Laying the Groundwork for the NBA in Toronto
As the Toronto Raptors approached their scheduled home opener at the
SkyDome on November 3, 1995, club President John I. Bitove could congratulate
himself on having pulled off a remarkable achievement.
Bringing NBA basketball back to Toronto, where the long-forgotten Toronto
Huskies had tipped off against the New York Knickerbockers in 1946, had
been an arduous process, fraught with obstacle after obstacle. It had
not been such a struggle a half-century ago, when the Huskies became a
charter member of the Basketball Association of America, the forerunner
of the NBA. In fact, Toronto had hosted the new league's first game on
November 1, 1946, when the Knicks beat the Huskies, 68-66. The Toronto
franchise folded at the end of the 1946-47 season, however, and the NBA
wouldn't return to Canada for nearly 50 years.
The current franchise traces its roots back to April 23, 1993, when the
NBA announced that it had received a formal application from Professional
Basketball Franchise (Canada) Inc. (PBF). The ambitious group's president
was Bitove, the son of a leading Canadian food services family and president
of Bitove Investments Inc. (His father, John Bitove Sr., had approached
the NBA about a franchise in Toronto during previous expansions.) The
PBF group also included Allan Slaight of Standard Broadcasting Limited;
Borden Osmak, a vice president of The Bank of Nova Scotia; Phil Granovsky
of Atlantic Packaging Limited; and David Peterson, former premier of the
Province of Ontario, who served as chairman.
Originally, Bitove and Slaight were each to own 44 percent of the franchise,
with the bank holding a 10-percent stake and Granovsky and Peterson 1
percent each. The ownership group later cut in former Detroit Pistons
star Isiah Thomas, who received a 5-percent share from both Bitove and
Slaight. Thomas later became a club vice president and the architect of
the Raptors' roster.
The NBA's expansion into Toronto was unique for two reasons. First, it
marked the league's first step beyond the borders of the United States.
Second, PBF was only one of three viable prospective bid groups in the
same city. In previous expansions the NBA had been faced with choosing
between competing cities, but never with such a strong internal rivalry
for a franchise within a single market. There was little doubt, however,
that Toronto wanted and could support an NBA franchise-top-caliber exhibition
basketball games had twice drawn more than 25,000 fans to the SkyDome,
in 1989 and 1992.
The door to Canada had been nudged open the previous year by the Palestra
Group, led by road construction magnate Larry Tanenbaum of Toronto, who
was joined in his application by the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
and Labatt Breweries, both of whom were also founding partners in baseball's
highly successful Toronto Blue Jays. The NBA was not considering expansion
when Palestra put down an unsolicited application fee of $100,000, but
the possibilities presented by the untapped Canadian market were irresistible.
Also joining the bid process were rock concert impresarios Bill Ballard
and Michael Cohl, who had NBA legend Earvin "Magic" Johnson in their camp
and support from Metro Toronto to develop a new arena on civic lands.
In July 1993 an NBA expansion committee, headed by Phoenix Suns owner
Jerry Colangelo, came to Toronto to meet with the bid groups, examine
their plans, and visit their proposed arena sites. The PBF contingent
made an immediate impact, based upon its criteria for a downtown site:
it was to be on the subway line-giving Torontonians access without having
to fight winter conditions-and close to the financial core of the city
to entice major businesses to buy corporate boxes, a key element in the
financial plan of 1990s sport franchises. Neither of the other bidders
proposed a site that was so centrally located.
In the end, it was the arena plan that led the NBA expansion committee
to recommend on September 30, 1993, that PBF be conditionally awarded
a franchise for the 1995-96 season to become the 28th team in the league.
The NBA Board of Governors endorsed that decision on November 4 and set
a record expansion fee of $125 million, about four times the amount levied
for the previous expansion. It was agreed that Toronto would play its
first two seasons in the SkyDome while its own building was being completed.
The battle was still far from over, however. There was a chance that
the franchise agreement would be revoked over the thorny issue of an Ontario
provincial betting game, Pro-Line, which among other things allowed bettors
to wager on the outcome of NBA games. The league's longstanding opposition
to such a scheme ran up against the province's unwillingness to do away
with a game that could put some $100 million into Ontario's coffers, some
of it earmarked for hospitals. It took three months of sensitive negotiations
involving the league, the PBF, and the province to resolve the dispute.
The province finally acknowledged the boost an NBA team would provide
to the local economy through taxes-$81 million the first year alone, according
the the Metro Toronto Convention and Visitor Association-and the creation
of 4,000 jobs necessitated by construction and related activities.
The Toronto club took on responsibility for various youth and community
programs in order to offset dropping basketball from the betting slips.
For its part, the NBA, eager to gain the Toronto market and wanting to
preserve good relations with its new constituency, contributed $1.5 million
to medical research, donated $2 million in television time to promote
tourism in Ontario, joined with the Toronto team to create a charitable
foundation, and agreed to hold the 1995 NBA Draft in Toronto.
The Name Game
After meeting all of these conditions, PBF could finally get down to
the business of creating a team identity. It instituted a nationwide "Name
Game" contest to name the team and develop team colors and a logo.
The Name Game became one of the most popular such enterprises in league
history, generating more than 2,000 entries. The final top-10 list was
dominated by animal names: Beavers, Bobcats, Dragons, Grizzlies, Hogs
(Toronto's nickname is Hogtown), Raptors, Scorpions, T-Rex, Tarantulas,
and Terriers.
On May 15 the PBF finally had an identity. No doubt fueled by the enormous
success of the movie Jurassic Park and the popularity of dinosaurs with
youngsters who would grow up to be fans in the target market, the team's
new moniker, the Toronto Raptors, was unveiled on Canadian national television.
The franchise's logo (the work of NBA Properties) featured an aggressive,
sharp-toothed little dinosaur dribbling a basketball. The team colors
were to be bright red, purple, black, and "Naismith silver" (in honor
of Canadian James Naismith, who invented the game of basketball in 1891).
More than $20 million in Raptors gear was snapped up in the first month.
By the end of 1994 the logo was hot in the marketplace, and the Raptors,
still a long way from their first game, were seventh in the league in
merchandise sales.
Shortly after their name was announced, the Raptors made several additions
to their management team. On May 24, 1994, Isiah Thomas burst through
a large paper Raptors logo to be introduced as the team's vice president
of baskeball operations. Thomas had long been admired by Bitove, who had
attended Thomas's alma mater of Indiana and had then followed the start
of his Pistons career closely while studying at the University of Windsor,
Ontario, across the river from Detroit.
In September 1994 Bob Zuffelato, a 33-year veteran of coaching, player
development, and scouting, was hired to direct the talent search, with
the help of a pair of video experts. Former Denver Nuggets vice president
Glen Grunwald, a member of the 1981 NCAA-champion Indiana Hoosiers, was
hired as Thomas's assistant in November.
Later that year the Raptors' original downtown site, next to the Eaton
Centre shopping complex, was deemed too small to accommodate the new arena.
Bitove wanted a construction site large enough to house an additional
22,500-seat hockey rink, which would assure more event nights and give
the structure more financial viability. This was accomplished by acquiring
from Canada Post the historic Postal Delivery Building at the south end
of downtown, east of the SkyDome and still served by the subway system.
Uncertainty about the arena obviously didn't deter ticket sales. At the
end of 1994 the Raptors reported 50-percent deposits on 15,287 seats for
the inaugural season. In February 1995 it was announced that the building
would be named the Air Canada Centre. Revised plans called not only for
an arena to be completed by fall 1997 but also for 200,000 square feet
of adjacent office space.
The Raptors officially became an NBA franchise on May 16, 1995, and the
work of building the team began in earnest. Toronto held its first free-agent
camp at Seneca College, under Brendan Malone, a longtime assistant with
the Pistons and well-known to Thomas. Although Thomas was well aware of
Malone's abilities on the basketball court, he had never pictured him
in a head coaching role until he listened in on the motivational talk
Malone had with the crew of career minor leaguers and journeymen who had
turned up in search of the NBA dream.
Five days after camp closed, Thomas introduced Malone as the team's first
head coach. Thomas wanted someone who was not only a teacher but also
had the maturity to deal with what would inevitably be a number of losing
seasons. Malone, for his part, emphasized defense and rebounding as a
key for the new club.
And On to the Draft. . .
The NBA held a coin flip between the Raptors and the expansion Vancouver
Grizzlies to determine the order of selection in both the expansion draft
and the college draft. The Grizzlies won the flip, electing to pick sixth
in the college draft (Toronto would pick seventh) and give Toronto the
first pick in the expansion draft. Prior to the expansion draft Toronto
had signed its first player by agreeing on contract terms with Vincenzo
Esposito, an all-star forward from the Italian League.
The 1995 NBA Expansion Draft was held on June 24. Toronto's first pick
was veteran Chicago Bulls guard B. J. Armstrong, although Thomas made
it clear that Armstrong's wishes to be traded to a contender would be
honored. After the selection of Armstrong, the Raptors and the Grizzlies
alternated picks until one player had been taken from each of the existing
27 NBA teams.
Thomas filled out the Toronto roster with a combination of veterans and
youngsters. He acquired proven players in the Portland Trail Blazers'
Jerome Kersey, the San Antonio Spurs' Willie Anderson, the Milwaukee Bucks'
Ed Pinckney, and the Miami Heat's John Salley. He also picked promising
young players such as Dontonio Wingfield from the Seattle SuperSonics,
B. J. Tyler from the Philadelphia 76ers, Keith Jennings from the Golden
State Warriors, Oliver Miller from the Detroit Pistons, and Tony Massenburg
from the Los Angeles Clippers. Others selected included Andres Guibert
from the Minnesota Timberwolves, Doug Smith from the Dallas Mavericks,
Zan Tabak from the Houston Rockets, and Acie Earl from the Boston Celtics.
In the 1995 NBA Draft held at SkyDome in Toronto, the Raptors' first-ever
draft pick (seventh overall) was 5-10 point guard Damon Stoudamire from
Arizona. The pick surprised most of the 20,000 in attendance, who were
expecting the Raptors to take Ed O'Bannon from UCLA. "They'll know who
Damon Stoudamire is by the time I'm through playing," the young recruit
said confidently. In the second round Toronto picked University of Michigan
guard Jimmy King, the fourth member of the vaunted "Fab Five" to be drafted
into the NBA.
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1995-96:
Raptors Boast Top Rookie In Debut Season
As was expected, the Toronto Raptors took their share of lumps during
the 1995-96 season, posting a 21-61 record in their first season. But
the Raptors also offered huge doses of the unexpected, including wins
over the teams with the three best records in the NBA (Chicago, Seattle
and Orlando).
The Raptors also unleashed a 5-10 rookie dynamo by the name of Damon Stoudamire,
who led the team in scoring (19.0 ppg) and assists (9.3 apg, fifth in
the NBA). Stoudamire did it all; he was the MVP of the Rookie Game at
All-Star Weekend, recorded his first triple-double (20 points, 12 rebounds
and 11 assists in the win over Seattle), played more than 40 minutes per
game, was a two-time Rookie of the Month, and capped his first NBA campaign
with the ultimate honor, the Rookie of the Year Award.
Stoudamire and the Raptors recorded their first win at the expense of
the New Jersey Nets, a 94-79 decision at the SkyDome. In December, they
defeated the Vancouver Grizzlies in the first regular-season matchup between
the NBA's two newest teams. But the most shocking and satisfying victory
had to have been the 109-108 upset over the history-making Chicago Bulls
on March 24.
Isiah Thomas, the team's general manager, was constantly mindful of trying
to build a winner for Toronto. He shuffled the deck just before the trading
deadline to give the Raptors more youthful talent in Doug Christie and
Sharone Wright. At the end of the season, he made another big move, replacing
Head Coach Brendan Malone after one season and replacing him with Darrell
Walker.
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1996-97:
Giant Killers on the Rise
Success is relative, and so a 30-52 record in only their second season
in the league was cause for celebration in Toronto, where the Raptors
improved by nine games from their inaugural season.
At times, the Raptors were a team that belied their inexperience. Toronto
was one of only 11 teams to topple the Chicago Bulls. The Raptors also
defeated each of the three other eventual conference finalists - Houston,
Utah and Miami. Mysteriously, the Raptors had more problems with teams
that were not of championship caliber, including three losses to the 15-67
Boston Celtics.
Like his team, prize rookie Marcus Camby showed flashes of brilliance.
Camby shook off early season injuries and flourished down the stretch,
including games of 36 and 37 points, en route to a berth on the NBA's
All-Rookie Team. Toronto's other young star, the speedy Damon Stoudamire,
ran the Raptors' offense with the precision of a crafty veteran, finishing
sixth in the league in assists (8.8 apg) and 19th in scoring (20.2 ppg).
Journeymen Doug Christie and Walt Williams found a home in Toronto. Williams
tied a team record by nailing six three-pointers during a win over Minnesota,
and finished among the league leaders in three-point percentage (.400).
Christie finished second in the league in steals (2.48 spg) and was the
runnerup for the league's Most Improved Player Award.
Forward Carlos Rogers made international headlines after offering to donate
a kidney to his ailing sister, a move that would have ended his career.
But a virus weakened Rene Rogers, and she died before the transplant could
be performed. Rogers dedicated his season, and his career, to his sister.
"Everything I do now is for Rene. My sister fought a long and hard
battle. I'm not going to let what my sister went through be in vain."
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1997-98:
New Arena Brings New Hope
It was a tumultuous season for the Toronto Raptors, but with a core of
talented young players, a determined new general manager and ownership
and the prospect of a new arena opening next February, Raptor fans should
be optimistic about the future of basketball in Toronto.
The troubles started early in the season with a slew of injuries which
kept Popeye Jones, Marcus Camby, Carlos Rogers, Walt Williams and Zan
Tabak off the court and led to a 17-game losing streak in the first part
of the season. Executive Vice President Isiah Thomas, whom many considered
the heart and soul of the organization, severed his ties with the team
and signed on as an analyst with NBC Sports. On Feb. 13, 1996, Schick
Rookie of the Year Damon Stoudamire was traded to Portland along with
Walt Williams and Carlos Rogers for Kenny Anderson, Gary Trent, Alvin
Williams, a couple picks and cash, while assistant coach Butch Carter
was promoted to the head job to replace Darrell Walker.
The Raptors were not done trading yet, however. On Feb. 18, Toronto sent
Anderson, Popeye Jones and Zan Tabak to Boston for rookie point guard
Chauncey Billups, Dee Brown, Roy Rogers and John Thomas. Following the
trading deadline, the Raptors had become the youngest team in the league
with an average age of 24.6. Toronto had five rookies on its roster, including
18-year-old Tracy McGrady, the youngest player in the NBA.
With such a young team, growing pains must be expected, but the Raptors
did show heart and determination throughout the season. Toronto notched
a win 102-93 win at Cleveland on Jan. 10 and came away with a 97-94 victory
over New York on Dec. 27. The Raptors were 5-1 in overtime games this
season and swept season series against both Golden State and Denver. In
addition, Toronto beat Sacramento, Minnesota and Philadelphia in succession
to tie the team's longest winning streak in franchise history.
Despite the Raptors' disappointing 16-66 record this season, there is
enough talent on the court to look forward to next season. Guard-forward
Doug Christie and forward John Wallace have become solid NBA scorers and
led the team with 16.5 and 14.0 ppg, respectively. Christie also ranked
among the league leaders in steals with 2.44 steals per game. Forward-center
Marcus Camby, when healthy, can score, rebound and block shots. And Billups
shows great potential as a multi-talented point guard.
The Raptors now had three first round picks from the 1996 Draft, three
first round picks from the 1997 Draft and had three first round picks
in the 1998 NBA Draft. Only three players -- Oliver Miller, Doug Christie
and Sharone Wright -- remained from Toronto's 1995-96 inaugural season
team. Yes, there had been big changes in the team's brief history in the
league. But with the turmoil of the 1997-98 season behind them, the Raptors
could focus on the future, look forward to the opening of Air Canada Centre,
scheduled to be completed early in 1999 and continue to contribute to
the growth of basketball in Canada.
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1998-99:
Raptors' Best Season Ever
Despite a shortened 50-game schedule, the Raptors looked forward to rebounding
from a disappointing season the year before. On Feb. 21, their fourth
home game of the season, the Raptors opened their brand-new home, Air
Canada Centre, with a 102-87 victory over their Canadian cousins, the
Vancouver Grizzlies.
The Raptors went on to their most successful season to date with a 23-27
record for a franchise-best winning percentage of .460. They defeated
the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs, the teams that competed
later that year in the NBA Finals. Toronto posted its first winning record
at home (14-11) and set franchise records for longest winning streaks
at home (nine wins, March 7-April 4), on the road (three wins, April 17-23),
and overall (six wins, March 26-April 4). In the process the Raptors became
the most improved team in the NBA based on increased winning percentage
over the previous year.
Part of the Raptors' breakout season can be contributed to Vince Carter,
who the team acquired in a draft-day deal with the Golden State Warriors.
Carter was named the NBA's Rookie of the Month in March and April and
was the NBA's Player of the Week for March 22, becoming the first Raptor
to earn the accolade after leading the team to a 5-0 record during that
time. Carter went on to become the league's Rookie of the Year averaging
a team-leading 18.3 points per game.
The Raptors also had the NBA's leader in three-point shots made and attempted
when Dee Brown sunk 135 of 349 shots from beyond the arc. Also contributing
to the team's success was Doug Christie who finished the season ranked
fifth in steals with 2.26 a game. Kevin Willis scored his 15,000th point
of his career on April 25, and collected his 10,000th rebound on March
26, making him only the 17th player in NBA history to reach the double
milestone.
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1999-00:
Future Looks Bright for Raptors
After the 1998-99 season the future finally looked bright again for the
Raptors and their dedicated fans. At that season’s end Vince Carter
took the microphone and addressed the Air Canada Centre crowd after the
final game and guaranteed a trip to the post-season next year. This was
a bold promise by the rookie, but the promise would be kept and the Raptors
would have their best season yet.
With the offseason acquisition of Antonio Davis for a high draft pick,
the Raptors not only got older, they got a whole lot better. Vince Carter
continued his climb to the apex of NBA stardom and his younger cousin,
Tracy McGrady, wasn’t far behind. With a fifteen-point victory over
the Wizards the Raptors went into the All-Star break with a record of
22-19, marking the first time in their brief history the Raptors would
begin the second half with a winning record.
As the All-Star game approached it became clear that Carter would become
the first Raptor to appear and start an NBA All-Star Game. He did so in
true VC fashion amassing the second-most votes in NBA history with 1,911,973.
So the stage was set for Vince. Not only would he be competing with the
NBA's best in the annual classic, but he was also the centre of all the
media, public and player attention as the NBA.com Slam Dunk Competition
returned to All-Star weekend after a two-year hiatus. The pressure was
on for Vince and the anticipation in and around the arena was heavy as
NBA stars, not easily impressed, gathered courtside with personal video
cameras and jaws poised to drop.
Vince did not disappoint. He amazed the fans and pros alike with creative
dunks never even imagined before he completed them. Runner-up Steve Francis
knew he was beat when Vince did the incomprehensible by dunking the ball,
cramming his arm into the rim and hanging from it as an arena packed to
capacity stared in near silence, unable to believe what they had just
witnessed.
In the second half of the campaign, the Raptors continued to prove that
they had taken great leaps forward. In their first-ever NBC appearance,
the Raptors posted a thrilling 103-102 victory over Phoenix with Carter
scoring a career and franchise-high 51 points. The team would finish the
season with a franchise-best record of 45-37 and their first trip into
the playoffs. Carter finished the year fourth in the league in scoring
while Davis emerged as the star he knew he could be, registering career
highs in virtually every statistical category.
The playoffs proved to be a tougher test for Toronto as the club was eliminated
in three games by the New York Knicks. The Raptors lost the final game
of the series, 87-80, in the first-ever NBA playoff game in Canada.
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2000-01: Raptors Taste Playoff
Success
After achieving their goal of making the playoffs in 2000, the Raptors
were not about to stand pat. General Manager Glen Grunwald had a busy
offseason as he was eager to improve the team. Joining the squad was draft
pick Morris Peterson, free agent point guard Mark Jackson and Corliss
Williamson, acquired in a trade for Doug Christie.
Vince Carter came off a busy summer after helping Team USA bring home
the gold medal at the Summer Olympics in Sydney. Vince added to his mystique
and legend with his jaw-dropping dunk over (literally over!!) France’s
7-2 centre Frederic Weis.
The first half of the season was a successful one as the Raptors posted
a first-half record of 26-23 and sent a franchise-best three players to
the All-Star weekend in Washington. Carter led all vote-getters once more
with 1,717,687, and was joined by Antonio Davis in the starting lineup.
Peterson played in the Schick Rookie Challenge on the eve of the All Star
classic.
In January Grunwald traded veteran centre Kevin Willis, Garth Joseph and
Alek Radojevic to the Nuggets in exchange for Keon Clark, Tracy Murray
and Mamadou N’diaye. The move sparked the team for a bit but it
wasn't the end of a roster makeover. On the trading deadline, Toronto
triggered two more trades, sending Jackson and Muggsy Bogues to the Knicks
for Chris Childs and a first-round draft pick, and dealing Williamson,
Tyrone Corbin and Kornel David to the Pistons for Jerome Williams and
Eric Montross.
The trio of trades revitalized a sluggish Raptors squad that won 19 of
its last 27 games to finish with a franchise best 47-35 record. Another
playoff showdown with the New York was in the cards and it looked like
the result might be the same as the previous year when the Knicks shut
down Carter and the Raptors in Game 1. However, this meeting would be
a different story as the Raptors came back to win Game 2 by 20 points
and triumphed in the deciding Game 5 at Madison Square Garden, 93-89.
Advancing to the conference semi-finals, the Raptors met the top seed
Philadelphia 76ers and league MVP Allen Iverson. Carter and Iverson engaged
in a classic scoring duel during the series, each recording games of 50
points. Toronto gave everything it had but ultimately fell short in Game
7 as Carter's potential series-winning shot rolled off the rim.
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2001-02:
Raptors Face Adversity
Coming off another franchise-best season, there was no break for GM Glen
Grunwald. Many outsiders believed many, if not all, Raptor free agents
were poised to leave the team for greener pastures south of the border.
Once again, Grunwald proved the doubters wrong as he re-signed Antonio
Davis, Jerome Williams and Alvin Williams, all of which led to Vince Carter
extending his contract showing the team and the rest of the league that
he was committed to the Toronto Raptors. Vince's vote of confidence in
Grunwald and the owners help lure future Hall of Famer Hakeem Olajuwon
to town as well.
The Raptors finished the first half of the season with an impressive 29-21
record. Vince Carter led all players with 1,470,176 votes for the All-Star
Game and joined Michael Jordan (nine times) and Julius Erving (four times)
as the only players in league history to lead all vote-getters three or
more times. Unfortunately, in the final game before the All-Star break,
Carter aggravated his "jumper's knee" injury and was unable
to compete in the festivities.
The Raptors returned from the All-Star break with great optimism, but
without their scoring leader. With Carter out of the lineup various players
stepped up as Davis recorded a six-game double-double streak, Alvin Williams
tied a career-high with 14 assists in a game and Keon Clark had his season
highs with 26 points and 15 boards against the Knicks. All of these efforts
couldn’t stop the Raptors from suffering through a 13-game losing
streak though and it looked as though they were headed for the Draft Lottery.
Just when everyone around the game counted them out and with Vince shutting
it down for the season, the Raptors turned it all around. The team came
together and won 12 of its final 14 games, including a franchise-high
nine straight victories, to claim its third straight playoff appearance.
Without Carter the playoffs proved tough for the team as they took on
the surprising Detroit Pistons, champions of the Central Division. After
two disappointing setbacks in Detroit, the Raptors stormed back to soundly
win two games at home and force a deciding Game 5. Toronto took an early
lead and the contest was tight throughout but the Raptors suffered a painfully
close loss, 85-82, ending a rollercoaster season.
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