Posts Tagged ‘Luke Babbitt’

Healthier Roy, repaired Oden, and improved Babbitt, major parts of what Blazers need to regain former momentum

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

If you’re a fan of the terrific work done by Nate McMillan, since becoming head coach for the Portland Trail Blazers … as this corner of the blogosphere most assuredly is … then:

Positive Sign #1 -  Portland expected not to amnesty Roy this season

Positive Sign #2 – Oden set to sign 1-yr option with Portland

Positive Sign #3 – Babbitt ready for step forward this season

these three individual items, in conjunction with one another, should be seen as initial indicators that all may not be doom and gloom, afterall, in Rip City this season.

Depending on the other specific personnel decisions which Chad Buchanan is eventually going to make, prior to Christmas Day, the Blazers should still be expected to field an upper echelon team in the Western Conference this year.

It’s important to be perfectly clear about one thing …

Friday, June 25th, 2010

Initial Thoughts on last night’s NBA Draft concerning the Toronto Raptors

#1. In all likelihood, Ed Davis [PF, North Carolina] …

is going to become a very solid NBA player, sometime down-the-road.

#2. When it comes to properly evaluating which specific player was THE BEST available when the Raptors made the No. 13 [overall] Selection of the 2010 NBA Draft, last night …

———————-

Ed Davis will help possibly Bosh-less Raptors

Maybe the best thing about the pick is this: Davis wasn’t simply selected because he plays Bosh’s position. He was selected because he was, in the minds of the brain trust, the best player on the board when the Raptors used their 13th-overall pick. Taking the best-available talent is always a savvy strategy, which is to say it hasn’t always been the Raptors’ strategy. (See Araujo, Rafael.)

———————-

those who would try to tell you that Toronto’s basketball brain-trust did, in fact, choose THE correct player will eventually be shown to have made a serious mistake in judgment.

Tracking the development of how exactly a team that makes its 1st Round Draft choice, on the basis of a positional need and then tells its fanbase that it did the exact opposite thing

The first 5 selections went pretty much as planned:

1 Washington Wizards – John Wall, PG
2 Philadelphia 76ers – Evan Turner, G/F
3 New Jersey Nets … in need of dynamic Wing or a conventional Power Forward – Derrick Favors, PF
4 Minnesota Timberwolves … in need of a dynamic Wing or a conventional Big Man – Wesley Johnson, F
5 Sacramento Kings … in need of a Big Man – DeMarcus Cousins, C

Then, the Golden State Warriors became the first team to by-pass the opportunity to add a highly-rated PF from a reknowned Atlantic Coast Conference [ACC] program who has been properly identified, to this point, as a very good rebounder and shot-blocker with good length, overall athleticism, and a solid hoops IQ.

6 Golden State Warriors … in need of a Big Man – Ekpe Udoh, PF

Then, the Detroit Pistons proceeded to do the exact same thing.

7 Detroit Pistons … in need of a Big Man – Greg Monroe, PF/C

Then, the LA Clippers did precisely what the LA Clippers were expected to do.

8 Los Angeles Clippers – Al-Farouq Aminu, SF

Then the ‘fun’ began.

9 Utaj Jazz … in need of a Big Man – Gordon Hayward, SF

Raptors fans might want to ask themselves this question:

“How come Kevin O’Connor decided to go in this direction when the chances are pretty good that Carlos Boozer [PF/C] will NOT be returning to Salt Lake City in the fall? … when different “stat-based basketball gurus” have suggested that Gordon Hayward – as a relatively unathletic Small Forward – will be a bust?”

[PLEASE NOTE: This is the same GM who selected Deron Williams over Chris Paul a few seasons back; and, whose franchise has missed the playoffs, oh, about 1 time in the last 100 years, or so; and, played its way into the NBA Finals, during the 1990's; and, consistently been a top 6 team in the Western Conference for the last decade ... while operating under the same Hall Of Fame head coach, i.e. Jerry Sloan.] 

Then, Larry Legend went to work, and dipping into his ‘infamous bag of tricks’ …

10 Indiana Pacers … in need of a Point Guard – Paul George, SF

selected a college sophmore who was deemed to be not ‘good enough’ to have earned a place on the WAC all-conference team this season … but, who was also perceived by most NBA teams – not expressly looking for a big man – to be, perhaps, THE Guard/Forward with the HIGHEST UPSIDE in the entire 2010 Draft, having rocketed up to a potential ‘Lottery Pick’ over the course of just the last 3 months.

[PLEASE NOTE: This is the same GM who decided not to re-sign Jarrett Jack, PG last summer, as a restricted free agent, on a reasonable contract; once coached his team to the NBA Finals; and, has recently gone about the task of gradually re-building the Indiana Pacers into a legitimate franchise again, in the unseemly aftermath of The Brawl At The Palace ... since taking over from Donnie Walsh, on a full-time basis ... as one of the all-time great players in the history of the game.]

Then, Jeff Bower … who has blown both hot and cold during his tenure, as GM for New Orleans … made a serious mistake.

11 New Orleans Hornets [picking for the Oklahoma City Thunder] … in need of a Big Man – Cole Aldrich, C

Then, Chris Wallace … who has blown mostly cold during his tenure, as GM for Memphis … made a moderate mistake.

12 Memphis Grizzlies – Xavier Henry, SF

Then the Toronto Raptors had the chance to select THE BEST available basketball player still on the Draft Board … regardless of their positional need … and, proceeded to whiff, albeit by just a few inches.

[PLEASE NOTE: Luke Babbitt will play next season for the Portland Trail Blazers, and was selected in last night's Draft by their out-going GM, Kevin Pritchard, who is generally considered to have done a fabulous job during his tenure with their team, successfully overseeing the transformation of the once reknowned "Jailblazers" to one of the best still-youngish teams in the NBA, with legitimate title-winning aspirations down-the-road.]

It says in this corner that players like:

1 John Wall

2 Evan Turner

3 Al-Farouq Aminu

4 Gordon Hayward

5 Paul George

and

6 Luke Babbitt

 

2010 NBA DRAFT

 

1st ROUND

 

2nd ROUND

No.

Team

Player

Pos.

 

No.

Team

Player

Pos.

1

Wizards

John Wall

PG

 

1

Thunder

Tibor Pleiss

C

2

76ers

Evan Turner

SG

 

2

Heat

Dexter Pittman

C

3

Nets

Derrick Favors

PF

 

3

Kings

Hassan Whiteside

C

4

Timberwolves

Wesley Johnson

SF

 

4

Trail Blazers

Armon Johnson

PG

5

Kings

DeMarcus Cousins

C

 

5

Timberwolves

Nemanja Bjelica

SF

6

Warriors

Ekpe Udoh

PF

 

6

Pistons

Terrico White

SG

7

Pistons

Greg Monroe

PF

 

7

Bucks

Darington Hobson

SF

8

Clippers

Al-Farouq Aminu

SF

 

8

Knicks

Andy Rautins

SG

9

Jazz

Gordon Hayward

SF

 

9

Knicks

Landry Fields

SF

10

Pacers

Paul George

SF

 

10

Pacers

Lance Stephenson

SG

11

Thunder

Cole Aldrich

C

 

11

Heat

Jarvis Varnado

PF

12

Grizzlies

Xavier Henry

SG

 

12

Heat

Da’Sean Butler

SF

13

Raptors

Ed Davis

PF

 

13

Lakers

Devin Ebanks

SF

14

Rockets

Patrick Patterson

PF

 

14

Bucks

Jerome Jordan

C

15

Bucks

Larry Sanders

PF

 

15

Timberwolves

Paulao Prestes

C

16

Trail Blazers

Luke Babbitt

SF

 

16

Suns

Gani Lawal

PF

17

Wizards

Kevin Seraphin

PF

 

17

Bucks

Keith Gallon

PF

18

Clippers

Eric Bledsoe

PG

 

18

Thunder

Latavious Williams

SF

19

Celtics

Avery Bradley

SG

 

19

Spurs

Ryan Richards

PF

20

Spurs

James Anderson

SG

 

20

Raptors

Solomon Alabi

C

21

Hornets

Craig Brackins

PF

 

21

Pacers

Magnum Rolle

C

22

Trail Blazers

Elliot Williams

SG

 

22

Celtics

Luke Harangody

PF

23

Wizards

Trevor Booker

PF

 

23

Hawks

Pape Sy

SF

24

Nets

Damion James

SF

 

24

Clippers

Willie Warren

PG

25

Mavericks

Dominique Jones

SG

 

25

Jazz

Jeremy Evans

SF

26

Hornets

Quincy Pondexter

SF

 

26

Timberwolves

Hamady N’diaye

C

27

Hawks

Jordan Crawford

SG

 

27

Thunder

Ryan Reid

PF

28

Grizzlies

Greivis Vasquez

SG

 

28

Lakers

Derrick Caracter

PF

29

Magic

Daniel Orton

C

 

29

Magic

Stanley Robinson

SF

30

Timberwolves

Lazar Hayward

SF

 

30

Suns

Dwayne Collins

PF

simply do not come along every year in the NBA Draft, and when a franchise that really does know what it’s doing has a chance to grab one of them it does NOT willing choose to pass THAT by, in favour of a ‘solid pro prospect’ without ‘star’ upside.

Which is precisely what Toronto did, yet again, last night. :-(

#3. The Raptors did not make this pick last night because Ed Davis was the best player still available.

The Raptors made this, specific, pick because they are now thinking that Chris Bosh will not be re-signing with their team after July 1 and they desperately needed to add a capable Power Forward to their line-up with solid long term potential, as an above average rebounder and shot-blocker, to play beside Andrea Bargnani [C] – who is horribly deficient in both of these areas – in the front-court for the foreseeable future … given the fact that each of the other Big Men candidates who they had originally targeted had already been selected by the teams slotted ahead of them in this year’s Draft.

———-

PS. FWIW, know that choosing to go with a capable player like Solomon Alabi [C] over an exceptional ‘NBA talent’ like Hassan Whiteside [C], as an additional pick scooped up from the 2nd Round, in return for cash considerations, actually fits into the exact same category, i.e. as yet another opportunity lost. 

‘Bargnani Effect’ is what’s gradually making the Raptors extinct

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

It really is amazing just how serious the ramifications can be when an organization falls in ‘puppy love‘ with an ‘ineffectual’ player and then ‘ties its can to him’, come h*ll or high water.

Far too many times, this type of nonsensical decision results in years of under-achieving flatline performance for an outfit that could otherwise have gradually risen to eventually become one of the best in the league, if it would have been aware of this player’s actual deficiencies, in the first place, and removed him from their roster at the earliest possible point in time.

When this corner has to read the following example of a grossly incorrect statement/observation … from a Basketball Acumen perspective … from a significant segment of the Raptors still rabid fanbase:

————————

A Road Map For The Raptors 2010 Draft

If George is off the board, a distinct possibility, if I’m BC, I draft Cole Aldrich (assuming he’s still on the board at 13 as well of course.)  No, he’s not the biggest upside guy in the world, but I truly believe he can become a shot-blocking, solid rebounding big man at the next level akin to Joel PrzybillaThis would allow Toronto to then move Andrea to the 4, a position he’s more suited to play and one I feel that will minimize his weaknesses.

————————

it is extremely disappointing.

The fact is …

After watching him play in the NBA for the last 4 seasons, Andrea Bargnani’s best position is, undoubtably, Center [not Power Forward].

How come, you ask?

Primarily, because this is the ONLY position on the floor where he has a hope in h*ll of not committing 6 fouls in 20 minutes of game action and/or costing his team an unholy number of points allowed on the defensive end of the floor by his inability:

i. To DEFEND adequately [A] in Transition, or against any type of [B] “Switch” situation, or against any type of [C] Pick and Roll/Pop action, or [D] in any scenario where he is required to give “off-the-ball help to a teammate” after dribble penetration has occurred;

and;

ii. To REBOUND adequately versus any type of under-sized mismatched opponent … with a superior level of quickness … at the PF position.

i.e. NBA Secret Scout nails description of Bargnani [Oct 22 2009]

As Andrea Bargnani’s PT has gradually increased over the last 3 seasons, the Raptors’ W-L record has [coincidently? or correlatively?], either, gone in the opposite direction or, at-best, flatlined:

2006-2007, 47-35, made the playoffs, 1st Rd loss to the Nets
2007-2008, 41-41, made the playoffs, 1st Rd loss to the Magic [-]
2008-2009, 33-49, failed to make the playoffs [-]
2009-2010, 40-42, failed to make the playoffs [0]

The chief reason Toronto has had to play Bargnani for increasing numbers of minutes at the Center position these last 3 seasons is NOT because the team has “wanted” to use him in this way, or because he is particularly effective at this spot but, rather, because he is actually the LEAST DESTRUCTIVE to his own team’s chances for success when he’s working at this specific position … primarily against a power-based opponent.

Secondly, if the Raptors make the decision to select Cole Aldrich [C] with the No. 13 [overall] Pick in this evening’s NBA Draft, it will do absolutely nothing to eleviate their current problem with Bargnani …

* i.e. NBA: Potential Draft Busts

* If Chris Bosh happens not to re-sign with their team, as an UFA after July 1;

AND,

* If Toronto then makes the decision to trade Hedo Turkoglu [PF] and Jose Calderon [PG], in return for other players who are of equal or less ability.

Given the following developments in the Eastern Conference this summer:

1 Cleveland, re-signs LeBron James + adds Byron Scott?
2 Orlando, ?
3 Atlanta, re-signs Joe Johnson + promotes Larry Drew
4 Boston, retains Ray Allen + Doc Rivers
5 Miami, re-signs D-Wade + adds at least 1 [and, possibly, 2] new UFA
6 Milwaukee, returns Andrew Bogut from injury + adds Corey Maggette & CDR
7 Charlotte, ?
8 Chicago, adds at least 1 [or, possibly, 2] new UFA + Thom Thibodeau
——————————————-
9 Toronto, adds the No. 13 [overall] Pick/2010 NBA Draft
——————————————-
10 Indiana, adds the No. 10 [overall] Pick/2010 NBA Draft
11 New York, adds at least 1 [and, possibly, 2] new UFA
12 Detroit, adds the No. 7 [overall] Pick/2010 NBA Draft
13 Philadelphia, adds the No. 2 [overall] Pick/2010 NBA Draft + Doug Collins
14 Washington, adds the No. 1 [overall] Pick/2010 NBA Draft
15 New Jersey, adds the No. 3 [overall] Pick/2010 NBA Draft + Avery Johnson

and a possible 2010-2011 roster for Toronto which looks like this:

HOLDOVERS

PG: Jarret Jack/#1 and Marcus Banks/#2
OG: DeMar DeRozan/#3, Sonny Weems/#4 and Marco Belinelli/#5
SF: ?
PF: Andrea Bargnani/#6, Reggie Evans/#7 and Joey Dorsey/#8
C: Amir Johnson/#9

NEWCOMERS

* Cole Aldrich/#10
* Player 1/#11 [in return for Chris Bosh, e.g. David Lee]
* Player 2/#12 [in return for Chris Bosh, e.g. Wilson Chandler]
* Player 3/#13 [in return for Hedo Turkoglu, e.g. Andres Nocioni]
* Player 4/#14 [in return for Jose Calderon, e.g. Mo Williams]
* Player 5/#15 [2nd Pick, 2010 NBA Draft, e.g. Devin Ebanks]

in all likelihood, it would mean the Raptors will finish with less than 38 wins, again, and fail to make the playoffs for a 3rd consecutive season.

Instead of continuing to believe that Andrea Bargnani was in some way the RIGHT PLAYER for their franchise to select with the No. 1 [overall] Pick in the 2006 NBA Draft, and then still being determined to build around him going forward 5 years later … even though it will have cost them the services of Chris Bosh, in the end … what the Raptors need to do is finally bite the bullet on the entire Il Mago experiment and completely remove him from their roster.

Only then will this franchise begin to turn itself around … by recalibrating its over-riding Basketball Philosophy with a new focus on a more balanced approach to Team Offense, Team Defense and – most importantly! – Team Rebounding.

Now is the time to … quite literally … throw the baby out with the bath water!

———————————–

PS. The player who Toronto SHOULD be selecting this evening with the No. 13 [overall] Selection in the 2010 NBA Draft is one of: Al-Farouq Aminu [SF], Paul George [SF], Gordon Hayward [SF], Luke Babbitt [SF] or Hassan Whiteside [C]. ;)

TrueHoop Network Mock Draft, 1st Round Selections: Toronto Raptors’ perspective

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

According to the good folks at Raptors Republic, Toronto would be best served by selecting Avery Bradley [G, 6-3, 180, 19 yrs/Texas] with the No. 13 [overall] Pick of the 2010 NBA Draft, if the proceedings follow the path prescribed by the collection of team blogs asked to contribute to the TrueHoop Network’s annual mock draft yesterday:

1 John Wall, PG [Washington Wizards]

2 Evan Turner, G/F [Philadelphia 76ers]

3 Derrick Favors, PF [New Jersey Nets]

4 Wesley Johnson, F [Minnesota Timberwolves]

5 DeMarcus Cousins, C [Sacramento Kings]

6 Greg Monroe, C [Golden State Warriors]

7 Ekpe Udoh, PF [Detroit Pistons]

8 Al-Farouq Aminu, G/F [Los Angeles Clippers]

9 Xavier Henry, G/F [Utah Jazz]

10 Paul George, G/F [Indiana Pacers]

11 Cole Aldrich, C [New Orleans Hornets]

12 Ed Davis, PF [Memphis Grizzlies]

13 Avery Bradley, G [Toronto Raptors]

Unfortunately …

Yours truly does NOT share this same opinion.

If the Raptors exercise their right to make the No. 13 [overall] Selection tomorrow night and Gordon Hayward, Luke Babbitt and Hassan Whiteside are each on the board, then, the Raptors would be making a serious blunder if they use this pick on a combination guard with the attributes of Avery Bradley.

RATIONALE

While there is little doubt that Avery Bradley has what it takes to become a solid player in the NBA, when you consider his:

i. Relative quickness at the position he plays best;
ii. Explosive power;
iii. Size; and,
iv. Specific skill-set; 

there is still considerable doubt as to whether or not he has what it takes to become a “star” player in the best pro basketball league in the world.

However, when you look at the attributes of the following 3 players:

———-

Gordon Hayward, SF, 6-8, 200, Soph, 20 yrs/Butler
Scouting Report, Stats

Butler’s Hayward creates buzz at 19-and-under national team trials

Hayward’s Q rating should explode this summer, though, following a freshman year at Butler in which he averaged 13.1 points and 6.5 rebounds, and helped the Bulldogs reach the NCAA tournament after being picked to finish fifth in the Horizon League. On Wednesday morning at USA Basketball’s 19-and-under trials, there was more buzz over Hayward than any other player in camp.

Sharing a court with mega-recruits like Florida-bound Kenny Boynton and former top 100 big men such as Minnesota’s Ralph Sampson III and Georgia’s Howard Thompkins, Hayward dominated an early scrimmage with his stellar long-range shooting (6-of-9 from the field for 15 points) and passing ability (three assists, no turnovers). He had the gallery of NBA scouts and college coaches atwitter. “This Hayward kid is impressive,” one scout remarked. “He’s not just a shooter, either — he can put the ball on the floor and make plays.”

No one was rushing to put him on their 2010 draft boards — Hayward still projects as a 3-4 year college player who, at 200 pounds, has yet to fill out his frame — but he could eventually become Butler’s first NBA player since Ralph “Buckshot” O’Brien in 1953. In the meantime, after making Jamie Dixon‘s 12-man roster for the 19-and-under team, Hayward should begin to be viewed as a high-level national talent rather than merely the All-Horizon League player he was as a freshman. As Butler’s Stevens says, Hayward is a player “with a very high ceiling.”

———-

Luke Babbitt, SF, 6-7, 215, Soph, 21 yrs/Nevada
Scouting Report, Stats

———-

Hassan Whiteside, C, 6-11, 235, Fresh, 21 yrs/Marshall
Scouting Report, Stats

———-

there should be little-to-no doubt, whatsoever, that each one has the ability to become a PRIMETIME player in the NBA, in the not-too-distant future.

If your team is gifted with the opportunity to select a player who …

OPTION A
Was named 1 of the 5 best players at the 2009 U19 Men’s FIBA World Championship, or

OPTION B
Has an individual game which resembles a high motor, hybrid version of two members of the original USA Dream Team [i.e. Larry Bird and Chris Mullin], or

OPTION C
Has the ability to average 5.4 blocked shots per game, as a freshman in college + a 7 foot, 7 inch wingspan + a father whose DNA allowed him to play professional football in the NFL and CFL, as a 6-4, 250 defensive end,

you do NOT pass THAT up for a combo guard whose best “skills” are found on the “defensive” side of the floor, and in his ability to “create his own shot”, on offense.

Whether or not the Raptors are eventually able to re-sign Chris Bosh should actually be irrelevant … when it comes to making this specific decision … if any of these 3 players is still on the board and Toronto has the chance to make the No. 13 [overall] Selection in the 2010 NBA Draft.

With the 13th pick in the 2010 NBA Draft, the Toronto Raptors select …

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

This year’s draft will take place on Thursday [June 24].

According to 3 recent ‘mock drafts’, the first 10 selections are likely to play out in the following ways:

#

Team

Yahoo Sports

Draft Express

Chad Ford

1

Wizards

Wall/J

Wall/J

Wall/J

2

76ers

Turner/E

Turner/E

Turner/J

3

Nets

Favors/D

Favors/D

Favors/D

4

Timberwolves

Johnson/W

Johnson/W

Cousins/D

5

Kings

Monroe/G

Monroe/G

Johnson/W

6

Warriors

Udoh/E

Cousins/D

Monroe/G

7

Pistons

Cousins/D

Aminu/A

Aminu/A

8

Clippers

George/P

Hayward/G

Davis/E

9

Jazz

Henry/X

Davis/E

George/P

10

Pacers

Davis/E

Udoh/E

Henry/X

 

 

 

 

 

11

Hornets

?

?

?

12

Grizzlies

?

?

?

13

Raptors

?

?

?

Which would then mean the following group of players will not be available to the Raptors with the #13 pick:

 

HIGHLY RATED PROSPECTS

ACCORDING TO OTHER NBA OBSERVERS

Player

Hgt

Wgt

Pos

Yr

Age

Likely Availability For Raptors

Already Selected In Mocks

Wall/J

6-4

195

PG

Fr

19

Gone

3 of 3

Turner/E

6-7

201

G/F

Jr

21

Gone

3 of 3

Favors/D

6-10

246

PF

Fr

18

Gone

3 of 3

Johnson/W

6-7

195

PF

Jr

22

Gone

3 of 3

Monroe/G

6-11

240

C

So

20

Gone

3 of 3

Cousins/D

6-11

270

C

Fr

19

Gone

3 of 3

Henry/X

6-7

210

G/F

Fr

19

Probably Gone

2 of 3

Davis/E

6-9

215

PF

So

21

Gone

3 of 3

while at least 2 of the following group of players shown below in neon green will most likely still be available when Toronto makes the #13 selection:

HIGHLY RATED PROSPECTS FOR TORONTO

ACCORDING TO khandor

Player

Hgt

Wgt

Pos

Yr

Age

Likely Availability For Raptors

Already Selected In Mocks

Aminu/A

6-8

210

SF

So

19

Probably Gone

2 of 3

Babbitt/L

6-7

215

SF

So

21

 Available

0 of 3

Bradley/A

6-3

180

G

Fr

19

Available

0 of 3

George/P

6-9

215

SF

So

20

Probably Gone

2 of 3

Hayward/G

6-8

200

SF

So

20

Perhaps Available

1 of 3

Udoh/E

6-10

240

PF

Jr

23

Probably Gone

2 of 3

Whiteside/H

6-11

235

C

Fr

21

Available

0 of 3

 

The key poll question for today is:

————————————————————-

If these players are still available, who should the Raptors pick with the No. 13 [overall] Selection of the 2010 NBA Draft?

View Results

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Related:

Revisiting Draft Rater [includes John Hollinger's subjective Draft Board]

Possible 1st Round Draft Picks for the Raptors

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

The 2010 NBA Draft will take place in 7 days.

This summer there are several players available who should be able to develop into outstanding NBAers, including household names like John Wall [PG/OG] and Evan Turner [OG/SF], currently atop every list of the so-called “draft experts”.

From a Raptors perspective, however, Toronto is situated in the #13 position and is, therefore, unlikely to have access to those players.

Nevertheless …

If the Raptors want to make significant strides going forward this off-season … regardless what Chris Bosh eventually decides to do, as far as re-signing with the team [or not] is concerned … their rabid fans should focus their attention on the following players who are likely to be picked in the 1st Round on Thursday, June 24, 2010:

[in alphabetical order]

Should Toronto manage to select one of these players they will have succeeded in upgrading the talent on their current roster and positioned themselves to make gradual progress up the standings in the Eastern Conference.