t happened or that hadn’t happened, that doesn’t matter. What matters is Kevin Durant is going to miss next season with an Achilles tear and Klay suffered a knee injury.” 
What occurred on Thursday was more than just the Warriors run and back-to-back champions concluded, it was the fact that their prospects for getting back took a major hit with the injuries to Durant, who prior to Game 5 had not played since straining his left calf in Game 5 of the West Semifinals versus the Houston Rockets. 
On top of that Thompson will be unrestricted free agent this summer and Durant will opt out of the Final year of his two-year contract of $31.5 million and become an unrestricted free agent.  
The Warriors’ front office led by General Manager Bob Myers has made it clear they want to re-sign both Durant and Thompson to max contracts, even if they sit out all next season to heel from their injuries. 
If Durant and Thompson do sign max deals to stay with the Warriors this summer, the team will be on the hook for a $200 million pay roll for the upcoming 2019-20 season.
Myers especially showed how much both Durant and Thompson mean to the organization by when they both were carried to the locker room following their injuries in Games 5 and 6 respectably, he was right there alongside them. 
Both Myers and Coach Kerr are bracing for the uncertainty of this summer that could see Durant and their hopes of being champs again if they can re-sign him, while still coping with the heartbreak of seeing him go down just one week and a day ago. 
The good news if there is anything is that Durant had surgery to repair that ruptured Achilles just 48 hours after it happened in New York. 
There has been no word from the Warriors when Thompson will have surgery to repair that torn ACL in his left knee. 
 “Well, the injury kind of throws everything for a loop, so I have no idea what Kevin’s going to do,” Coach Kerr said to the media on Friday. “I know that we all want him back, and we think this is a great situation for him and vice versa. So, hopefully we get him back and keep this thing going with the understanding that he’s a free agent and we want what’s best for him, and he’s free to make any choice he wants. Hopefully he’s back, and we will all give him advice, any counsel that he needs. And ultimately, he’s going to make his own decision. He’s earned it.” 
GM Myers, whose been through a roller coaster of emotions during this past week echoed those same feelings saying that he has no idea what Durant is going to do with the most important decision of his NBA career. 
“All I’ll say is those guys are highly important to us, and deserving of being rewarded in the right manner,” he added. “So, you know, knowing them too as people, those are people you beyond what everybody here sees… It’s hard to find high-quality people and both [Durant and Thompson] are that. And so, you try to keep those guys within these walls the best you can.” 
The task of taking care of both Durant and Thompson this summer will be a tall order considering that they will have to add to a roster that unlike years past was filled with depth was short of that as we saw in this recent completed Finals tilt against the now champion Raptors. 
The team has five guaranteed contracts for their 2019-20 roster in Curry ($40.2 million), Draymond Green ($18.5 million); Iguodala ($17.2 million), who may retire this summer; Damian Jones ($2.3 million); Jacob Evans ($1.9 million). 
While reserve guard Shaun Livingston and Alfonzo McKinnie are on the books to make $7.6 and $1.5 million next season, those contracts are not guaranteed. 
Besides having to re-sign Thompson and Durant, DeMarcus Cousins, Andrew Bogut, Jonas Jerebko, and Kevon Looney, who played most of The Finals with a chest injury are all unrestricted free agents this summer. Reserves in guard Quinn Cook and forward/center Jordan Bell are restricted free agents. 
Thompson has expressed since the start of this season and even on the stage when the Warriors on their second straight title in a four-game sweep of the then four-time Eastern Conference champion Cleveland Cavaliers that he wants to finish his career with the team that drafted him and help build term the Warriors from a cellular dwell into a squad that made The Finals for five consecutive seasons. 
If there is one sign that Durant might stay with the Warriors is that back in February when news of him possibly signing with the New York Knicks in free agency, he came out emphatically to the media then and said, “I’m trying to play basketball.” 
“I have no clue where that stuff comes from. I just focus on playing ball every single day, and I can’t control what people say about me or what they say about my future, or what I should do,” Durant said during a media session at the start of the new year. “I just try to come to work every single day and life will figure itself out for me.” 
From the start of this season, the Warriors made a commitment to cherish the 2018-19 season, fully knowing that the training camp roster this September could look completely different.   
The venue will definitely be different as the Warriors will be moving its games, practices, and day-to-day operations to the new Chase Center across the bay in San Francisco, CA starting next season. 
The players have insisted throughout this season that they have never taken for granted this special five-year run of winning three Larry O’Brien trophies and in their five straight berths in The Finals. 
The fans of the bay area have certainly not taken this five-year run for granted selling out Oracle Arena for the 343rd consecutive time in the 2,070th game played there in the 47th and final season. 
They, along with NBA fans in the U.S. and across the globe say some of the greatest team basketball you will ever see a team play on both ends of the floor. A dynamic backcourt in Stephen Curry, who went from being a player whose early career was headlined by ankle injuries to where he has become a perennial All-Star, a two-time Kia MVP and the apple of the eyes of many NBA fans and Klay Thompson, who went from an unknown into one of the best two-way players in the business, who moved into third place on the NBA’s all-time postseason list for threes made with 374, trailing only Curry (470) and Hall of Famer, and two-time NBA champion with the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat Ray Allen (385). 
They saw Draymond Green go from being a Second-Round pick seven years ago into the NBA’s ultimate swiss army knife, where he can impact a game on both ends of the floor. 
When Green in his career, regular season and playoffs combined has registered a triple-double, the Warriors have a 29-3 mark. 
In Durant, who signed with the Warriors in the summer of 2016 put them over top and they went from a team that split their first two appearances in The Finals against the Cavs going 7-6 to a team that basically swept them the next two times they met going 8-1. 
“They have a lot to be proud. For five years they showed us what championship basketball was all about. And their finest moment you make the case was when adversity set in,” former Warriors head coach and NBA on ESPN/ABC color analyst Mark Jackson said at the close of the Game 6 broadcast last Thursday night on ABC. “Had every right to let go of the rope and they went out like champions. An incredible inspiring story.” 
“They put guys in the Hall of Fame with this five-year run, and rightfully so. I loved the way it ended. This crowd, seeing them go out fighting and competing. An inspiring story across the board and a salute to the Bay Area.” 
Yes, the Western will be more competitive, especially with what the Lakers did by acquiring perennial All-Star big man Anthony Davis from the New Orleans Pelicans, the first of many impactful moves on the horizon in “The Association” this summer.
The future for this team and their chances of winning more titles does hinge on whether they can re-sign Durant and Thompson and if they can come back and play to the level that has made them future first ballot Hall of Famers after this upcoming season. 
“You’re talking about two career-altering injuries to two of your best players in back-to-back Finals games. Unheard of. It will probably never happen again,” Coach Kerr said. “We’re in new territory now and you just have to keep moving forward.”
As the Warriors move forward into the 2019-20 season, they will still have Curry and Green, who will be an unrestricted free agent next summer and head coach Steve Kerr will still be on the sidelines. 
The Warriors know what they need to do and if they can retain Thompson and Durant, even if they redshirt this upcoming season, they have proven they can and will do whatever it takes to win, as demonstrated by their 18-7 record in the postseason since 2015 in close out games and their NBA record streak of 23 straight playoff series winning a game in the opposing team’s building. 
That is why as important as it is for the Warriors organization and their fans to look forward to an uncertain future, it is also important to appreciate what they just did these past five seasons that may never be accomplished again. 
“Winning one game in the regular-season is hard. Winning a playoff game, a playoff series and a championship exceptionally hard,” former Knicks and Rockets head coach and now ESPN/ABC color analyst Jeff Van Gundy said on Thursday night. “To win three in five years means you’re one of the great teams.” 
Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 5/5/19 9:30 p.m. edition of “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 5/10/19 9 p.m. “Golden State Warriors versus Houston Rockets,” Game 6 of Western Conference Semifinals, presented by Well Fargo on ESPN with Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Lisa Salters; 5/18/19 9 p.m. “NBA Courtside,” presented by SoFi on ESPN with Michelle Beadle, Jalen Rose, Paul Pierce, and Chauncey Billups; 5/20/19 11:30 p.m. edition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” with Steve Levy and John Buccigross; 6/13/19 9 p.m. “Toronto Raptors versus Golden State Warriors,” Game 6 of NBA Finals, presented by YouTubeTV on ABC with Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Doris Burke; YouTube piece of Kevin Durant addressing rumors about him going to the Knicks, “Kevin Durant Has ‘No Clue’ Where Knicks Rumors Came From-NBA on ESPN;” https://www.nba.com/games/20190613/TORGSW#/boxscore/recap; 6/14/19 www.nba.com story, “Injured Warriors Brace For Unclear Summer,” by Janie McCauley of “The Associated Press:” and https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/6589/draymond-green.  

Monday, June 17, 2019

J-Speaks: Lakers and Pelicans Make Along Waited Blockbuster Trade


Entering the summer of 2019, there were two NBA teams in need of change. In Southern California, the 16-time NBA champions were in need of another game-changing player to get them back to relevance, while in the “Big Easy” the team was in search of the best compensation for a perennial All-Star that no longer wanted to be a part of their organization. On Saturday both teams made a transaction that got them each what they were looking for. 
In the first domino to fall in what will be the busiest off-season in NBA history, ESPN’s Senior NBA Insider Adrian Wojnarowski reported that the New Orleans Pelicans traded perennial All-Star Anthony Davis to the Los Angeles Lakers for former No. 2 overall picks in lead guard Lonzo Ball, forward Brandon Ingram, swingman Josh Hart and three future First-Round picks-which includes the No. 4 overall pick in the 2019 NBA draft, which is Thursday from Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY at 7 p.m. on ESPN, presented by State Farm. 
“You knew he was going to go to the Lakers at some point,” NBA on TNT studio analyst and Hall of Famer Charles Barkley said Saturday night about the trade on NBATV. “I think New Orleans did as good as they could do under the circumstances.” 
Back in February the two teams tried to broker a deal where the 26-year-old Davis would go to L.A. but that deal fell apart. 
The other factor is they had a man steering their front office in the new Executive Vice President of Basketball Operations steering the ship. He laid out there what he wanted to get for Davis. An All-Star, a young player with All-Star potential and two First-Round picks. 
The other factor that made this trade work between these two squads the second time around is that any of the other 28 teams that acquired Davis in a trade he would play for them for just that one year of his contract and he would be out of dodge to L.A.  
For the Lakers, this trade gives them one of the most dynamic talents in “The Association,” in the heart of his prime years, whose vast array of skills will fit well alongside fellow perennial All-Star, three-time NBA champion and four-time Kia MVP LeBron James, who will turn age 35 this December.  
It also puts the Lakers in position to not only end their six-year playoff drought, the longest in franchise history but they are in the conversation of contending at least on paper for an NBA title, especially with the five-time defending Western Conference champion Golden State Warriors not having two key pieces to their team next season in two-time Finals MVP Kevin Durant, who will be on the shelf for possibly all next season because of a ruptured Achilles and perennial All-Star Klay Thompson because of a torn ACL that will sideline him for at least six months. Both are about to enter unrestricted free agency at the end of this month.  
“LeBron James is one of the best players in the history of the NBA, but he is also a diminishing asset,” host of ESPN’s “NBA: The Jump” Rachel Nichols said in the opening monologue of Monday’s edition. “because he is well ‘a human,’ and we know how humans age.” 
“If you don’t look to maximize him now, in the year he’s turning 35 there’s really no point to have even signed him.” 
How happy was James with the deal for Davis, on his Instagram page @kingjames, that had a photo of him and Davis in Lakers colors wearing jersey No. 21 saying, “AD on da way!! @antdavis23 [smile emogi]. Let’s get it bro! Just the beginning… [crown emoji] #LakeShow.” 
There is good chance that this pairing will win a title if you look at James’ past history when he pairs with another perennial All-Star. 
In the summer of 2010, James took his as he mentioned in the televised ESPN show “The Decision,” James took his talents to “South Beach” and joined future Hall of Famers Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh with the Miami Heat. That resulted in four straight trips to The Finals from 2010-14 and two straight Larry O’Brien trophies in 2012 and 2013. 
Four years later he returns to the Cleveland Cavaliers, where he teams up couple more All-Star players in Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love, who the Cavaliers acquired in a trade from the Minnesota Timberwolves. Love and Irving averaged 26.1 and 20.8 points per game respectably the previous season. That resulted in another four straight trips to The Finals and in 2016 won the city of Cleveland’s first pro sports title since the Cleveland Browns led by Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown won that season’s NFL title in 1964, beating the then defending NBA champion Warriors in seven games. 
“Listen, you got LeBron [James]. You got A.D., you’re in the conversation because this thing has flipped on its head the last week. KD out for next year. Klay out probably for next year also” Barkley also said on Saturday. 
“It makes them a power player in the West, but I still like Portland [Trail Blazers]. I like Denver [Nuggets]. The [Houston] Rockets are going to be right there. So, this doesn’t make them automatically the favorites.”  
To bring to light who the Lakers acquired in this blockbuster deal, Davis in his first seven NBA seasons has registered averages of 23.7 points, 10.5 rebounds and 2.4 blocks on 51 percent shooting. He is just two of six players to average 23 points and seven rebounds per game since 2013. Davis and James, along with 2018 Kia MVP James Harden (5) of the Houston Rockets and two-time Kia MVP Stephen Curry (3) and 2014 Kia MVP Kevin Durant (3) since the 2012-13 NBA campaign have been selected three-plus times to the All-NBA First-Team selections, and are to of five players to have made the All-Star team in each of the last six seasons. 
Davis has also on three occasions in his career led the NBA in block shots per game. In his two playoff appearances in 2015 and 2018, totaling of 13 games has averaged 30.5 points, 12.7 rebounds, 2.5 blocks and 1.8 steals. 
For James, this addition also means that his streak of most consecutive seasons of leading his team in total points could end next season at 16 in a row, one shy of Hall of Famers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who did it from the 1969-70 season to the 1985-86 season and Karl Malone, who did it from the 1986-87 season to the 2002-03 season with the Utah Jazz.  
It also shows that after Lakers legend and Hall of Famer Earvin “Magic” Johnson stepped down as President of Basketball Operations that general manager Rob Pelinka can deliver the goods in turning the team into a contender. 
This was a team that after a big time win on Christmas Day 2018 at the Warriors went from No. 4 in the West to missing the playoffs as mentioned for a sixth consecutive season.
Injuries, specifically to James, who missed a career-high 27 games this past season and disfunction from the team from the front office to the roster took its toll. The out-of-the-blue press conference that “Magic” Johnson held right before the Lakers last game of the regular season back in April where he stepped down as team president. The back-and-fourth he and Pelinka had through the media about who stabbed who in the back first. It got to the point where at the introductory press conference that when new head coach Frank Vogel, the Lakers third choice to be their head man on the sidelines that topic came up that Pelinka had to address. 
On top of that, the hiring of the assistants in Hall of Famer Jason Kidd and former head coach with the Memphis Grizzlies and Brooklyn Nets Lionel Hollins got a lot more attention. 
For the Lakers, this trade is a major gamble. They mortgaged their future on them re-signing Anthony Davis next summer, more on that in a momentarily and sending draft assets that can he in the lottery or late in those upcoming drafts. 
That said as Nichols also noted in her aforementioned opening monologue as teams that win titles like the Raptors did thanks to acquiring now two-time Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard from the San Antonio Spurs, with no assurances he would re-sign take huge risks. 
“You don’t gamble you don’t win,” she said. “So, if you want to be in it you have to take some of these kinds of gambles.”
For the Pelicans, this trade clears the air for them of a player, very talented and did some amazing things for them who wanted to leave the “Big Easy” for a bigger market in either L.A. or the New York Knicks. 
The wheels were set in motion of this happening when the 26-year-old Davis parted ways with his former agent and signed with James’ agent and founder of “Klutch Sports” Rich Paul. 
In January it was leaked that Davis told the Pelicans back in January he was not going to sign a super max contract extension and that he wanted to be traded.
“I gave everything I feel like I could. I feel like it’s my time to move on,” Davis said to the media the first month of the new year. 
In February, during the All-Star draft selection show on TNT, James with his first pick in the Second-Round chose Davis. 
James was asked by NBA on TNT's studio analyst Ernie Johnson jokingly that if he wanted him to be his teammate? James’ answer, “Uh, you know, I’m pretty sure of that.” 
Milwaukee Bucks’ forward and Kia MVP to be Giannis Antetokounmpo then asked, “is that tampering?” 
James replied while laughing, “Tampering rules does not apply on All-Star weekend.” 
The team had tried to deal Davis before the trade deadline back in February but nothing came to fruition and he sat out over two weeks before returning to the lineup playing on average just 22 minutes before he was shut down the final seven games of this past season.
In a nationally televised game where the Pelicans lost to the Lakers 123-117 on ESPN back on Feb. 27, where James hit the game-clinching three-pointer play-by-play analyst Dave Pasch noted of the look Anthony Davis made when that shot went in, which color analyst Jeff Van Gundy said of it, “That’s my boy. I’m going to be playing with him next year.” 
Perhaps the biggest indicator of that Davis’ days being in New Orleans were numbered was when he came in to clean out his locker at the end of this past season back in April with a T-Shirt that had on it the concluding slogan for the ending of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons of “That’s All Folks!” 
As Wojnarowski put it on Saturday, “This is a monster hall for the New Orleans Pelicans.” 
That hall included getting a player next to Holiday in Ball who can some of the ballhandling pressure off of All-Star lead guard Jrue Holiday. Two years ago, when the Pelicans made the playoffs and swept the Trail Blazers in the opening round, they had Rajon Rondo and Holiday as the starting backcourt and they created havoc for the opposing starting guards of perennial All-Star Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum. 
In Ingram, if he recovers well from the blood clot found in his arm that cut his season short the Pelicans have a dynamic forward who can score and play make for others.   
In terms of draft assets, Griffin got those three First-Round picks in the No. 4 overall pick in this Thursday’s draft to go along with the No. 1 overall pick they won in the 2019 Draft Lottery in May, where they are almost assured to select freshmen sensation Zion Williamson out of Duke University. 
“The idea of some lob passes between Lonzo and Zion Williamson, that’s pretty exciting,” Wojnarowski said over the weekend. 
According to multiple reports, the Pelicans in the Davis deal acquired a top-eight protected pick in the 2021 draft, which will become an unprotected selection in 2022 if it does not convey. The Pelicans also have the right to swap First-Round picks with the Lakers in 2023, while also receiving an unprotected 2024 First-Round selection that the Pelicans can defer to the 2025 draft. 
In terms of what to do with the No. 4 overall pick for Thursday’s draft, the Pelicans can look to move that pick and get more picks, like from Atlanta Hawks, whose First-Round picks for the upcoming draft are in the No. 8, No. 10 and No. 17 spots or get an established player or two. Then there is the possibility of using that pick to draft the likes of guard Darius Garland from Vanderbilt University, Jarrett Culver from Texas Tech University or De’Andre Hunter from the University of Virginia. 
“It gives them an opportunity here to even expand this trade, whether it turns three First-Round picks into four, five or brings in more talent to pair with Zion Williamson, Jrue Holiday,” Wojnarowski said on the Sunday morning edition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter.” 
“This is now a Pelicans roster potentially that should be right back in the playoffs in the Western Conference and a formidable group, especially if Zion is everything New Orleans expects he will be.” 
Then there is the timing of the trade of when it becomes official. If the Davis deal becomes official on July 6, it would benefit the Pelicans because their salary cap space would go from $15 million to $19 million to go out and get some veteran talent to make a playoff push for next season after missing out on the postseason this past NBA campaign. If the trade happens on July 30, that cap space shrinks back down to $15 million.   
For both teams, the real work begins. For the Lakers, it is about filling out a roster which now consists of just James, Davis, Kyle Kuzma, Moritz Wagner, and Isaac Bonga. 
The combined salaries of James ($37.4 million) and Davis ($27.1 million), who combined total of 1,664 games played for next season total $64.5 million, while Wagner (43), Kuzma (147) and Bonga (22) will make a combined $5.4 million with a combined total of 212 career regular season games under their belt. 
Davis, who will enter next season on the final year of his current contract plans to re-sign in the summer 2020 with the Lakers, where he could be offered a projected five-year, $205.3 million max deal according to Wojnarowski. Davis said that he plans to re-sign with the Lakers next summer. A lot can change in a year though.  
The most important thing for Davis is to remain healthy starting next season and going forward. In his first seven seasons with the Pelicans, he has missed on average because of injury 15 games. 
“This is what he wanted when he asked for a trade back in January prior to that February trade deadline,” Wojnarowski said. “He finally gets it and the Lakers get a cornerstone to build their organization around even beyond the LeBron James era. 
The more immediate issue now for the Lakers is to fill out the remainder of the roster with the kind of talent and depth that can turn them into a serious contender. 
When the trade is made official, which can happen as soon as July 6, the Lakers will have a projected $23.6 million in cap space left to fill out the roster, which includes Davis’ $4 million trade bonus down, which he can either accept or decline, according to ESPN’s Front Office Insider Bobby Marks. If the trade is accepted on July 30, the Lakers would have $32.5 million in cap space to use in free agency. 
The other factor in all of this as ESPN.com’s Ramona Shelburne said on “NBA: The Jump” on Monday is that if the Pelicans trade the No. 4 overall pick before Thursday’s draft, the team that receives that pick will have a major say in when the deal gets done because if the trade goes through on July 30th that player would not be eligible to play for that team’s Summer League squad.  
The Lakers first target in free agency, according to Marc Stein of The New York Times have their sights on filling out their roster by signing unrestricted free agent in three-time All-Star guard Kemba Walker. The 29-year-old, who is eligible for a super max deal of five-years at $221.3 million if the eight-year veteran is offered that by the Charlotte Hornets, where he has played the first eight seasons of his career. 
If the trade goes through on July 6, that would take the Lakers out of the running to sign Walker, who averaged a career-high 25.6 points per game last season could offer Walker a max deal for four years at $140.6 million. 
It would also take the Lakers out of the running to sign Irving, who is assured to opt out the final year of his contract and become an unrestricted free agent and will command top dollar of a salary next season of $32.7 million. 
If the Lakers complete the swap and acquire Davis on July 30, then they would have the necessary cap space to sign either Walker or Irving. 
“Well personally I would love to see Kyrie join LeBron again,” Hall of Famer and six-time NBA champion Scottie Pippen said on “NBA: The Jump” on Monday. “I think instantly it gives them an opportunity to win and win now, but its whether or not Kyrie wants to sacrifice, and its whether or not A.D. wants to sacrifice $4 million.” 
“So, winning is important to these guys and I see them [James and Davis] coming together but the Lakers need some outside shooting. And I think having LeBron and A.D., there going to attract free agents. May not be the best of the best. But guys that want to win and want to play for the Lakers there not going to have any problem attracting guys.”  
The most pressing need for the Lakers to take care of this off-season is to get more perimeter shooting.
According to Second Spectrum, the Lakers were dead last, No. 30 in the league in catch-and-shoot three pointers at 34 percent during the 2018-19 season. Davis by himself shot 38 percent on catch-and-shoot threes this past regular season. There will be a plethora of shooting guards to choose from like Danny Green, who helped the Toronto Raptors win their first NBA title last Thursday over the Warriors. Terrence Ross, who helped the Orlando Magic make it to the playoffs for the first time since 2012 or JJ Redick, who has been a huge part of the Philadelphia 76ers’ playoff appearances the last two seasons, where they won 52 and 51 regular season games respectably. 
The possible signings of Green and Redick if those were to take place would give the Lakers still $12.3 million to still use according to Marks, which would give them the opportunity to sign for a second stint Brook Lopez, who played a major role in the Milwaukee Bucks achieving the best record in the East and making it to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2001. They lost to the previously mentioned NBA champion Raptors in six games in the Conference Finals. 
If things pan out for the Lakers in free agency if they makes those kinds of moves, they would be over the salary cap by $1.6 million.
NBATV analyst and former Vice President of Basketball Operations and Assistant General Manager for the Portland Trail Blazers from 2007-2010, said that the Lakers current situation reminds him of when the “Big Three” of James, Wade and Bosh assembled together with the Miami Heat and how Pat Riley had the luxury of all three coming at once where they each took as Penn put it a “haircut” of their maximum market value, which freed up an extra $15 million to get guys like Mike Miller, Eddie House, James Jones and Mike Bibby.
“This is going to be more challenging for Rob Pelinka,” Penn said Saturday night on NBATV about adding high quality people like how the Warriors, the Heat from the start of this decade and the Cavaliers during their four-year run were able to add. “It’s really going to depend on what types of players choose to go. But at least there’s the perception that L.A.’s back.” 
Penn added that the Lakers would be better suited to go after free agents who play important roles for them, especially when the chance to compete for playing time will be available. 
“Any smart veteran knows when LeBron is humming, and you put another MVP candidate next to him, the game is easy for you,” Penn said, “you can get your minutes. You can get your touches, and you can get your glory. So, I think L.A. is intriguing and they’d be better taking that $27 to $30 million bucks and spreading it across a bevy of talent.” 
Penn also said that with the Davis deal, it takes the possibility of adding Irving out of the mix, especially since he would be the third wheel essentially on the team. He feels that Irving if he chooses to leave the Celtics and sign with another team that he will likely go the Nets. 
“He’s always struck me as one of these guys-even as accomplished as he is that he’s just still on the rise. On the climb, looking for his own legacy,” Penn said. “His own situation and I think he’s still destined for big city that way.”  
In the early stages of this new year, the Los Angeles Lakers and New Orleans Pelicans where trying to execute a trade that felt would help them both that did not work out. 
Thanks to some things falling into place for both teams, like the Pelicans having the right man in David Griffin in the front office with a clear plan, both teams were able to execute a trade where they both feel they got what they wanted. 
The Lakers got that second star in Anthony Davis to pair with LeBron James, who they hope can lead them to a championship next season and beyond, if as mentioned they can re-sign him next summer to be the headline star when James eventually retires. 
For them it is all about finding the right fit in terms of signing players who can play alongside James and Davis, who can specifically shoot and play defense.  
Say what you will about Ingram, Ball and Hart, they were players that the Lakers drafted to make them better in the future and they said goodbye to them as well as three First-Round picks. That is a huge gamble that they hope pays off. 
The Pelicans are positioned to not only draft who they hope is their star for years to come in Zion Williamson this Thursday night but they will surrounded him with a stellar two-way guard in Jrue Holiday and young talents in Brandon Ingram, Lonzo Ball, and Josh Hart, and possibly another young player if the Pelicans keep that pick fourth overall pick and the future picks, which they can either use down the following year or swap them out for the next handful of years.
More than anything what the Pelicans did with this trade is give themselves a brighter future where they can possibly be in the playoff mix in the rugged Western Conference beginning in the 2019-20 season.  
Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 5/23/19 3 p.m. edition of "NBA: The Jump," with Rachel Nichols, Byron Scott, and Kendrick Perkins; 6/15/19 www.nba.com story via Twitter and Media reports, “Reports: Pelicans Agree To Trade Anthony Davis to Lakers;” 6/16/19 12 a.m. edition of NBATV’s “Gametime,” with Chris Miles and Mike Fratello, with reports from Charles Barkley NBA.com’s Shaun Powell, and Tom Penn; 6/16/19 12 a.m. edition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” with John Buccigross and John Anderson, with reports from ESPN’s Senior NBA Insider Adrian Wojnarowski and NBA Front Office Insider Bobby Marks;  6/16/19 8 a.m. edition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” with Elle Duncan and Matt Barrie, with reports from ESPN’s Senior NBA Insider Adrian Wojnarowski and NBA Front Office Insider Bobby Marks; 6/17/19 3 p.m. edition of “NBA: The Jump,” with Rachel Nichols, Ramona Shelburne, Scottie Pippen, and Dave McMenamin https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Penn; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010-11_Miami_Heat_season.   

J-Speaks: Raptors Win Their First NBA Championship


It had been 26 years since Toronto, Ontario celebrated a major sports title when Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Philadelphia Phillies in the 1993 World Series in six games to repeat as champions. On Thursday night, in the building of the back-to-back defending champion Golden State Warriors, the Toronto Raptors ended that long title drought thanks to a collective team effort and the remarkable play of a former Finals MVP, who made some history of his own. 
Behind another balance attack of five players scoring in double-figures, with five of them scoring 22 or more, the Raptors after blowing a chance to win it all on Monday night in front of their home fans at Scotiabank Arena finished the 2019 NBA Finals off with a 114-110 win at the banged up Warriors to win the country of Canada’s, winning the series 4-2. 
The Raptors were led by the 26 points of the Kia Most Improved Player to be in Pascal Siakam, who was 10 for 17 from the field, including 3 for 6 from three-point range with 10 boards. They also got 26 points from startling lead guard and perennial All-Star Kyle Lowry, who was 9 for 16 from the field, including 4 for 7 from three-point range with 10 assists, seven boards and three steals. Leonard, who won the Bill Russell Award as the MVP of this Finals series had 22 points in the Game 6 clincher with six rebounds and two steals. Lowry’s understudy VanVleet also had 22 points, hitting 5 for 11 from three-point range. Reserve big man Serge Ibaka contributed 15 points off the bench. 
“It is the fact we have 36 million Canadians that are cheering for our Raptors and this trophy is going to stay in Canada for many years to come,” Larry Tannenbaum, Chairman of the Board of Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment said to ESPN/ABC’s Doris Burke during the trophy presentation about what made the 2018-19 Raptors so special to an entire country that captured fans watching across the globe. “This trophy is going to stay in Canada for many years to come. We are so excited about it.” 
That excitement was shown especially at the Raptors championship parade on Monday where it seemed like all of Toronto, Ontario took the day off to celebrate the first pro sports title in that part of Canada in as previously mentioned a little over two-and-a-half decades.   
In Game 5, it was the Warriors who made the plays on both ends of the floor down the stretch of Game 5 that kept their season alive and the Raptors did not. They almost gave Game 6 away when in the closing seconds thanks to some great defensive full court pressure forced a turnover. 
The Warriors, down 111-110 came up empty on their offensive possession following that turnover when two-time Kia MVP Stephen Curry missed a contested three-pointer that would have given the Warriors a two-point lead. 
When the game was finally decided, the normally calm and stoic Leonard let all of his emotions out as the Raptors became the first pro sports team in Canada-that was not a hockey squad stood atop the of the four major pro sports leagues for the first time since the aforementioned Blue Jays.  
The Raptors were able to win this series because of the play of Leonard, who joined Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and LeBron James as the only player to win Finals MVP with multiple teams and Lowry, the longest tenured Raptor and their all-time leader in points, three-pointers made, assists and steals, but it was the play of VanVleet, scoring 12 of his 22 points in the final period that got the Raptors over the hump in a Game 6. 
Throughout the fourth period, VanVleet and the Raptors on offense spread the floor and when he had his chances to shoot, he did, especially from three-point range and he knocked them down, which allowed the Raptors to win a postseason game for the ages, which featured 18 lead changes, nine ties and with neither team amassing a lead of more than nine points.  
“It’s stressful. It’s stressful,” VanVleet, who went undrafted out of Wichita State two years ago said to ESPN/ABC’s Doris Burke after the win. “They’re [Warriors] are the best in the business for a reason. They’ve been the best for a long time. So, it took a lot of effort on our part. A lot of focus. A lot of resilience.” 
“They don’t give you anything. You got to go out there and take it, and we were just able to maintain over the series.” 
This series was a microcosm of the Raptors playoff run that consisted of their resilience, toughness, grit, and confidence of being able to overcome deficits in a series; their ability to win games on the road and being able to finish an opponent off when they have the chance. 
It started in the opening round where after losing Game 1 versus the Orlando Magic, the won the next four games to end the series 4-1. After falling behind in the East Semis 2-1 against the Philadelphia 76ers, the Raptors managed to win Game 7 thanks to four kind bounces on Leonard’s game-winning fallaway that before it went down at the final buzzer and sent the visitors home for the summer. The Raptors also fell behind in the Eastern Conference Finals 2-0 before rattling off four straight wins to capture their first Eastern Conference crown in their 24-year history. 
In their first appearance in The Finals, the Raptors took the early momentum by winning Game 1. After dropping Game 2 at home, the Raptors won both games in the Warriors gym of Oracle arena and they won the last game in Warriors home arena to close the door on their building forever. 
This crowning moment for the Raptors just suddenly happened. It came from a lot of years of blood, sweat and tears from the entire organization. 
When the Raptors reached the 2019 NBA Finals, one of the first things that President of Basketball Operations and Kia Executive of the Year candidate Masai Ujiri said was champions and championships are not built in a year. 
The Raptors drafted then Raptor DeMar DeRozan with the No. 9 overall pick in the 2009 draft. Three years later, they acquired Lowry from the Houston Rockets and after a rough beginning, the eventual starting backcourt not only found chemistry on the hardwood but developed a close friendship that last to this day. 
Over the last few years, the Raptors added via the draft Siakam, who averaged 19.8 points, and 7.5 boards on 51 percent from the field in The Finals and Norman Powell, with the No. 46 and the No. 27 pick in the 2015 and 2016 draft respectably.
“It’s just great, man,” Siakam, who entered Game 6 on a 0 for his last 12 from three-point range said to Burke. “Amazing for Cameroon, and you know, Africa in general. To be here and be able to celebrate with these guys is amazing.” 
What put the Raptors in position to capture their first Larry O’Brien trophy near the close of last week were the trades Ujiri made to bring in Ibaka at the trade deadline in February of 2017; the acquisition of Leonard, a two-time Kia Defensive Player of the Year and sharp shooting swingman Danny Green in the summer of 2018 from the San Antonio Spurs for DeRozan and reserve big man Jakob Poeltl and the trade that brought in starting center Marc Gasol, a three-time All-Star and the 2013 Kia Defensive Player of the Year for Jonas Valanciunas, Delon Wright, C.J. Miles and a 2024 Second-Round pick, who went to the Memphis Grizzlies. 
“This is the hardest thing I’ve ever done,” Gasol, who joined his older brother Pau as the first brothers in NBA history to individually win NBA titles said to Burke. “This is awesome. You know, it’s great and it’s time to celebrate. ‘We the North.’” 
Gasol also took the time during the trophy presentation to thank his former teammates from the Grit ‘n’ Grind era of the Grizzlies in Zach Randolph, Tony Allen, and Mike Conley saying to Burke, “Thank you. Thank you, guys, for making me the man and the player I am, and you know, I’ll be thankful forever.” 
One of the hard parts in building a title team is that you have to make some tough decisions along the way. Trading DeRozan and giving the winningest coach in franchise history with 320 wins in seven seasons and 2019 Kia Coach of the Year Dwane Casey the axe last summer after getting swept by then four-time Kia MVP LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2018 East Semis were two tough decisions but considering the way the last two postseasons for the Raptors concluded Ujiri felt change was necessary, even with the possibility that Leonard would not re-sign with the team when he becomes an unrestricted free agent at the end of this month. 
Leonard, Green and Gasol brought not only championship and playoff experience, but they brought a level of focus that made the Raptors better on both ends of the floor, especially at the defensive end. Above all, they brought an accountability and willingness to get better each and the understanding that strong work habits and a belief in one another will allow to not get to high when you win and not get to low after a tough loss. 
Those habits were also shaped by the man who replaced Coach Casey on the sidelines in first time head coach in Nick Nurse, whose coaching resume has taken him across the globe where he coached in London for the London Towers to the NBA G-League for Rio Grande Valley Vipers. 
One key thing that Nurse brought to the table was the fact that he put a focus to the team that everything they did during the regular season was to put them in position to be playing at their best in April, May, and June.
Those habits were especially valuable to the Raptors in the 2019 playoffs, and that resulted in them going 7-4 on the road this postseason. 
“We’ve been growing and trying to prove to the world that there’s a meaning to having an NBA team, one NBA team outside the U.S.,” Ujiri said to Burke. “These players, they’ve been unbelievable. But we wanted to win in Toronto, and we have won in Toronto.” 
Coach Nurse, who became the ninth rookie head coach in NBA history to lead his team to the title and the first to win an NBA G League title and an NBA title said his team became the last one standing because of their toughness, experience, unselfishness, and willingness to play defense. 
This group is also one where from the players to Coach Nurse was not highly thought of in their basketball journeys. The highest draft pick on this roster was Leonard at No. 15 in 2011. 
“Well I think it made us pretty resilient,” Coach Nurse said to Burke. “A group of guys who stuck together, fought through some adversity. We tried to keep even keel. I think our veteran players did a great job of that. And we tried to bounce back every time we needed to.” 
Perhaps the greatest display of that so-called toughness and grit was Leonard, who a year ago played just nine games because of a quad injury. His reputation took a major hit as he and the Spurs communication of him playing or not, even though he was medically cleared to return to the floor. 
He mentioned many times in this series that even with him being dealt to a new city and a new team with new teammates that the one thing that has never waivered was the poise and confidence that he could get back to being one of the best two-way players in the game. 
Leonard showed that in the 2019 playoffs where he scored 30 or more 14 times, eight of those coming on the road, which included efforts of 34, 30 and 36 points in Games 2, 3 and 4. 
This great playoff run by Leonard was the result of how the Raptors managed him during the regular season where he missed a total of 22 games this season, with a lot of them to rest and be ready for the postseason. The team in those 22 games he was out of the lineup they went 17-5. 
Leonard played this season with really no pressure from the organization, his teammates, and the coaching staff. The organization as a whole gave him space, which is the opposite of what the Spurs did and we saw the result of that. 
That is also a big reason why Leonard surpassed Hall of Famer Hakeem Olajuwon (725 points) for the third most points in a single postseason with a total of 732 points. Only James and six-time NBA champion with the Chicago Bulls Michael Jordan’s marks of 759 in the 1992 and 2018 postseasons respectably are ahead of Leonard. 
“Just life experiences,” Leonard, who averaged 28.2 points and 9.8 rebounds in The Finals on 36 percent from three-point range. “My teammates-they did a great job of you know welcoming me with open arms.” 
“They just told me to come out and play basketball. I’m a guy that just, you know, not get too high or too low, and it worked out. It out.” 
It worked out so well that, he as mentioned joined as mentioned earlier a Hall of Famer in Abdul-Jabbar and a future Hall of Famer in James as the only player to win Finals MVP with multiple teams, to which he said Burke that it is because of a great support system, through individual hard work and having a mindset of leading the Raptors to the title. 
It also helped as Leonard said that he came to a new team where the head coach’s mindset was the same as his. To try as he said to Burke get another “Larry O’ B.” 
“This is what I play basketball for. This is what I work out for all summer, during the season and I’m happy my hard work paid off,” Leonard said to Burke. 
Another player who has a great respect for this game, even with the highs and lows he has experienced in his seven seasons with the Raptors is Lowry. 
As mentioned earlier, last summer he saw not just his teammate and fellow All-Star DeRozan get dealt, which led him to not speaking to the Raptors front office and GM Ujiri for months. In fact, they did not try to clear the air until this past February. 
The product of North Philadelphia, PA though has had his good moments in his playoff career with the Raptors and has had some tough moments as well. 
Through it all he just kept on working and the guy who early on his NBA career in his prior stops with the Grizzlies and Rockets where he had a questionable attitude, his height, speed and athleticism has grown with the Raptors and as he said to Burke plays the game to provide for his wife Ayahna Cornish, a fellow native of the city of “Brotherly Love” and their two sons Karter and Kameron. 
“Hard work. Never letting nobody tell you [that] you can’t do something special and just a great group of guys,” Lowry, who averaged 16.2 points and 7.2 assists in The Finals said to Burke about his growth as a player and the love he has for his teammates. 
“This is crazy. This is awesome man. Toronto, Canada we brought it home baby. We brought it home.” 
He added about his former backcourt mate in DeRozan, “I love him and I know he’s happy for me right now. I’ll facetime him later. But right now, it’s about us on this stanchion. It’s about our fans and we’re going to celebrate some more right now. 
The question now for the Raptors is can they repeat next season? 
That will all depend if they can re-sign Leonard, who will opt out of the final year of his contract and become an unrestricted free agent. The team also has to decide if they want to keep Green, who will be an unrestricted free agent this summer. That is also a possibility Gasol, who can opt out of the final year of his contract, which is worth $25 million next season. 
“There’s nothing more we can do,” VanVleet said to the media on Monday about the Raptors front office re-signing Leonard. “I mean, the city’s done it. This franchise’s done it. The coaches have done it. The teammates have done it. We’ve done our job.” 
“He brought this city a championship, and I think he’s earned his freedom in his career to do what he wants to do, and we’ll all respect him and admire him, and if he’s on another team then we’ll just have to kick ass next year. Hopefully, he’ll be back.” 
The three things that the Raptors put to the forefront for Leonard that they believe should convince him to stay is he can win titles in Toronto. The medical staff will take great care of you so you can play at your best from the start of the season to the finish and trust you when you say to them you cannot play a game during the regular season. On top of that, he had millions of people screaming his name, especially during that championship parade that he gained their love and respect for leading them to the top of the NBA mountain. 
What the Raptors cannot guarantee in their negotiations to keep Leonard is nice weather and his extended family, which is all in Southern California, which is why the Los Angeles Clippers are in play to sign him this summer. It is now on Leonard to decide what he feels is the right decision to re-sign or move to possible sign with the Clippers. 
It took a lot of work for the Toronto Raptors to become NBA champions. They went through disappointing finishes in five straight postseason appearances prior to this one. They said goodbye to a player in DeMar DeRozan for the 2014 Finals MVP in Kawhi Leonard, and head coach in Dwane Casey who took them from the bottom of the NBA barrel to championship contenders. They took some chances in the draft on unknowns in Siakam and Powell. The made bold moves in acquiring Lowry, Gasol, and Leonard. They hired their newest head coach from within in Nick Nurse who had no prior NBA head coaching experience. 
Those moves by the front office, led by Masai Ujiri paid off with the franchise’s first NBA championship.
If the Raptors are able to re-sign Leonard this summer and possibly Green and Gasol opts in the last year of his deal or opts out and they sign him to a longer deal, the Raptors have as good of a chance to repeating. 
“I think at the end of the day, he’s going to make the right decision,” Pippen said of what Leonard will do. “If he wants to be in L.A. then it’s the right decision for him. But if he wants to continue to compete for a title there’s no better place than trying to repeat. And I think he’s with a good team, a good franchise. Obviously, he’s one of the top players in the game. So, he can pick his own poison and do well.”
Information, statistics and quotations are courtesy of 5/26/19 www.nba.com story, “High-Risk, High-Reward Trade For Leonard Looks Golden As Raptors Ride him To Finals,” by Shaun Powell; 6/13/19 9 p.m. “Toronto Raptors versus Golden State Warriors,” Game 6 of 2019 NBA Finals, presented by YouTubeTV on ABC with Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Doris Burke; 6/17/19 3 p.m. edition of “NBA: The Jump,” with Rachel Nichols, Ramona Shelburne, Scottie Pippen, and Dave McMenamin;  https://www.nba.com/games/201906123/TORGSW#/boxscore/recap; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/3149673/pascal-siakam; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/_/id/6450/kawhi-leonard; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/_/id/2991230/fred-vanvleet; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/_/id/2595516/norman-powell; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/_/id/3439/serge-ibaka; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toronto_Blue_Jays#1992-93:_World_Series_champions; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Gasol; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyle_Lowry; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeMar_DeRozan; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Toronto_Raptors_head_coaches; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Toronto_Raptors_seasons.