Thursday, 16 April 2026

Five Raptors stat trends to watch going into the playoffs

An on-the-rise Toronto Raptors team appears to be up against it going into a playoff series against the Cleveland Cavaliers. Sound familiar?

There’s no need to fear – LeBron James isn’t standing behind that door ready to ball spin and break a collective basketball nation’s heart. It’s nearly one decade later, and a great deal has changed. The Raptors won a championship, James is catching lobs from his son, and about a dozen new catch-all metrics dropped that dubiously distill a player’s worth into a single number.

Fast forward to 2025-26 and the burgeoning Raptors have taken serious strides, discovering strengths and limitations along the way to securing their first playoff berth in four years. And there’s plenty of data to analyze, as Toronto has achieved success in new and intriguing ways.

Unlike the Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan-led squads of the mid-2010s, the Raptors are now a defence-first group that thrives off turning opponents’ misses and turnovers into easy points. They were able to play their game against the Cavaliers in the regular season, sweeping that series 3-0. But those results come with plenty of caveats.

Donovan Mitchell missed one game, Jarrett Allen missed two and Darius Garland missed all three. And of course, Garland’s replacement, James Harden, wasn’t a member of the team yet. Acquiring the former MVP for Garland at the deadline has supercharged Cleveland’s already strong offence. With that in mind, let’s dig deep into five stat trends to watch for the Raptors in the first round, and potentially beyond.

  • Raptors return to the playoffs on Sportsnet
  • Raptors return to the playoffs on Sportsnet

    The Toronto Raptors are back in the playoffs for the first time since 2022. Watch Game 1 against the Cleveland Cavaliers Saturday at 1 p.m. ET/ 10 a.m. PT on Sportsnet ONE and Sportsnet+.

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1. The Raptors want to play fast

Toronto’s ability to dictate the pace of play and win the possession battle could define its success in the first round.

The Raptors led in the NBA in fast-break points this season. They ranked third in overall transition scoring. And they did it while ranking in the bottom 10 in transition efficiency over the first five months of the schedule. The Raptors didn’t score well when defences weren’t set; they just faced scrambled defences a lot – the third-most in the NBA.

Toronto fans will know well, but for anyone unfamiliar, the Raptors’ trying to finish odd-man breaks and easy runouts often resulted in a comedy of errors.

Still, they ran the fourth-most frequently off steals and the most frequently off rebounds (according to Cleaning the Glass, which filters out garbage time). Transition chances materialize much more easily off steals than live rebounds – 67 per cent of the time vs. 29 per cent of the time – so this demonstrates their commitment to getting out in transition at every opportunity.

One way they accomplished this was by using a philosophy Darko Rajaković described as “first touch,” meaning that the rebounder immediately looks up court to make a hit-ahead pass to a player leaking out as an outlet. They also have big wings in Scottie Barnes and Brandon Ingram, who are capable of both rebounding the ball and pushing. Collin Murray-Boyles and Sandro Mamukelashvili also fit this mould to a lesser degree.

Basically, the Raptors want to play fast.

It’s easy to understand why. Even when the Raptors were finishing at a below-average clip in transition, it was still far more efficient than in the halfcourt. The league average points per 100 transition plays is 125.8. Against a set defence, that number drops to 98.1. Running against a still-recovering defence is always going to be more effective than the alternative, and the Raptors have been among the best teams at creating those opportunities.

The same logic can also be applied going the other way, and the Raptors have been successful here too. They have limited opponents to the second-lowest transition frequency through a mix of curbing turnovers and being extra intentional about tagging up with their man when the shot goes up, as Raptors assistant coach Jama Mahlalela explains.

Moreover, this important element is trending in the right direction for the Raptors on a couple of fronts.

First, their transition finishing greatly improved over the final month of the season, bumping them up to 15th (just above league average at 126.5 points per 100). And while they didn’t convert consistently in their first win over Cleveland, they put up monster numbers of 142.9 and 144.4 in their next two matchups, respectively.

The Cavaliers were also below average at preventing teams from getting out in transition, ranking 18th. They also ranked 18th in opponents’ fast-break points, but have been seventh since adding Harden, mostly due to his ability to limit turnovers as a lead ball handler.

The Raptors’ success here, both recently in finishing and on the season against Cleveland, seemingly bodes well for them. But once again, the Harden caveat looms large.

2. Change of the guard

Even before Immanuel Quickley was plagued by plantar fasciitis and missed eight games down the stretch, the Toronto Raptors had already begun to initiate offence differently.

The most notable example came against the Detroit Pistons on March 15, when the Raptors shook out of their funk of habitually pounding the chalk – Toronto was 4-18 against teams with top-10 records in the NBA to that point, with three of those wins coming over the Cavs – by also breaking a pattern of play and taking down the No. 1 seed.

The Raptors’ crunch-time offence had grown stagnant to that point. Their go-to action was Quickley entering the ball to Ingram in the post after he shook free off a cross-screen. That bore fruit in earlier clutch wins over the Charlotte Hornets and Philadelphia 76ers, but opponents started to sit on it, gum it up, and the Raptors were eventually eating the majority of the shot clock just to get it off.

These forced possessions aside, Ingram’s natural pace is that of molasses. The Raptors’ average possession was nearly a full second longer with the languid wing on the floor (per PBP Stats), the highest mark on the team and nearly four times that of Poeltl, who was second.

Toronto will still rely on Ingram to create plenty of offence, but they seem to be leaning towards having him start with the ball more often, instead of burning clock working to get open. The all-star usually ended up taking on his defender one-on-one either way. In that aforementioned Pistons game, every Raptors starter except for Jakob Poeltl initiated a possession in the final five minutes, with all of them doing it multiple times except for Quickley.

With Quickley’s status now in question due to a mild hamstring strain sustained in the final game of the regular season, it might not matter. And the Raptors did already get practice filling the void at point guard. Barnes averaged 10.6 assists over Quickley’s eight-game absence as the Raptors’ pace shot up by 1.5 possessions per 48 minutes (an eight-spot leap in the leaderboard), and teammates were delivered the ball in more optimal positions to score.

After the Raptors’ second win over the Cavaliers, Ingram told me that Quickley is “able to be at his normal position scoring the basketball, getting into the lane. Still seeing passes, but he’s able to be more of a scorer than (a) facilitator when Jamal (Shead) is out there.”

It was telling that Quickley’s teammate saw him playing a more suitable role when Shead was handling point guard duties. Still, Quickley is Toronto’s most talented three-point shooter; he’s the only player on the team who attempts a high volume of more difficult pull-up triples, accounting for nearly 40 per cent the team’s attempts. Without Quickley, the Raptors have almost no pull-up shooting – eight players averaged more pull-up threes per game than the Raptors did as a team this season.

3. The Raptors have started shooting it

The Raptors have recently spent time without their best shooter, and counterintuitively, their poor three-point shooting has started to turn around.

While they rank among the lowest-volume distance shooting teams in the league, both on pull-ups (4.9 attempts per game, last) and overall (32.1 attempts per game, 26th), Toronto’s efficiency has improved. Pre all-star break, it ranked 25th at 34.4 per cent, and since then, it’s been sixth at 37.7.

The bulk of this can be attributed to Ja’Kobe Walter, who’s been pumping heat to the tune of 47.6 per cent from three on 4.7 attempts per game after the mid-February festivities – over a 12 per cent increase on an additional 1.5 shots. The 21-year-old sophomore has always had quiet and repeatable shooting mechanics, and it appears he’s put it together, while also serving as the Raptors’ best on-ball defender at the point of attack. He stands to play an important role in the series as a hot shooting night, or shutdown defence on Mitchell, could go a long way in swinging a game. If Quickley is unable to go, it’s probable Walter enters the starting five in his place – as he did for seven of the eight-straight games Quickley sat.

Ingram, Mamukelashvili, and even AJ Lawson have also had notable upticks in three-point efficiency post all-star break, albeit on less volume. Outside of his threes, Ingram had one of the most difficult shot diets in the league. In contrast, the Raptors’ role players are given the ball in very specific spots. The vast majority of Walter, Mamukelashvili, and Lawson’s usage came on cuts and spot-ups, which are among the most efficient play types. To their credit, they’ve executed, all posting above-average true shooting percentages. Walter and Mamukelashvili’s were 61 per cent and 63.7 per cent, respectively. Huge numbers.

The Raptors’ role players maintaining this level of shooting efficiency will be important if they’re going to have a chance against the Cavs.

4. Unique success in the clutch

During the regular season, the ability to navigate clutch basketball can swing a team’s record by a few wins. In the playoffs, it could save the season. The 2025-26 Raptors excelled in clutch scenarios, finishing with the seventh-best record (21-14) in games that were within five points in the final five minutes.

They didn’t achieve this result through offence. The poor shooting and static hoops we went over reared its ugly head in these situations more than any other. The Raptors were an average offence all-around (they finished 15th in offensive rating), but ranked 22nd in clutch offence and 23rd in the fourth quarter. Ingram took more shots in crunch time than any other Raptor and had the worst true shooting in these spots of any starter on the team at 46 per cent.

Teams tend to slow down late in close games, playing to avoid turnovers and maximize every possession. Flying directly in the face of the Raptors’ run-and-gun tendencies. Yet part of their successful formula was taking care of the ball, as they ranked in the top 10 in clutch turnover percentage (11.3 per cent). One way Toronto accomplished this was by frequently closing out games with two-point guard lineups featuring Quickley and Shead. The team had a 92nd percentile turnover rate when this pair shared the floor.

The other aspect of the Raptors’ late-game heroics was their outstanding defence, anchored by a Defensive Player of the Year candidate in Barnes. Toronto already ranked fifth in defensive rating (112.1), but in the clutch, they leapt up to second (99.1). Barnes has had a tremendous defensive season in general, finishing second to Victor Wembanyama in stocks (steal+blocks) with 230, was the only player with more than 100 steals and blocks, and forced teams to shoot 5.6 per cent worse at the rim when he was on the floor, a 94th percentile mark. This was all punctuated with a league-leading nine blocks in clutch time, including a couple of game-savers.

5. Could they see zone in the playoffs?

The Raptors faced the most zone defence in the NBA this season (h/t Blake Murphy). And for an extended stretch, it was for good reason, as they struggled to solve it.

That was until they had a breakthrough against the Sacramento Kings on Jan. 21, using Scottie Barnes to get middle and pick apart the zone with his surgically precise passing. Toronto most recently saw a significant zone in their two-game set against the Miami Heat – the NBA’s zone leaders – and diced them up. The Raptors scored against the Heat’s zone at 1.13 points per possession, well above league average, eventually dissuading them from using it altogether.

The Cavaliers ranked third in zone usage during the 2024-25 season at 8.6 per cent (per Basketball Poetry), but that number’s been cut in half this season. Considering that Toronto’s had plenty of practice against zones, showed an adjustment and Cleveland’s waning usage, it stands to reason the Raptors won’t be facing zone in the first round as they did in the regular season. But if Quickley’s unable to play and the Raptors’ bench shooters get cold, it could be lurking in the background as a curveball.

One other note on the topic of defensive coverages, it will be interesting to see if the Cavaliers opt to double Ingram. They didn’t during the regular season, instead playing him straight up one-on-one and living with the results of his shot-making abilities. If this continues, a hot shooting series from Ingram could be a big swing for the Raptors.



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Yankees’ Gerrit Cole to throw around 45 pitches in first rehab start

NEW YORK — Yankees right-hander Gerrit Cole will throw around 45 pitches in his first minor league injury rehabilitation start as he inches closer to his return to the mound.

Cole will pitch Friday night for Double-A Somerset in the same game shortstop Anthony Volpe is rehabbing a torn labrum in his shoulder.

Cole, a six-time All-Star and the 2023 AL Cy Young award winner, is returning from last year’s reconstructive elbow surgery. He made a pair of one-inning spring training starts on March 18 and 24, and has been facing hitters since.

In his latest session, Cole threw 42 pitches over three simulated innings on Sunday against batters from High-A Hudson Valley.

“I think we’ll get him to a higher threshold initially, but it’s one step at a time,” manager Aaron Boone said before the Yankees concluded a four-game series with the Angels on Thursday afternoon. “Looking forward to him starting on Friday and we’ll build him from there and then even when he gets back to us we’ll probably be conservative with him but we’ll probably get him to a higher threshold initially.”

The Yankees anticipate Cole will return in June but will gradually build him up and take advantage of rules about the length of minor league rehab assignments for pitchers coming back from injury.

While position players’ minor league rehab assignments are limited to 20 days, pitchers have 30 days and those recovering from Tommy John surgery may receive three consecutive 10-day extensions.

Cole’s last official outing was in Game 5 of the 2024 World Series. He made a pair of spring training starts before undergoing the surgery with Los Angeles Dodgers team physician Dr. Neal ElAttrache.

Cole’s 2024 season debut was delayed until June 19 because of nerve irritation and edema in his right elbow. He went 8-5 with a 3.41 ERA in 17 starts for New York and was 1-0 with a 2.17 ERA in five postseason starts.

Cole is signed to a $324 million, nine-year contract through 2028. He has a 153-80 career record and 3.18 ERA over 317 starts with Pittsburgh (2013-17), Houston (2018-19) and the Yankees (starting in 2020).

Besides Cole, Carlos Rodón will face hitters again on Saturday and will likely start a rehab assignment next week. Boone said the left-hander will need three rehab games.

Rodón threw 50 pitches to batters over three simulated innings before Monday’s game against the Los Angeles Angels. Rodón is recovering from surgery on Oct. 15 to remove loose bodies in his left elbow and shave a bone spur, and his rehab was slowed by right hamstring tightness.



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Messi purchases lower-division soccer club in Barcelona

BARCELONA, Spain — Lionel Messi is the owner of a fifth-division soccer club in Spain after the Argentine superstar acquired Barcelona-based UE Cornellà.

Messi was the best player of his generation during his two decades at FC Barcelona, where he won multiple titles and Ballon d’Or awards before leaving in 2021.

Cornellà is a modest club in a working-class neighborhood. The club announced the deal on Thursday without giving details of the purchase.

“Leo Messi’s arrival marks the beginning of a new chapter in the club’s history,” the club said in a statement. “The project is guided by a long-term vision and a strategic plan that combines ambition, sustainability, and a strong connection to its local roots.”

Cornellà was founded in 1951 and has helped produce players such as Arsenal goalkeeper David Raya and former Barcelona defender Jordi Alba, who also played with Messi at Inter Miami.

At age 38, Messi is aiming to compete in the World Cup this summer in North America where Argentina will defend the title.



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Jasudavicius excited to get back in octagon on home turf after brief reset



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Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Atletico Madrid knocks out Barcelona in Champions League quarterfinals

MADRID — Long after the game against Barcelona ended, Atletico Madrid players were back on the field at the Metropolitano stadium to celebrate.

They chanted along with the fans, and jumped and danced among themselves.

It was a big night for Atletico.

Diego Simeone’s team held on after an early charge by Barcelona to make it back to the semifinals of the Champions League for the first time in nearly a decade.

Atletico lost 2-1 but advanced 3-2 on aggregate after having won the first leg 2-0 in Barcelona last week. It will be the team’s first last-four appearance in the European competition since 2017.

“Extremely happy to eliminate a Barcelona team that has a lot of quality,” Atletico midfielder Koke said. “We struggled in the beginning but we found a way to recover. It was a great effort by the entire team.”

Barcelona, trying to return to the last four for the second season in a row, scored twice in the first 24 minutes to even the series, with Lamine Yamal and Ferran Torres finding the net.

Atletico struck back still in the first half with a goal by Ademola Lookman.

The Catalan club played a man down from the 79th after defender Eric García was shown a red card for fouling Alexander Sorloth to stop a breakaway.

“We played a very good match, we gave our lives out there, we tried everything,” Barcelona midfielder Frenkie de Jong said. “Luck wasn’t on our side this time. When you go a man down it’s always harder.”

Atletico will face either Arsenal or Sporting Lisbon in the semifinals. Arsenal won the first leg 1-0 in Lisbon last week. Their second leg in London is on Wednesday.

In the other quarterfinal on Tuesday, defending champion Paris Saint-Germain advanced past Liverpool, winning 2-0 for an aggregate score of 4-0.

Atletico, seeking its first Champions League title, lost in the 2017 semifinals to Real Madrid. It also lost to Madrid in both finals it played against the city rival in the Champions League, in 2014 and 2016.

The game was stopped for several moments near the 70th minute because Atletico defender Matteo Ruggieri sustained a cut on his forehead after being elbowed by Barcelona midfielder Gavi during a dispute for the ball.

Yamal opened the scoring four minutes into the match at Metropolitano stadium, entering the area free from defenders after Atletico lost possession on a passing mistake by defender Clément Lenglet.

With his goal, Yamal became the top Champions League scorer under the age of 19 with 11, one more than Kylian Mbappé.

The visitors added to the lead on the night — evening the tie at 2-2 — in the 24th, with Torres picking up a through ball by Dani Olmo and finding the top corner by the far post.

Fermín López nearly added the third a minute later but his close-range header was saved by Atletico goalkeeper Juan Musso.

The hosts struck back in the 31st with Lookman scoring from inside the area in a breakaway after a low cross by Marcos Llorente.

Barcelona thought it had equalized the series again, but Torres’ 57th-minute goal was disallowed for offside.

Defender Ronald Araujo had Barcelona’s last chance but his close-range header in stoppage time went over the crossbar.

Simeone kept Musso in goal instead of promoting the return of regular starter Jan Oblak, who has recovered from a muscle injury but hasn’t played since March 10.

Atletico can cap its week with the Copa del Rey title on Saturday. It will face Real Sociedad to try to win the competition for the first time since 2013.



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Tuesday, 14 April 2026

NBA sets 2026 draft dates for late June

With the regular season done and dusted, fans of non-playoff teams officially have a day to look forward to.

The 2026 NBA Draft will take place on June 23 and 24 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., the league announced Tuesday.

This will mark the third time that the NBA Draft is held over two days.

While the order of the draft is not yet set, the lottery will be held on May 10.

The Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers and Brooklyn Nets have the best odds at landing the first pick, with each side standing at 14 per cent. They all have a 52.1 per cent chance at a top-four selection.

The 2026 class is considered by many to be a special one, headlined by college standouts Cam Boozer (Duke), AJ Dybantsa (BYU) and Darryn Peterson (Kansas).

Last season, the Dallas Mavericks won the lottery with only a 1.8 per cent chance and selected Duke standout Cooper Flagg with the top pick.



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Maple Leafs sign Landon Sim to two-year entry-level contract

The Toronto Maple Leafs have inked one of their young forwards to a deal.

Landon Sim agreed to a two-year, entry-level contract with the Leafs beginning in the 2026-27 season, the team announced on Tuesday.

Sim originally signed a one-year AHL contract with the Marlies on May 5, 2025.

The 21-year-old appeared in 13 games with the Marlies this season, potting three goals. Before joining the Marlies, Sim played 18 games with the Cincinnati Cyclones of the ECHL.

With the Cyclones, he had six points (two goals, four assists) and 44 penalty minutes.

Sim spent four seasons with the London Knights of the OHL before joining the Leafs’ organization. He had 66 goals and 58 assists in 213 regular-season games with the Knights. Sim added 23 playoff points (16 goals, seven assists) in 30 career games en route to two OHL Championships (2024, 2025).

The centre was originally drafted No. 184 overall by the St. Louis Blues in the 2022 NHL Draft.



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Five Raptors stat trends to watch going into the playoffs

An on-the-rise Toronto Raptors team appears to be up against it going into a playoff series against the Cleveland Cavaliers . Sound familia...