Raptors Notes: Barnes, Play-In, Quickley, Ingram

Entering their first post-All-Star game vs. the Heat on Friday, the Raptors held a 17-38 record, the fifth-worst mark in the NBA. While fans in Toronto might like to see them finish the season by cementing their spot in the league’s bottom five and positioning themselves for a top pick in the 2025 draft, that’s not Scottie Barnes‘ plan, writes Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca.

“They can be excited (about the draft lottery),” Barnes said on Thursday. “I don’t really give a damn about it. I’m trying to go out there and win games, try to possibly make something happen. So, they can try to be excited for that, but my mindset’s on a different place.

“… I look at the standings every day. We’re still in that fight. We still could make something happen. That’s my motivation. When I look at it, I see that we still have a chance. The team, we feel like we still want to win. We feel great going into every single game with the mindset and focus of trying to get better and trying to achieve that goal of winning.”

In a normal season, those sorts of comments from a player on a 17-38 team might be written off as hopelessly optimistic. But in this year’s Eastern Conference, the idea of the Raptors making the play-in tournament isn’t entirely out of the question.

The No. 10 Bulls are just 4.5 games ahead of Toronto and have lost five games in a row. The No. 11 Sixers have dropped six straight. And the No. 12 Nets were plummeting down the standings before winning six of seven prior to the All-Star break. As Grange points out, the Raptors also have – by far – the easiest rest-of-season schedule of any NBA team by winning percentage, with a total of seven games still remaining against Washington, Utah, and Charlotte.

We have more on the Raptors:

  • Barnes limped off the court and into the locker room near the first quarter of Friday’s game vs. Miami after turning his right ankle, which he sprained earlier this season, according to Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca (Twitter thread). However, the star forward was deemed available to return to the game.
  • In the first season of a five-year, $162.5MM contract that raised eyebrows when it was reported last summer, Immanuel Quickley has had to deal with injuries affecting his wrist, pelvis, elbow, and groin and has played just 16 games. As Eric Koreen of The Athletic writes within a profile of the fifth-year guard, Quickley believes missing so much time due to health issues caused him to focus more on being a vocal leader for the team. “I think, if anything, I probably (spoke) maybe even more (than usual), because that’s really the only way you can help,” he said. “So, just try to (help) in any way I can help, especially being a young team — just all the experiences I’ve been through, what I’ve been able to learn. I try to give back to the guys.”
  • Reacting to the Raptors’ three-year, $120MM extension for newly acquired forward Brandon Ingram, one rival executive tells ESPN’s Tim Bontemps and Brian Windhorst (Insider link) that he thinks the price was “too expensive” for the former All-Star, who has been limited to 18 appearances this season due to injuries. “I don’t think Ingram gets that deal if he’d have hit free agency, especially the player option, but it depends on how he would’ve finished the season in New Orleans (had he not been traded),” another league executive told ESPN. “They obviously really like him and think he’s a good fit, but they bid against themselves on that deal — and they bid against themselves on Quickley.”
  • Ingram is still “not close” to playing, Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic said this week, per Lewenberg (Twitter link). However, the 27-year-old, who has been out since December 7 due to a badly sprained ankle, is doing some light on-court work. “He’s limited with what he can do with his ankle,” Rajakovic said on Thursday. “But his upper body, lifting, we can get on that right now. … I’m hopeful he’ll be able to ramp up his workouts.”
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