This is an excerpt from The Buzzer, which is CBC Sports’ daily email newsletter. Stay up to speed on what’s happening in sports by subscribing here.
When NBA free agency opened on Friday evening, three big-name Toronto players hit the market. By the time the dust settled, two of them were gone. But the Raptors re-signed the best one and made some cost-effective moves to replace the departures. Crucially, they kept themselves in position to land the biggest prize of all down the road.
Here are the details from the Raps’ busy weekend:
They lost Serge Ibaka and Marc Gasol to Los Angeles. Ibaka joined Kawhi Leonard and the Clippers for two years, $19 million. Gasol went to the NBA-champion Lakers for two years (no salary figures reported yet). Both big men were important and beloved members of the 2019 title team, and Ibaka will be especially missed. He averaged a career-high 15.4 points with 8.2 rebounds last season while blending his athleticism, shooting range and intensity with an off-court playfulness that endeared him to teammates and fans (never forget his kitchen-interview show or this scarf). Gasol, 35, is in the twilight of his career. But he’s still capable of contributing off the bench for a contender with his brainy defensive work, passing and judicious three-point shooting.

They added Aron Baynes to help fill the hole in the middle. The 33-year-old Australian centre isn’t as good as Ibaka and Gasol, but he’s an inexpensive substitute who can take on their work. Baynes averaged a career-high 11.5 points and 5.6 rebounds last season for Phoenix and is considered a pretty good defender and three-point shooter (by big-man standards). He technically signed a two-year contract for about $14 million. But the second year is a team option, so Toronto can walk away from it next summer to free up cap space. That’s very much in keeping with the Raptors’ long-term strategy, which we’ll come back to in a second.
They re-signed Canadian Chris Boucher and took a flier on DeAndre’ Bembry. Boucher got two years, $13.5 million, signalling the Raptors think he can step into a bigger role helping Baynes soak up the minutes that belonged to Ibaka and Gasol. Bembry is a 26-year-old wing who averaged only 5.8 points last season for Atlanta. But the Raptors are paying him less than $2 million and they can opt out after this season. So why not.
Greek Freak in 2021?
They stayed in the hunt for Giannis Antetekoumpo. Perhaps even more than re-signing VanVleet, this was Toronto’s top priority. The Raptors put up an impressive and honourable defence of their championship last season after losing Kawhi Leonard in free agency, but it became clear in the playoffs that they need a true superstar to win another title. Antetekoumpo is as super as they come — he just won back-to-back MVPs and was named Defensive Player of the Year last season. He also might be looking to leave Milwaukee when his contract expires this summer, and Toronto could be one of the prime destinations for him. To have a shot, president Masai Ujiri and his staff needed to preserve their cap space beyond this season while also keeping the roster solid enough that Giannis could envision a strong supporting cast. By re-signing VanVleet and not doing anything dumb (like, say, that Hayward contract), the Raptors nailed both objectives.
Original article: https://www.cbc.ca/sports/basketball/nba/the-buzzer-toronto-raptors-free-agency-analysis-1.5813231?cmp=rss