The Toronto Raptors head into the historically unfriendly confines
of Arco Arena in Sacramento on Wednesday losers of six of their last
seven after a tough setback the previous night.
Toronto couldn't hold on to a 58-50 lead at halftime against the Los
Angeles Lakers on Tuesday, with Kobe Bryant netting the winning basket
with just 1.7 seconds left in the fourth quarter.
Toronto managed just four field goals in the final eight minutes in
the 109-107 result, starting their road trip with two straight losses.
As a result, the Raptors begin Wednesday just 1½ games clear of the
playoff dividing line in the Eastern Conference, although they are in
sixth place.
The positive part for the Raptors is that after seven games away due
to an ankle injury and then a stomach bug, Chris Bosh came close to his
season averages against the Lakers.
Bosh compiled 22 points, seven rebounds and four assists in his
second game back. He managed just 12 points the previous outing against
Philadelphia.
Andrea Bargnani poured in 21 against Los Angeles to go along with a team-high eight rebounds.
Jarrett Jack had the vast majority of his 18 points in the third
quarter, but was curiously glued to the bench for a large chunk of the
fourth despite not being in foul trouble.
After a strong finish to February, Hedo Turkoglu has mostly fizzled
so far in March. Turkoglu's ledger on Tuesday included just a pair of
three-pointers made among his seven shot attempts.
Turkoglu perhaps can gain motivation on Wednesday, playing against
the team where he spent his first three-plus seasons as an NBA pro.
Toronto got a rare win in their last visit to Arco, a 107-101 score
on Dec. 26, 2008. The Raptors as a franchise hadn't won in the building
since 1997, a span of 10 games.
But 15 months is a long time by NBA standards. The leading scorer
for the Raptors that night was Jermaine O'Neal, while John Salmons and
Brad Miller were top point-getters for the Kings. All three have since
moved on to other teams.
The current edition of the Kings is also struggling, losing three in a row and seven of the last 10.
Sacramento had a strong first quarter in Portland on Tuesday, but
found themselves playing catch-up after a second period in which they
were outscored 27-13.
The club tied the game with eight minutes left in the 88-81 loss but
couldn't find the needed offence after that, most emphatically
illustrated by Beno Udrih's airball on a three-point attempt.
Rookie guard Tyreke Evans had 18 points, six rebounds and six
assists, with forward Carl Landry contributing 17 points. Centre
Spencer Hawes led the team with nine rebounds.
The Kings are a young team — no player on the roster has more than
six years of NBA experience — a fact that's been demonstrated often
this season.
The 19-year-old Evans publicly took fifth-year pro Andreas Nicioni
to task after Sunday's loss to Oklahoma City for selfish shot-taking
and then just as publicly apologized two days later to the Argentine.
The Kings also haven't been able to close the show on some occasions, demonstrated the last time the two clubs met on Feb. 7.
Bosh scored 12 of his 36 points in the fourth and Antoine Wright
stymied Evans late as Toronto rallied from a flat middle section of the
game at Air Canada Centre for a 115-104 win.
Toronto concludes its road trip with games on consecutive nights against Golden State and Portland, beginning Saturday.