Saturday, December 9, 2017
Raptors battle back against Grizzlies for fifth straight win
MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- Down 17 points in the first half, the Toronto Raptors knew they had themselves in a tough spot.
“We were more frustrated that we let ourselves get down 17 points,” said Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan, who scored 26 points with seven rebounds and six assists in a 116-107 win over the Memphis Grizzlies Friday night at FedExForum. “We kinda made the job harder on ourselves.”
The Raptors cut the lead to five by halftime, fell behind by double digits again in the third quarter, but put the Memphis Grizzlies away in the fourth quarter.
“We’ve been OK on the road this year. We’ve been great (9-1) at home,” DeRozan said. “We’re trying to flip that and be great on the road as well. Being able to go on road and being down 17 and pull out a victory is big.”
Toronto (16-7) won its fifth straight at the start of a four-game road trip. The Raptors’ road record is now 7-6, but early on they made things difficult.
“Anytime you let a team shoot 70 percent (73.7) in the first quarter you’re going to be in trouble, I don’t care how good your offense is,” said Raptors coach Dwane Casey.
Serge Ibaka scored 21 points and Kyle Lowry finished with 16 points, eight assists, six rebounds and two steals for the Raptors.
Memphis (8-17) carried a 93-92 advantage into the fourth quarter, but after a layup by Andrew Harrison (seven assists, six points) with 10:06 left, Memphis went 5:40 without a field goal.
Tyreke Evans led the Grizzlies with 27 points. Marc Gasol finished with 20 points, seven rebounds and four assists. Chandler Parsons had 15 points, four rebounds and two blocks off the bench.
The Raptors shot 47.4 percent from the floor and went 13 of 31 from 3-point range for 41.9 percent. Memphis shot 50 percent from the field while going 9 of 27 from distance for 33.3 percent.
“Defensively, for us, you can’t give this team 41 fast-break points,” Memphis interim coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “That’s where they thrive in the open court -- 17 turnovers led to 25 points for them.”
Said Parsons: “We’re kinda shooting ourselves in the foot, doing things we can control. Turning the ball over, giving them easy baskets. Things we work on every day and are not executing in the game. Not getting back in transition. It’s frustrating, it’s miserable and we gotta figure a way to get out of this.”
The Raptors also got a lift from reserve guard Fred VanVleet. He finished with 12 points and three assists and made 3 of 6 shots from long range. He played all of the fourth quarter.
“That’s the best part, end of the game with all the marbles on the line,” VanVleet said. “As bad as I was in the first half, I was just happy to be on the floor at that point.”
source: news.abs-cbn.com