Raptors center Jakob Poeltl was able to go through portions of Wednesday’s practice but he still hasn’t been cleared for contact work, tweets Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca. Head coach Darko Rajakovic said Poeltl is working on his conditioning after being out since January 7 with a left ankle sprain, and the Austrian big man is considered day-to-day.
Toronto reacquired Poeltl last February, when the team sent out its 2024 first-round pick (top-six protected) to San Antonio. Poeltl, who has averaged 10.6 PPG, 8.3 RPG, 2.5 APG and 1.4 BPG in 36 games this season, re-signed with the Raptors on a four-year, $78MM deal last summer.
The roster looks a lot different now than it did last year, with veterans Fred VanVleet (signed with Houston in free agency), OG Anunoby (traded to New York) and Pascal Siakam (traded to Indiana) all on new teams. Poeltl said it was difficult to see Siakam go, according to Lewenberg (Twitter link).
“It was tough because he was the guy I was closest to on this team,” Poeltl said of Siakam. “… I guess I was mentally prepared for it a little bit already because there were so many rumors… but it’s still really sad for me to basically lose my best friend on the team.”
With Toronto now focused on developing its young players rather than competing for a playoff spot, Lewenberg asked Poeltl if the team’s change of direction made him question the decision to re-sign or ponder his future with the Raptors (Twitter link).
“Not necessarily,” Poeltl said. “The only thing that was important to me is that I was on a team that could play competitive basketball. As long as it’s not a team that was really actively trying to tank, I guess, was the thing for me. Like, I want to play on a team that’s trying to win every night.
“So, for me, even though had some changes and we lost some really good players, I think we’re still on a course where we’re trying to build around this team right now and were not hunting for a No. 1 draft pick, you know what I mean? So as long as that’s the case, I think I’m going to be happy here and I’m hoping to contribute to this new Raptors team, this new project that we’re starting.”
Here’s more on the Raptors, who are currently 16-28 after dropping seven of their past eight games:
- On a related topic, Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca wonders if fans should be cheering for the Raptors to lose for the remainder of 2023/24 in order to keep their first-round pick. As previously mentioned, Toronto will only keep the pick if it lands in the top six of the upcoming draft; in that scenario, the Spurs would be owed the Raptors’ 2025 first-rounder, with the same top-six protection. On the other hand, Grange notes that the 2025 draft is viewed by scouts and executives as having more top-end talent compared to 2024; the No. 7 or No. 8 pick in ’25 could be end up being quite a bit more valuable than a top-six pick this year.
- Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca recently released a trade deadline primer that covers Toronto’s cap situation, draft assets, player assets, exceptions, restrictions (newly acquired players can’t be aggregated with other salaries), and more.
- The only “untouchable” player on Toronto’s roster is Scottie Barnes, according to Eric Koreen of The Athletic, who believes the third-year forward will sign a rookie scale max extension this summer. Koreen also thinks “it would be aggressively weird” if RJ Barrett, Immanuel Quickley, Gradey Dick, Jordan Nwora or Kira Lewis were traded. Veterans like Bruce Brown, Gary Trent Jr., Dennis Schröder, Chris Boucher and Poeltl fall into Koreen’s “Selling with hopes of a return” trade tier, though he doesn’t think Poeltl will actually be moved.
- Starting guard Quickley has been ruled out for Friday’s contest with the Clippers due to a thigh bruise, Murphy tweets. Quickley, acquired from New York in the Anunoby deal, is averaging 16.7 PPG, 4.6 RPG and 6.1 APG through 12 games (31.8 MPG) as a Raptor. The 24-year-old will be traveling on the upcoming six-game road trip, per Doug Smith of The Toronto Star (Twitter link), which suggests it may be a short-term injury.
I would say Quickly is untouchable unless it was for a top elite young PG.
And I can’t see anyone giving that up for Immanuel Quickly. Very nice player but not a star.
Poetle is delusional if he thinks we’re not hunting for that # 1 pick
The bottom 5 is god awful and I can’t see the Raptors bottoming out like that if healthy.
Emo-tl
Raptors need to gut the roster further to ensure the tank job does its job.
GTJ, Poeltl, and Brown all need to go.
I think there are plenty of deals to be made.
OKC – Bertans, Mann, and a FRP for Bruce Brown.
Rockets – Landale, Oladipo, FRP and a SRP for GTJ.
Mavs – Poeltl and McDaniels for Holmes, Kelber, FRP and SRP.
And maybe you ship Schroder back to LAL if they miss out on Murray.
Tanking is a terrible idea. The Raptors should be playing to send that pick to the Spurs this year. Makes little sense to attempt to keep a high pick in a weak draft, only to send the Spurs a high pick in a deeper draft next year.
What makes you think anyone wants GTJ? He couldn’t find a single taker last off-season so he opted in. His current market is reported as non-existent. He doesn’t move the needle. Really hasn’t leaped making Masai look bad ok that trade for years later
Tanking is not the way forwards with the Raptors current line up…
They are 1 star piece away now… They have the solid role players and picks as well as a little wiggle room on the cap sheet to get themselves set up for a trade…
To set themselves up for next season… But they could also just take their time…
In 2025 with some draft stock they could be a 500 team.
That would give Spurs the 17th pick.
We should be able to live with that