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MEDIA POLICIES

On behalf of the entire organization, the Toronto Raptors media PHOTO/VIDEO


relations department welcomes you to the 2010-11 season. The Limited space is available on each baseline for both still and television
Raptors media relations staff looks forward to serving you throughout photographers. There are no photo positions along the sidelines, and
the season, and we welcome your input as we strive to be of assistance photographers may not shoot within 15 feet of the team bench areas.
to you. It is part of our championship vision as a media relations Flash photography is strictly prohibited. Photographers must be seated
department to be accessible and accountable to your needs and to on the floor and may not kneel when shooting from the baselines.
make your experience with us as easy and pleasant as possible.
In accordance with NBA rules, rubber lens shades are required for all
In an effort to effectively service your requests, we have put together still photographers, broadcasters, news and entertainment video and
the following guidelines we hope will be of assistance. film crews who are authorized to shoot NBA game action. Rubber
lens covers are available by contacting:
RAPTORS MEDIA RELATIONS DEPARTMENT CONTACTS:
Jim LaBumbard O: (416) 815-5423; jlabumbard@torontoraptors.com Roberts Distrubers, Inc.
Roven Yau O: (416) 815-6130; ryau@torontoraptors.com 255 South Meridian Street
Phil Summers O: (416) 815-6102; psummers@torontoraptors.com Indianapolis, IN 46225
Laura Leite O: (416) 815-5445; lleite@mapleleafsports.com (317) 636-5524
Communications Fax (416) 359-9213 (800) 726-5544
Media Room (416) 815-5690 Fax: (317) 636-5793

AIR CANADA CENTRE Individual game credential requests must come from a photo editor
Media Entrance: Gate 2, northeast entrance on Bay Street by e-mail, fax or mail through the media relations office no later than
Media Centre: Event level, off the north corridor 5 p.m. the day prior to a game, or by 5 p.m. Friday for all Saturday,
Media Dining: Served in the Rogers Media Centre Sunday and Monday games. Photographers must be on assignment
Media Seating: North side of the court, between the team from a specific publication no freelance photography is allowed.
benches, and in the Foster Hewitt Gondola
Raptors Locker Room: Event level, northwest corner EQUIPMENT
Visitors Locker Room: Event level, north corridor Photographers located on the baseline will be permitted only one
Adidas Practice Court: Upper concourse level (300 level), northwest standard size Domke bag, which must be placed behind the
corner photographer during the game. All other equipment (including all
cameras and lenses) must be stored off-court or kept on the
EXECUTIVE OFFICES photographers person at all times. Each photographer will be
The Toronto Raptors executive offices are located on the 15th floor of permitted to use one monopod but no tripods at courtside. No
the Air Canada Centre office tower at 50 Bay Street. All visitors must stand-alone remotes or seats other than lawn-type photographer
enter the Air Canada Centre office tower and report to the concierges seats will be permitted.
desk on the 5th floor.
STROBE POLICY
TO AIR CANADA CENTRE (From Pearson International Airport) Photographers wishing to use strobe lighting may contact a member
Take Highway 427 South to Gardiner Expressway (Toronto). Exit at of the Raptors media relations staff to arrange payment method. Strobe
York Avenue North. North on York one block to arena. lighting is on a first-come, first-served basis, at the discretion of the
Raptors media relations staff.
MEDIA PARKING
There are no parking privileges for media at Air Canada Centre. There INTERNATIONAL MEDIA POLICY
are, however, numerous pay lots in the area. Media representing an organization with affiliations located outside
Canada or the United States must contact NBA International at (212)
MEDIA ENTRANCE 407-8000 to arrange credentials. Please do not contact the Raptors
Accredited media and those receiving individual game credentials media relations department. Additional information on international
should use the Media Entrance (northeast entrance on Bay Street media policies can be obtained from the NBA League Office.
between Gates 2 and 3) for games. Access will commence two hours
prior to game time. Individual game credentials can be picked up at MEDIA SEATING
the desk located at the bottom of the Media Entrance. All media seats are reserved and marked with place cards for each
individual media outlet. Individuals are required to sit in their pre-
CREDENTIALS assigned seats. Seating charts are posted in the media work room.
Season credentials are limited to local newspapers, radio and
television stations that regularly cover the Raptors. Individual game LOCKER ROOMS
credential requests must come from an editor/director by e-mail, fax Pregame: In accordance with NBA rules, home and visiting locker
or mail through the media relations office no later than 5 p.m. the day rooms are open 90 minutes prior to game time and close 45 minutes
prior to a game, or by 5 p.m. Friday for all Saturday, Sunday and before the start of the game.
Monday games. Credentials must be worn at all times, are non-
transferable and do not guarantee a seat. Postgame: In accordance with NBA rules, both locker rooms will be
open 10 minutes after the conclusion of the game.
Media members wishing to cover the team on the road should contact
Jim LaBumbard at (416) 815-5423 at least three days prior to the Notes: Cell phone usage in the locker by members of the media room
game. Travelling media must make credential arrangements through is prohibited. Still photographers not employed by the Raptors will
the Raptors media relations department and not through the host not be permitted in any locker room. No autographs are to be asked
team media department. of any team personnel during media access periods. It is NBA policy
to allow all accredited media members access to the locker rooms.
MEDIA POLICIES
Shootarounds: The Raptors will use the main floor for morning day-
PREGAME COACHES INTERVIEWS of-game shootarounds. All team day-of-game shootarounds are closed
Raptors coach Jay Triano will conduct his pregame media availability to the media, except for the last five minutes. Players will be available
75 minutes prior to game time in Multi-Purpose B across from the at the conclusion of each shootaround.
Raptors locker room. Please check with the opposing team PR contact
regarding his/her coachs availability. RAPTORS ON THE NET
Raptors.com (http://raptors.nba.com) offers members of the media
POSTGAME COACHES INTERVIEWS and fans the most comprehensive Raptors information on the internet.
Raptors coach Jay Triano will conduct his postgame media session
in Multi-Purpose Room B across from the Raptors locker room. The NBA MEDIA CENTRAL
opposing coach will meet the media outside the visiting locker room The media is strongly encouraged to take advantage of the NBAs
located on the event level, north corridor between the Raptors locker media central site. To register, log on to www.nba.com/mediacentral/
room and the Media Centre. . The Media Central Web site on NBA.com is designed specifically
for journalists covering the NBA. It is a password-protected site that
LIVE SHOTS contains information and resources that help the media cover the
Television stations desiring live shots must first receive permission league. Membership to the site includes free access to Audio League
from the Raptors media relations staff. Live shots are to be staged Pass for live RealAudio action of every game and links to local
courtside along either baseline and must be concluded no later than newspapers in every NBA market. Additionally, in-depth sections on
30 minutes prior to game time. the Business of the NBA and In the Community, box scores, team
game notes, archives of press releases sorted by team and by date,
GAME SERVICES NBA News archives, week-by-week team statistics, credential
Rogers Media Centre: The media work room at Air Canada Centre is applications and biographies of referees and league executives are
accessible only with a valid credential. The centre is open at least some of the elements within Media Central. The site is updated
two hours prior to game time, throughout the game and after the continuously to provide up-to-minute information on the NBA.
game. In order to provide the proper work environment, friends,
relatives or guests of the media will not be permitted access to the
Rogers Media Centre.

Pregame meals for working media will be served in the Rogers Media
Centre from two hours prior to the game up to tip-off. The charge is
$12 (Cdn) or $10 (U.S.).

The media work room is equipped with electrical outlets, and several
telephones (available on a shared basis) from which collect or credit
card calls may be placed.

Telephones: Telephones are placed at the media seats courtside and


in the Rogers Media Centre for your convenience on a shared basis.
Media members desiring their own phone can contact Jason Howarth
at (416) 815-5400 ext. 5026 for assistance.

Injury reports: Reports on players who are injured during a game will
be distributed by the Raptors media relations staff. The locker rooms
are closed during games, and players who are injured and who do
not return to the court may not be interviewed until 10 minutes after
the conclusion of the game. Any interviews with team physicians or
the training staff must be cleared through the media relations
department.

PRACTICE POLICIES
Media members must enter Air Canada Centre through Gate 2 located
at 40 Bay Street, and report to the security personnel on duty before
proceeding to the Adidas Practice Court for practice or the main floor
for shootaround.

Practices and shootarounds are always subject to last-minute change


and/or cancellation. Members of the media are strongly encouraged
to check the Raptors media information line for up-to-date information.

Practice: The Raptors practice in the Adidas Practice Court training


facility on the third level at Air Canada Centre. For media access
periods, members of the media are required to remain along the west
baseline. All visitors to the practice court are requested to wear rubber-
soled shoes. For the 2008-09 season, the final 30 minutes of practices
will be open to the media. Players and coaches will be available for
interviews after practice. Media members may conduct interviews on
the court or outside of the training facility.
DIRECTIONS TO UBC
Translink's free Trip Planning service allows you to plan your trip to UBC from virtually any Lower Mainland location
(http://tripplanning.translink.bc.ca).

Full bus, Skytrain (rapid transit), and Seabus route and schedule information, including bus frequency listings and
route maps, are also available on the Translink web site, or call (604) 953-3333.

From Vancouver and the Lower Mainland:


Take any bus that states UBC as its destination -- in Vancouver, bus routes #4, #9, #17, #25, #41, #43, #44, #49,
#99 B-Line, #258 and #480 will all take you to UBC
Skytrain passengers can get off at Broadway Station and then transfer onto the #99 B-Line bus to UBC. Note that
some routes service the UBC campus only during peak hours

From Vancouver International Airport:


From Vancouver International Airport, take the Canada Line Skytrain going to Waterfront. Get off at Oakridge-41st
Station Northbound. Transfer to either the #43 UBC or #41 UBC buses.

From B.C. Ferries Terminals:


Tsawwassen: from the B.C. Ferries terminal in Tsawwassen, take bus #620 to Ladner Exchange and transfer to
bus #601 Vancouver; take bus #601 Vancouver until Granville St. at Broadway, and transfer to either bus #17 UBC
or #99 UBC (in peak hours, bus #601 may be scheduled as a direct route from the Tsawwassen Terminal to
Downtown)

Horseshoe Bay: from the B.C. Ferries terminal in Horseshoe Bay, take bus #257 Vancouver Express to down-
town Vancouver, and transfer to either bus #4 UBC or bus #17 UBC on Granville St.

Direction by Car:
For complete information on carpool / vanpool options at UBC, see the Carpool section on the UBC Trek Pro-
gram web Site.

If you are traveling by car, drive westbound along either 4th Avenue, 10th Avenue, 16th Avenue, or 41st Avenue
into Southwest Marine Drive (check the UBC Parking web site for information about rates)

For detailed driving directions, see the UBC Trek web site (http://www.trek.ubc.ca).
2010-11 NBA KEY DATES
September 16 19 Basketball Without Borders (Barcelona, Spain)

September 24 Players participating in NBA Europe Live presented by EA Sports, NBA Mexico Game
2010 presented by HP and NBA China Games 2010 may report to their teams no earlier
than 11 a.m. (local time)

September 27 Training Camps open for all other teams

October 3 NBA Europe Live presented by EA Sports (Milan) New York Knicks vs. Armani Jeans
Milano at Mediolanum Forum

October 4 NBA Europe Live presented by EA Sports (London) Los Angeles Lakers vs. Minnesota
Timberwolves at The O2

October 6 NBA Europe Live presented by EA Sports (Paris) New York Knicks vs. Minnesota
Timberwolves at Palais Omnisports Paris Bercy

October 7 NBA Europe Live presented by EA Sports (Barcelona) Los Angeles Lakers vs. Regal FC
Barcelona (Palau Sant Jordi)

October 12 NBA Mexico Game 2010 presented by HP (Mexico City) San Antonio Spurs vs. Los
Angeles Clippers at Palacios de los Deportes

October 13 NBA China Games 2010 (Beijing) Houston Rockets vs. New Jersey Nets at Wukesong
Arena

October 16 NBA China Games 2010 (Guangzhou) Houston Rockets vs. New Jersey Nets at
Guangzhou International Sport and Entertainment Center
October 22 NBA Preseason ends

October 25 Rosters set for NBA Opening Day (6 p.m. ET)

October 26 Start of the 2010-11 NBA Season

October 26 November 2 NBA Tip-Off 2010 presented by Kia Motors

January 5 10-day contracts may now be signed

January 10 All contracts are guaranteed for the remainder of the season

February 18-20 2011 NBA All-Star Game (Los Angeles, CA)

February 24 Trade deadline, 3 p.m. ET

April 6 9 Portsmouth Invitational Tournament (Portsmouth, VA)

April 13 Regular Season ends

April 14 Rosters set for 2011 NBA Playoffs, 3 p.m. ET

April 16 2011 NBA Playoffs begin

April 24 NBA Early Entry Eligibility Deadline (11:59 p.m. ET)

June 13 NBA Draft Early Entry Entrant Withdrawal Deadline (5:00 p.m. ET)

June 23 2011 NBA Draft


2010-11 SCHEDULE
OCTOBER/NOVEMBER FEBRUARY
Date Opponent Time TV Date Opponent Time TV
Wed. Oct. 27 New York 7:00 p.m. TSN2 Wed. Feb. 2 at Atlanta 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Oct. 29 Cleveland 7:00 p.m. TSN2 Fri. Feb. 4 Minnesota 7:00 p.m. TSN
Mon. Nov. 1 at Sacramento 10:00 p.m. Sportsnet One Tue. Feb. 8 at Milwaukee 8:00 p.m. TSN
Wed. Nov. 3 at Utah 9:00 p.m. Sportsnet One Wed. Feb. 9 San Antonio 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Nov. 5 at L.A. Lakers 10:30 p.m. TSN2 Fri. Feb. 11 Portland 7:00 p.m. TSN
Sat. Nov. 6 at Portland 10:00 p.m. Sportsnet One Sun. Feb. 13 L.A. Clippers 6:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Mon. Nov. 8 Golden State 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One Wed. Feb. 16 Miami 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Wed. Nov. 10 Charlotte 7:00 p.m. TSN2 Tue. Feb. 22 at Charlotte 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Fri. Nov. 12 at Orlando 7:00 p.m. TSN2 Wed. Feb. 23 Chicago 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Sat. Nov. 13 at Miami 7:30 p.m. TSN Fri. Feb. 25 Phoenix 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Tue. Nov. 16 at Washington 7:00 p.m. TSN Sun. Feb. 27 Dallas 6:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Wed. Nov. 17 at Philadelphia 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Fri. Nov. 19 Houston 7:00 p.m. TSN
Sun. Nov. 21 Boston 1:00 p.m. Sportsnet
MARCH
Wed. Nov. 24 Philadelphia 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Date Opponent Time TV
Fri. Nov. 26 at Boston 7:30 p.m. TSN2
Tue. Mar. 1 New Orleans 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Sun. Nov. 28 Atlanta 1:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Fri. Mar. 4 at New Jersey* 3:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Sat. Mar. 5 at New Jersey* 3:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Wed. Mar. 9 Utah 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
DECEMBER Fri. Mar. 11 Indiana 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Date Opponent Time TV Sun. Mar. 13 Charlotte 1:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Wed. Dec. 1 Washington 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet Wed. Mar. 16 at Detroit 7:30 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Dec. 3 Oklahoma City 7:00 p.m. TSN2 Fri. Mar. 18 Washington 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Sun. Dec. 5 New York 1:00 p.m. Sportsnet Sun. Mar. 20 at Oklahoma City 7:00 p.m. TSN
Mon. Dec. 6 at Indiana 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One Mon. Mar. 21 at Denver 9:00 p.m. TSN
Wed. Dec. 8 at New York 7:30 p.m. TSN2 Wed. Mar. 23 at Phoenix 9:00 p.m. TSN
Fri. Dec. 10 Denver 7:00 p.m. TSN Fri. Mar. 25 at Golden State 10:30 p.m. Sportsnet One
Sat. Dec. 11 at Detroit 7:30 p.m. TSN Sat. Mar. 26 at L.A. Clippers 10:30 p.m. Sportsnet One
Tue. Dec. 14 at Charlotte 7:00 p.m. TSN Wed. Mar. 30 Milwaukee 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Wed. Dec. 15 Chicago 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Dec. 17 New Jersey 7:00 p.m. TSN
Sun. Dec. 19 L.A. Lakers 1:00 p.m. TSN
APRIL
Wed. Dec. 22 Detroit 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Date Opponent Time TV
Mon. Dec. 27 at Memphis 8:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Sat. Apr. 2 at Chicago 8:00 p.m. TSN2
Tue. Dec. 28 at Dallas 8:30 p.m. Sportsnet One
Sun. Apr. 3 Orlando 6:00 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Dec. 31 at Houston 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Tue. Apr. 5 at New York 7:30 p.m. Sportsnet One
Wed. Apr. 6 Cleveland 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Apr. 8 at Philadelphia 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
JANUARY Sun. Apr. 10 New Jersey 6:00 p.m. TSN2
Date Opponent Time TV Mon. Apr. 11 at Milwaukee 8:00 p.m. TSN
Sun. Jan. 2 Boston 6:00 p.m. TSN2 Wed. Apr. 13 Miami 8:00 p.m. Sportsnet One
Tue. Jan. 4 at Chicago 8:00 p.m. Sportsnet
Wed. Jan. 5 at Cleveland 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet NBA All-Star Weekend, February 18-20, 2011
Fri. Jan. 7 at Boston 7:30 p.m. TSN STAPLES Center, Los Angeles, California
Sun. Jan. 9 Sacramento 1:00 p.m. TSN
Wed. Jan. 12 Atlanta 7:00 p.m. TSN2 All start times listed are Eastern Time.
Fri. Jan. 14 Detroit 7:00 p.m. TSN Subject to change.
Sat. Jan. 15 at Washington 7:00 p.m. TSN
Mon. Jan. 17 at New Orleans 3:00 p.m. Sportsnet One * at The O2 arena, London, England.
Wed. Jan. 19 at San Antonio 8:30 p.m. Sportsnet One
Fri. Jan. 21 at Orlando 7:00 p.m. TSN All radio broadcast on The FAN 590.
Sat. Jan. 22 at Miami 7:30 p.m. TSN2
Mon. Jan. 24 Memphis 7:00 p.m. TSN
Wed. Jan. 26 Philadelphia 7:00 p.m. TSN2
Fri. Jan. 28 Milwaukee 7:00 p.m. TSN
Sat. Jan. 29 at Minnesota 8:00 p.m. TSN
Mon. Jan. 31 at Indiana 7:00 p.m. Sportsnet
TORONTO RAPTORS BASKETBALL CLUB
50 Bay Street, Suite 500 - Toronto, Ontario, M5J 2L2
Phone: (416) 815-5600 Fax: (416) 359-9205

BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Lawrence M. Tanenbaum (Chairman of the Board), Glen Silvestri, Robert G. Bertram, Ashvin Malkani, Robert
MacLellan, Dale H. Lastman, Richard Peddie

MAPLE LEAFS SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT


Chairman of the Board & NBA Governor Lawrence M. Tanenbaum
President, Chief Executive Officer & Alternate NBA Governor Richard Peddie
Executive Vice-President, Chief Operating Officer Tom Anselmi
Executive Vice-President, Chief Financial Officer & Business Development Ian Clarke
Executive Vice-President Venues & Entertainment Bob Hunter
Senior Vice-President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary Robin Brudner
Senior Vice-President, People Mardi Walker
Senior Vice-President, Broadcast & Content Chris Hebb
Senior Vice-President, Finance Kevin Nonomura
Senior Vice-President, Business Partnerships Dave Hopkinson
Senior Vice-President, Ticket Sales & Service Beth Robertson
Vice-President, Live Entertainment Patti-Anne Tarlton
Vice-President, Food & Beverage Michael Doyle
President & General Manager, Toronto Maple Leafs Brian Burke

RAPTORS MANAGEMENT
President & General Manager, Alternate NBA Governor Bryan Colangelo
Senior Basketball Advisor Wayne Embry
Senior Vice-President, Basketball Operations Maurizio Gherardini
Senior Director, Scouting Jim Kelly
Senior Director, Basketball Administration Steve Fruitman
Assistant General Manager Marc Eversley
Director of Player Development Alvin Williams
Head Coach Jay Triano
Assistant Coach P.J. Carlesimo
Assistant Coach Alex English
Assistant Coach Micah Nori
Assistant Coach Scott Roth
Assistant Coach/Basketball Development Eric Hughes
Assistant Coach/Strength and Conditioning Francesco Cuzzolin
Scout Bob Zuffelato
Head Athletic Trainer Scott McCullough
Assistant Trainer/Athletic Therapist Rory Mullin
Assistant Trainer/Massage Therapist Ray Chow
Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach Jon Lee
Team Medical Director/Orthopaedic Surgeon Dr. Paul Marks
Assistant Team Medical Director Dr. Howard Petroff
Equipment Manager and Travel Coordinator Kevin DiPietro
Assistant Equipment Manager Paul Elliott
Manager, Team Security John Altilia
Team Services Coordinator Doreen Doyle
Video Coordinator Bob Peterson
Assistant Video Coordinator Jon Goodwillie
Assistant to the General Managers Office Graeme McIntosh
Basketball Operations Coordinator Courtney Charles
Director, Media Relations Jim LaBumbard
Coordinator, Media Relations Roven Yau
Coordinator, Media Relations Phil Summers
MAPLE LEAFS SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT
COMMUNITY & SPORTS PARTNERSHIPS BROADCAST & RAPTORS NBA TV CANADA INFORMATION
Manager, Community & Sports Partnerships David De Freitas Senior Vice-President, Broadcast & Content Chris Hebb
Coordinators, Sports Partnerships Melanie Gerin-Lajoie Senior Director, Broadcasting & Networks Liana Bristol
Coordinators, Sports Partnerships Rebecca Davies Director, Content & Networks GM Frank Hayward
Coordinators, Community & Player Programming Jason Schwabe Senior Producer, Networks Mark Askin
Coordinators, Community & Player Programming Kristina Flynn Director, Business Development Aaron Lafontaine
Coordinator, Hockey Development Greg Schell Director, Networks Development & Operations Dale Scott
Director, Creative MLSE Design Group Dean Bender
MLSE TEAM UP FOUNDATION Director, Venue Services Jim Steele
Executive Director Lori Radke Manager, Network Production & Programming Peter Papulkas
Manager, Resource Development Christine Chan Producer, Raptors Broadcast Dan Gladman
Manager, Legacy Program & Communications Tanya Mruck Associate Producer, Networks Matt Runge
Manager, Events & Community Fundraising Jillian Svensson Supervising Producer, Networks Jamie Arnold
Coordinator, Grants & Communications Alicia Erz Producer, Networks Scott Wallace
Coordinator, Legacy Program Bridgette Estrela Associate Producer, Networks Jeff Landicho
Coordinator, Events Kristen McAdam Associate Producer, Networks Dave Leiter
Coordinator, Fundraising & Events Eleanor McDonald Executive Assistant Pina DellAnno
Coordinator, 50/50 Program Shellie Thomas Television Talent Matt Devlin
Television Talent Jack Armstrong
AIR CANADA CENTRE Television Talent Leo Rautins
Senior Director, Corporate Partners & Service Activation Jeff Deline Television Talent Sherman Hamilton
Senior Director, Executive Suite Services Kristy Fletcher Television Talent David Amber
Senior Director, Accounting Bobby Karabatsos Television Talent Andi Petrillo
Senior Director and Associate General Counsel Peter Miller Radio Paul Jones
Senior Director, Ticket Sales Tom Pistore Radio Eric Smith
Senior Director, Information Technology Sasha Puric
Senior Director, Broadcast Finance Wayne Zronik DIGITAL CONTENT
Director, Project Development Dan Arts Director, Digital John McCauley
Director, Media Sales Anthony Attard Manager, Online & Mobile Mike Ball
Director, Food and Beverage/Retail Finance Alldrick Britto Manager, Video & Social Chris Clarke
Director, Security Services Michael Burns Senior Writer Mike Ulmer
Director, Fan Experience Vince Bozzo Producer Jason Satur
Director, Retail & Merchandise Operations Jeff Budway Producer/Host (Video & Social) Akil Augustine
Director, Food and Beverage Quick Service Doug Collier Social Producer Jonathan Sinden
Director, Event Personnel &Parking Operations Brendan Costigan Creative Producer JP Lopez
Director, Labour Relations Les Fisher Creative Producer Anthony Laksmana
Director, Ticket Operations Donna Henderson Producer Asif Hossain
Director, Payroll Randi Jakobsen Producer Matthew Iaboni
Director, Building Operations & Team-Up Green Bryan Leslie
Director, Ticket Services Tom McDonald
Director, Accounting Joe Pinuzza
Director, Event Operations & Production Jim Steele
Director, Fan Loyalty Caroline Wright

Manager, Game Operations Anton Wright


Coordinator, Game Operations Annie Cho
Coordinator, Game Operations Steve Benetti
Coordinator, Dance Pak Amberley Waddell
Head Audio Engineer Courtney Ross

Director, Corporate Communications Rajani Kamath


Manager, Corporate Communications Jamie Deans
Communications Executive Assistant Laura Leite
Team Photographer Ron Turenne
LARRY TANENBAUM
Chairman Of The Board, Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment
NBA Governor, Toronto Raptors
Larry Tanenbaum was appointed Chairman of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment in July 2003. He also serves as
a Governor of the NBA for the Toronto Raptors, of the NHL for the Toronto Maple Leafs and of Major League
Soccer for Toronto FC. Toronto FC is the latest addition to the MLSE sports family, and began play in spring 2007 at the new 21,000 seat BMO
Field located on the Exhibition grounds.

Mr. Tanenbaum has shown a long-standing interest in the sports and entertainment industry and was the primary force in bringing an NBA
franchise to Toronto. In the early 1990s, Tanenbaum attempted to move established NBA clubs to Toronto and then, as head of the Palestra
Group, he initiated the expansion process that opened the eyes of the NBA to Canada. Although he was unsuccessful in being awarded the
initial expansion franchise, Tanenbaum established himself in NBA circles and the city as a legitimate NBA home.

In 1996, Mr. Tanenbaum acquired an interest in the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League and Maple Leaf Gardens, Limited
(now Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment). With MLGs purchase of the Raptors and Air Canada Centre in February 1998, Tanenbaum fulfilled
his goal of NBA and NHL ownership in Toronto under the same group.

In 2000, Mr. Tanenbaum was appointed to the Planning Committee of the NBA Board of Governors, a group that charts the course of
future direction for the league. In addition to that prestigious posting, he also serves on an NBA task force comprised of players and Board
members to further the leagues community outreach efforts. Mr. Tanenbaum has recently been appointed to the Advisory/Finance
Committee - the senior most committee of the NBA Board of Governors which considers and makes recommendations to the Board
concerning a wide range of financial and league business matters.

Mr. Tanenbaum is currently Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Kilmer Van Nostrand Co. Limited (KVN), having served as President &
CEO from 1968 to 2000. Under his direction, Kilmer developed into a multi-faceted construction operation with operating divisions and
subsidiaries covering road building and paving, ready-mix concrete, aggregates, heavy construction, trucking and pipe manufacturing. Through
December 2000, Kilmers road building, paving and aggregates operations were conducted through Kilmers wholly owned subsidiary, The
Warren Paving & Materials Group Limited. Mr. Tanenbaum served as Chairman of Warren, which was Canadas largest asphalt paving
company. Warrens activities also included major commercial aggregates operations, liquid asphalt trading and distribution and road
maintenance. In December 2000, Warren was merged into Lafarge Corporation, North Americas largest diversified supplier of construction
materials. As a result of this merger, Kilmer became a significant shareholder in Lafarge NA, and Mr. Tanenbaum served on the Board and
chaired its Finance Committee until the 2006 buyout by Lafarge SA. Kilmer today manages infrastructure investments through Kilmer
Brownfield Equity Fund LP, Quickload CEF Inc. and Host Kilmer Service Centres Inc.

Kilmer also has significant investment in various sports-related entities, including Insight Sports Ltd, which is a leading sports media company
involved in the creation, production and broadcasting, on all platforms, of sports and related lifestyle content. Insight Sports holds equity
positions in several Canadian specialty television services including The NHL Network and Score Media and owns and/or operates the World
Fishing Network (WFN) and Game TV. In 2003, through Plaza Gaming and Entertainment, Kilmer invested in the charitable gaming industry
in Canada. Through its operations in Ontario and BC, Plazas facilities raise over $20 million per year for local municipal charities.

In addition, Mr. Tanenbaum serves as Chairman of Kilmer Capital Partners, a private equity investment fund, which provides equity capital to
small to mid-market companies, and is dedicated to building leading companies in partnership with management. Kilmer Capitals portfolio
includes Unisync Group Ltd., McGregor Industries Inc., Algorithme Pharma Inc., Coalision and Tribal Sportswear.

Mr. Tanenbaum served as National Revenue Chair of the Liberal Party of Canada during Prime Minister Paul Martins term of office. He
currently serves as a member of the Ontario Investment and Trade Advisory Council, and recently served on the Independent Fiscal Review
Panel of the City of Toronto and the Mayors Economic Competitiveness Advisory Committee of the City of Toronto.

Mr. Tanenbaums involvement in Community Associations includes the following: Vice-Chairman, Board of Directors, Mount Sinai Hospital
a tertiary care teaching hospital associated with the University of Toronto; Co-Chairman of the Research Committee for the Samuel Lunenfeld
Research Institute; Member, Board of Directors, NeuroScience Canada; Member, University Council, Cornell University; Member, Advisory
Board, Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care; Member, Deans Advisory Council, Schulich School of Business, York University; Member,
National Board of The Canadian Council of Christians & Jews; Member, Board of Directors, Miller Thomson Foundation; Founding Member,
Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy (CIJA), and Co-Chair, Tomorrow Campaign for UJA Federation.
In recognition of his contributions in the areas of business, philanthropy, and volunteerism, Mr. Tanenbaum was appointed an Officer of the
Order of Canada on October 25, 2007. The Order of Canada is the centrepiece of Canadas honors system and represents its highest civilian
award.

Mr. Tanenbaum has a Bachelor of Science degree in Economics from Cornell University (1968).
RICHARD PEDDIE
President and CEO, Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment
Alternate NBA Governor, Toronto Raptors
For Richard Peddie the concept of a winning organization at Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE) reflects
winning on the ice, on the court and on the pitch and being a winner off it as well. Peddies company vision is clear
WIN. Accordingly, the companys core values are: Excite Every Fan, Inspire Our People, be Dedicated To Our Teams, and be Leaders In Our
Community.

It is a personal practice of this vision and values that has enabled Peddie to continually place his mark on the North American professional sports
and entertainment scene. In his 12th year as President and Chief Executive Officer of MLSE, Peddie oversees all business operations related
to the Maple Leafs, Raptors, Toronto FC, Marlies, the operations of Air Canada Centre, BMO Field and Ricoh Coliseum, the organizations three
digital channels Leafs TV, Raptors NBA TV and GOLTV and Maple Leaf Square, a sports and entertainment development adjacent to Air
Canada Centre.

Peddie was named president of the Raptors on November 22, 1996, but his first foray into professional team sports came in 1993 with the
Palestra Group, a consortium of local businessmen seeking to bring an NBA expansion franchise to Toronto. The group, headed by Larry
Tanenbaum, current Chairman of the Board of MLSE, was unsuccessful in securing the rights to the franchise but did establish Toronto as a
viable entry into the NBA marketplace. It showcased the citys overwhelming capability to support a new franchise in uncharted waters. In 1998,
when the merger of Maple Leaf Gardens Limited and Toronto Raptors created Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. (MLSE), Peddie moved
over to become the organizations president. Peddie was appointed to MLSEs Board of Directors in July 2003.

Under his vibrant leadership MLSE has expanded its growth and reach with a dynamic vision. In 2001, MLSE became the first North American
sports franchise to unveil separate television channels dedicated to coverage of its hockey and basketball entities. The stations have witnessed
substantial growth in programming and viewership. In 2009, MLSE acquired GOLTV Canada, a network dedicated to soccer, to complement its
existing broadcast portfolio and to support its aspiration to grow soccer in Canada. Today, MLSE is one of the largest producers of live sports
broadcasts in Canada. Developing new innovative digital platforms to deliver Leafs, Raptors, Marlies and Toronto FC content to fans is one of
MLSEs primary initiatives for the coming years.

MLSE launched its first venture into outside building operations in 2004 with an agreement to lease Torontos Ricoh Coliseum to become the
home of the Marlies, the Leafs AHL affiliate, and to manage the facilitys operations and event planning.

On April 19, 2005 the company announced a major expansion initiative with the development of a $500 million Maple Leaf Square a premier
sports and entertainment destination located next to Air Canada Centre. Opened in 2010, the developments anchor brand Real Sports includes
two key properties the 1,000-seat Real Sports Bar & Grill with 199 High-Definition televisions and Real Sports Apparel, a 9,000 square-foot
themed store for sports enthusiasts. Htel Le Germain Maple Leaf Square, a 168-room boutique hotel, a 48,000-square-foot store Longos
grocery store, 872 condominiums and retail office space are also integral properties at Maple Leaf Square.

In May 2006, the organization unveiled its newest sports team Toronto FC. Toronto FC, the 13th team in Major League Soccer and the first
outside the United States, has proven to be one of the most successful start-up teams in professional sports history. Since opening play in April
2007 in the new 21,000 seat BMO Field at Exhibition Place, Toronto FC has sold out every home game and established league standards in
several areas of business operation. It was runner-up to the Boston Red Sox as Sports Business Journals Professional Sports Franchise of the
Year in 2007. Pivotal to growing soccer in Canada, BMO Field is operated by MLSE and a successful example of a private-public sector
partnership between MLSE and the three levels of government. BMO Fields success has created economic growth for Exhibition Place and the
City of Toronto. Its high-profile events outside of the Toronto FC games such as the FIFA Under 20 World Cup, 2008 Major League Soccer All-
Star Game and 2009 Real Madrid friendly match have generated an economic impact of $158 million for Toronto.

In 2009, MLSE unveiled two major building initiatives. An investment of $48 million has created a newly revitalized and expanded Air Canada
Centre. Air Canada Centre now boasts multiple entry points on its west side, additional retail areas, concessions stands and a High-Definition
broadcast studio all located on a multi-level spacious area known as the Atrium. The Maple Leafs and Marlies also opened their new practice and
training facilities in the MasterCard Centre for Hockey Excellence, Torontos first community arena built since 1982. The training and practice
facilities will serve as a global model for excellence in sports and an epicenter for hockey in North America, where the next generation of athletes
can develop.

Prior to joining the Raptors, Peddie was President and COO of NetStar Communications, formerly Labatt Communications, the parent company
for The Sports Network (TSN), Le Rseau des sports (RDS), The Discovery Channel and Dome Productions. In July 1995, he was one of the key
individuals in the management-led consortium that purchased the company.

In 1989, after 19 years in the packaged goods industry, Peddie accepted the post of president and chief executive officer of the Stadium
Corporation of Ontario (SkyDome). During his five years at SkyDome, he helped to host more than 1,000 events and entertain more than 29
million guests. The facility was chosen Stadium of the Year four consecutive years by the Sports and Entertainment Industry and in 1992, Peddie
was honoured as the North American Facility Manager of the Year.

Peddie began his business career with Colgate Palmolive in 1970 and moved to General Foods three years later. In the spring of 1983 he was
promoted to the position of president of Hostess Foods. In 1985, he left to become the president and CEO of Pillsbury Canada, and during his
tenure the company displayed record growth and was recognized as one of Canadas 100 Best Companies by The Financial Post. Peddie
received the Donald B. McCaskill Award for Marketing Excellence in Canada for his efforts with Pillsbury.

A native of Windsor, Ontario, Peddie graduated from the University of Windsor in 1970 and received an honourary doctorate from the institution
in 2001. Peddie accepted an invitation to teach a bachelor of commerce course in strategic leadership to fourth year students at the University
of Windsor in the fall of 2002. Peddie remains one of the Universitys most philanthropic and active donors.
BRYAN COLANGELO
President and General Manager
Alternate NBA Governor, Toronto Raptors

On February 28, 2006, the Toronto Raptors named Bryan Colangelo president and general manager. He joined
the franchise following 15 years in the Phoenix Suns organization, where he served 11 seasons as the clubs general manager including the
last seven as team president.

Colangelos arrival in Toronto was marked by a series of trades and free agent acquisitions that resulted in nine new players on the roster at
the start of 2006-07 training camp. In his first full season at the helm of the Raptors, the team improved an NBA-best 20 wins over the 2005-
06 season to tie a franchise high with 47 victories. Toronto went on to win the 2006-07 Atlantic Division championship, securing third seed and
home court in its return to the playoffs after missing the postseason the previous five seasons.

For his efforts in leading the Raptors dramatic change of fortune, Colangelo was named 2006-07 Sporting News NBA Executive of the Year.
It was his second such honour, having received the award in 2005 after guiding the Suns to the third-greatest turnaround in NBA history en
route to winning the Pacific Division Championship. He is one of only three executives to win the award with two different franchises (Bob
Bass, Jerry West).

During Colangelos career as a general manager, his teams have appeared in the NBA Playoffs 11 of 15 seasons, captured four division
championships and posted an overall record of 643-552 (.538).

Prior to his move to Toronto, the former Suns executive was part of a new ownership group that purchased the franchise June 30, 2004. He
also previously held the positions of scout, assistant director of player personnel, and vice president/assistant general manager with the
Suns, where he was directly involved in all aspects of player personnel, including evaluation, draft selection and transactions. He also served
as tournament director of the NIKE Desert Classic, an annual college All-Star basketball tournament held in Phoenix, from 1993 through
2001.

In addition to his responsibilities with the Suns, Colangelo served as president of Phoenix Arena Sports (PAS), the owning entity of the
Arizona Rattlers (Arena Football League) and the operating entity of the Phoenix Mercury (WNBA) from June 1991 through June 2002.
Highlights of his involvement with PAS include the 1994 and 1997 Rattler World Championships, setting the league attendance mark with the
Phoenix Mercury in the WNBAs inaugural season, and his selection as the AFLs 1993 Executive of the Year. The Rattlers also won the AFL
Commissioners Award as the top franchise on and off the field for an unprecedented five straight years from 1996 to 2000.

Colangelos accomplishments and influence in sports and business were recognized nationally when he was named to the 40 Under 40
most influential group by Street and Smiths Sports Business Journal in 2000.

In May 2005, Colangelo was named to the USA Basketball Mens Senior National Program Advisory Panel charged with selecting teams for
the 2006 FIBA World Championship (Saitama, Japan), 2007 FIBA Americas Olympic Qualifying Tournament (Las Vegas, USA) and the 2008
Olympics (Beijing, China). Colangelo currently serves on the NBAs Competition Steering Committee and he was also named to Canada
Basketballs Board of Directors in June of 2008.

Colangelo has been active with and supportive of many different charitable organizations and community partners including the Boys and
Girls Club of Metropolitan Phoenix, the Phoenix Zoo, MLSEs Team Up Foundation, (formerly Raptors Foundation for Kids), the Art Gallery of
Ontario, Save a Childs Heart Foundation, the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the National Italian American Sports Hall of
Fame, among others.

Colangelo was born June 1, 1965. He is a 1987 graduate of Cornell University with a bachelor of science degree in business management
and applied economics.
WAYNE EMBRY
Senior Basketball Advisor
Wayne Embry embodies and lives by P words: preparation, perception, perseverance, persistence, pride and
passion. Others will use another P word pioneer to describe a man who has made his mark during a long and
storied basketball career.

Embry joined the Raptors on June 7, 2004 as senior basketball advisor. He took charge of the basketball operations area as Interim GM from
January 26, 2006 February 28, 2006. Over the course of that time, Embry engineered two trades (Aaron Williams to New Orleans/
Oklahoma City and Jalen Rose to New York) to create significant salary cap space for his successor, Bryan Colangelo, to rebuild the roster
in the offseason.

Embry has been affiliated with the NBA for more than 50 years as a player and front office executive. While Embry enjoyed a successful 11-
year career as a player, he will be forever remembered in professional sports circles for being the first African American to be general
manager and a president of an NBA club.

Embry became the first NBA African American general manager in 1972 when he was named to the post by the Milwaukee Bucks. He served
in that capacity for eight years leading the Bucks to two seasons of 59 or more wins and four postseason appearances, including the 1974
Finals. Prior to joining the organization, he was instrumental in negotiations that brought former teammate and legendary guard Oscar
Robertson to Milwaukee to join forces with Lew Alcindor, the first overall pick in the 1969 NBA Draft. In 1971, the Bucks captured the NBA
title, becoming the fastest expansion team in sports history to accomplish that feat.

From 1985-92, Embry served as vice-president and general manager of the Cleveland Cavaliers. He moved to an executive vice-president
position with the club from 1992-94, and in 1994 once again made history by becoming the first African American NBA team president and
chief operating officer. Under his direction the Cavaliers won 40 or more games 10 times, 50 or more on three occasions and advanced to the
Eastern Conference Final in 1992. Embry earned The Sporting News Executive of the Year honours in 1992 and 1998, as well as being
named Sports Illustrateds Executive of the Year in 1998.

The 6-foot-8, 240-pound Embry was known as The Wall during his playing days for his ability to set solid picks. He appeared in 831 regular
season NBA games, averaging 12.5 points and 9.1 rebounds. He averaged double figures in points in eight of his 11 seasons. He participated
in 56 postseason contests where he contributed an average of 10.1 points and 8.0 rebounds, including tallies of 16.3 points and 13.5
rebounds in the 1963 playoffs.

Embry began his NBA career in 1958 with the Cincinnati Royals, where he played eight seasons, including the final four as team captain. He
earned first-team All-NBA honours for five consecutive seasons (1961-65). He joined the Boston Celtics for two campaigns (1966-68) and
helped the Celtics capture the 1968 NBA championship with a 4-2 series triumph over the Los Angeles Lakers. He finished his playing career
the following year as the first captain in Milwaukee Bucks history.

A native of Springfield, Ohio, Embry was a two-time honourable mention All-America selection at Miami (Ohio) University. He was the teams
leading scorer, team captain and MVP in 1957 and 1958, and is the fourth player in school history to have his jersey (No. 23) retired. He
earned a bachelor of science degree in education and a minor in business administration from Miami.

Embry has been involved in a number of business ventures, including membership on the Federal Reserve Bank of Clevelands Board of
Directors where he plays a large role in shaping monetary and economic policies. He was enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1999,
and has had his high school and collegiate uniform numbers retired. He also has a road named in his honour in Clark County, Ohio.

Embry is married to Terri, and is the father of three children: Debbie, Jill and Wayne Jr.
MAURIZIO GHERARDINI
Senior Vice-President of Basketball Operations
Maurizio Gherardini was promoted July 22, 2008 to Senior Vice-President of Basketball Operations. Since joining
the Raptors in June 2006, Gherardinis knowledge and vast international experience have been instrumental in
helping facilitate a multitude of transactions involving both domestic and international players.

Gherardini originally joined the Raptors as the clubs vice president and assistant general manager. He became the first European to hold a
senior management position with an NBA franchise.

Gherardini was the general manager of Italys Benetton Treviso, where he established himself as one of the brightest minds and administrators
in the history of European basketball. During his tenure, he built Benetton into one of the most recognizable basketball organizations outside
the NBA.

In his 14 years with Benetton, his teams captured four League championships (1997, 2002, 2003 and 2006), seven Italian Cups (1993-95,
2000, 2003-05), three Italian Supercups (1997, 2001 and 2002), two Eurocups (1995 and 1999) and made four appearances in the Euroleagues
Final Four (1993, 1998, 2002, and 2003).

Under Gherardinis guidance, Benetton became a training ground in Europe and a destination for NBA personnel to scout players. He
organized basketball camps and clinics, including the first NBA coaches clinic in Europe. He also oversaw the Reebok Big Man camp and
Reebok Eurocamp, where top European young players learned and competed, as well as the Treviso Summer League, which is the only
event of its kind in Europe.

Gherardinis influence gained him positions on the FIBA Sports Commission (1998-2000) and the Euroleague Board (2001-06). He also
oversaw four editions of the NBAs Basketball Without Borders in Treviso.

Gherardini has been honoured as the La Gazzetta dello Sport Executive of the Year (2001) and the Legabasket Executive of the Year (2006),
and won the FIBA Oscar Basketball Award Pietro Reverberi (2003) and GIBA Players Association Oscar Award (2004).

Gherardini started his basketball career playing in the youth leagues in Forli, Italy. He held the positions of assistant coach and director of
youth teams for the Forli club from 1975-82. In 1982, he was promoted to general manager of the Forli entry that played in the top league
(serie A). He remained in that capacity until 1992 when he joined Benetton.

In addition to his role with the Raptors, Gherardini has brought his experience and expertise in international competition to Canada Basketball
where he serves as Managing Director of the Senior Mens National Team and member of the Council of Excellence.

Gherardini was born in Forli, Italy on September 22, 1955. He attended McCluer High School in Florissant, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, as
a foreign exchange student and graduated in 1973.

Gherardini and his wife, Luana, have two children: Michele and Valentina.
JIM KELLY
Senior Director of Player Personnel
Jim Kelly, in his 16th season with the team, was promoted July 22, 2008 to Senior Director of Player Personnel.
In addition to his prominent scouting role of all college, professional and international prospects, Kelly has managed
the teams recent free agent camps, draft workouts and summer league team.

Kelly was elevated to director of player personnel in the summer of 2001. He has more than 30 years of scouting and coaching experience at
the NBA, international and collegiate levels.

He joined the Raptors as a scout in 1994, focusing on international scouting activities, following a 10-year coaching career in the Philippines,
Germany, England and Greece. He led TSV Bayer to the German championship in 1985 and the Solent Star of Southampton to their first
English National Basketball League title in 1984. Kellys previous NBA experience came as the European scout for the Milwaukee Bucks
between 1988 and 1991.

Prior to his work in Europe, Kelly had collegiate coaching stints at Marshall, American International, Middlesex C.C. and Central Connecticut
State. Kelly holds a masters of science degree from Central Connecticut State where he captained the basketball team in his senior year.

Kelly and his wife, Lucy, have one son, Kris.

STEVE FRUITMAN
Senior Director of Basketball Administration
Steve Fruitman was promoted to Senior Director of Basketball Administration on July 22, 2008. He joined the
department in 2004 as its director of basketball operations following four years in the company as a controller in
the finance department.

Fruitmans extensive knowledge of the NBAs Collective Bargaining Agreement, insurance programs and other related business complexities
has made him invaluable to the organization. Fruitmans expertise was instrumental with proposing the cap-friendly strategy that allowed the
Raptors to acquire Hedo Turkoglu while retaining the financial flexibility to secure additional players to complement the roster during the
summer of 2009.

Fruitman is a native of Toronto.

MARC EVERSLEY
Assistant General Manager
Marc Eversley is in his fifth season with the Raptors. As Assistant General Manager, Eversley plays an integral
role in the overall strategy and management of the teams day-to-day operations. His range of duties includes
everything from scouting, to player relations and development, to acting as the Raptors liaison for the NBAs
Player Development program.

Eversley returned to his native Ontario after working for five years at Nikes world headquarters in Oregon as its NBA player relationship
manager. It was there he became versed in managing athlete relationships, along with team and athlete brand management.

Eversley worked for six years with Nike Canada before heading to Oregon. He began in retail, managing Nike owned stores in Ontario and
then moved to their corporate office overseeing Nike Canadas basketball assets, including high school, college, university and pro. He also
managed marketing agreements with NBA Canada, the Vancouver Grizzlies and the Raptors.

Eversley attended high school in Brampton, Ontario, and Urbana University in Urbana, Ohio on a basketball scholarship.
JAY TRIANO
Head Coach
Jay Triano was promoted to head coach and signed to a three-year contract May 11, 2009. He is the seventh head
coach in franchise history.

The 2009-10 campaign marked Trianos eighth as a member of the Raptors coaching staff. He served as an assistant to three coaches
before being named interim head coach. He became the first Canadian born and Canadian trained coach in the NBA when he joined Lenny
Wilkens staff for the 2002-03 season.

Traino led his 2009-10 team to a 40-42 mark, missing the eighth and final playoff spot by a single game. Injuries to key players after the all-
star break sidelined the Raptors bid to return to the postseason. Prior to that, Trianos squad won 22 of 32 games from December 2 to
February 10.

Triano took over the head coaching duties on an interim basis December 3, 2008 following the dismissal of Sam Mitchell. Triano guided the
club to a 9-4 mark in its final 13 outings in the 2008-09 season, and a 12-15 record after the all-star break. He finished 25-40 overall.

A native of Niagara Falls, Canada, Triano possesses significant international coaching experience. He was the head coach of the Canadian
Mens National Team from 1998-2004 posting a 52-42 (.553) record. He led Canada to a semifinal berth in the 2003 FIBA Americas Olympic
Qualifying Tournament in Puerto Rico and to a 5-2 record, second best to the United States, in the 2000 Olympics.

In August 2010, he was tabbed to replace Mens National Team assistant coach Mike DAntoni on the 2010 USA coaching staff. DAntoni was
sidelined with back problems. Triano joined the team for its New York training (August 10-16) and continued on the bench through its training
and exhibition games in Spain and Greece, and the FIBA World Championship in Turkey. He helped lead the US to a gold medal winning the
title over host country Turkey.

Triano had also served as an assistant coach of the USA Basketball Select Teams that trained against the U.S. National Team in 2007 and
2008, was lead coach at the 2009 USA Basketball Mens National Team mini-camp, and assisted at the 2010 USA National Team training
camp in Las Vegas, Nevada.

He also served as the head coach of the NIKE Skills Academy in Vancouver (2006) and Toronto (2007), as a coach at the prestigious EURO
CAMP in Treviso, Italy (2003-09), and as a coach with Basketball Without Borders in Istanbul (2008) and Senegal (2010).

Prior to becoming a NBA assistant coach, Triano worked in the league from 1995-2001 as a radio and television analyst and director of
community relations for the Vancouver Grizzlies. He moved to Toronto from Vancouver in 2001 to work as a basketball analyst for TSN.

Triano began his coaching career in 1985 as an assistant at his alma mater Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia. He took
over the schools head coaching duties in 1988 and served in that capacity until 1995. In 1992-93, he also worked as an assistant coach on
the Canadian Mens National Team and in 1993-94 he was the head coach of the Canadian Mens Junior National Team.

During his collegiate playing career at Simon Fraser, Triano led the Clansmen in scoring all four seasons and set 11 school records, including
the career scoring mark of 2,616 points. He was also a member of the football team during his senior season. In 1981, he was drafted by the
Los Angeles Lakers in the eighth round of the NBA Draft and by the Calgary Stampeders in the sixth round in the CFL Draft.

Following graduation, Triano played for the Canadian National Team for 11 years (1978-88) and was team captain from 1981-88. He represented
Canada as a player on three Olympic teams (1980, 1984 and 1988), serving as captain for the last two.

Triano also wore his countrys colours internationally in the World University Games in 1979, 1981 and 1983 where he led the tournament in
scoring and Canada to the gold medal, and in 1985 in Kobe, Japan where he carried the Canadian flag at the opening ceremonies.

Triano is a member of the Canadian Basketball, Canadian Olympic, Basketball British Columbia, Basketball Ontario, Simon Fraser Athletic
and Niagara Falls Halls of Fame.

In April 2005, Triano was honoured by the Raptors with the Coach Mac Award, given annually to a member of the Canadian basketball
community who through exemplary character and effort, has made a major contribution to the sport of basketball while upholding the principles
for which Coach Mac stood honesty, integrity, competitiveness and a love of the game.
P.J. CARLESIMO
Assistant Coach
P.J. Carlesimo brings 35 years of coaching experience to his first season on the Raptors bench, including 13
seasons in the NBA. He is also a veteran of international and college ball.

This will be the second time that Raptors head coach Jay Triano and Carlesimo have worked together. Carlesimo was the head coach and
Triano his assistant of the USA Basketball Select Team in 2007 and 2008.

Carlesimo spent five seasons (2002-2007) as Gregg Popovichs lead assistant with the San Antonio Spurs where they captured three NBA
titles in 2003, 2005 and 2007. He also served as the head coach in Portland (1994-97), Golden State (1996-2000) and Seattle/Oklahoma City
(2007-09).

Carlesimo began his coaching career as an assistant at Fordham University in 1971, before being named head coach at New Hampshire
College for one season (1975-76). He then spent six seasons (1976-82) as the head coach at Wagner College, and led the Seahawks to their
first NIT appearance. In 1982, Carlesimo was named head coach at Seton Hall University, a position he held for 12 years. In 1987-88, he
guided Seton Hall into the NCAA Tournament for the first time in school history. His teams qualified for the NCAA Tournament in six of his final
seven years. He was named NCAA Coach of the Year in 1989 after registering a 31-7 mark, and advancing to the NCAA Championship
Game. In addition, he was named Big East Coach of the Year in 1988 and 1989.

Carlesimo made the transition to the NBA in the summer of 1994, when he was named head coach of the Portland Trail Blazers. He compiled
a 137-109 (.557) record over three seasons and led the Blazers to three straight playoff appearances. Posting a winning season in his first
year in the NBA coming from the collegiate ranks made him the first coach to accomplish that feat in 25 years. His 1996-97 team posted the
lowest field goal percentage allowed (.436) in team history to that point, and recorded an 11-game winning streak (third longest in Blazers
history). Each of Carlesimos three Portland squads finished in the top three in league rebounding totals. All three teams held opponents
scoring totals to under 100 points, with each season lower than the previous year. The 1994-95 Blazers allowed 99.2 points, followed by 97.0
points and a then Blazers record 94.8 points in 1996-97.

In June of 1997, Carlesimo was hired as the head coach of the Golden State Warriors, a position he held until December of 1999. The
Warriors led the league in rebounding each of his first two seasons in Golden State. In addition, the 1998-99 Warriors set franchise records
in field goal percentage defense (.420) and lowest points allowed (90.8).

In seven NBA seasons, Carlesimo has an overall NBA record of 203-284 (.417).

Carlesimo served as an assistant coach for USA Basketball for the gold-medal winning team at the 1992 Olympic Games, the 1990 World
Championships, the 1990 Goodwill Games and the 1988 Olympic Trials. In addition, Carlesimo was the head coach of three other U.S.
Teams, including the 1991 World University Games squad, winners of the gold medal, and at the Olympic Festival in Norman and Oklahoma
City in 1989.

Between coaching stints, Carlesimo has been a broadcaster for NBC Sports, Turner Sports and Spurs Television.

A native of Scranton, Pennsylvania, Carlesimo graduated from Fordham University in 1971. He was a member of the schools 26-3 basketball
team in 1970-71, a team that set the mark for the most wins in school history and was Fordhams first NCAA Tournament Team.

Carlesimo has been inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame (1992 USAB Dream Team), Pennsylvania Hall of Fame, the Wagner Hall of
Fame and the Seton Hall Athletic Hall of Fame. His father, the late Pete Carlesimo, was the long-time executive director of the NIT. He and
his wife Carolyn have two sons, Kyle and Casey.
ALEX ENGLISH
Assistant Coach

It is an understatement to say Alex English brings an impressive resume to his position as an assistant coach.
The Basketball Hall-of-Famer and the leagues 13th all-time leading scorer with 25,613 points was appointed to
his current post with the Raptors on June 7, 2004.

English joined the Raptors after spending the 2003-04 season as an assistant coach with the Philadelphia 76ers. He served as director of
player personnel and assistant coach with the Atlanta Hawks during the 2002-03 campaign. English began his professional basketball
management career in 2001-02 as the head coach of the National Basketball Development Leagues North Charleston (S.C.) Lowgaters. In
his lone season at the helm, he guided his team to a 36-20 record and a berth in the finals of the first NBDL Championship.

The 6-foot-7, 190-pound English was elected to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility in 1997. An eight-time NBA All-Star, he was
selected to the all-league second team three times (1982, 1983 and 1986), and in 1988 was presented with the leagues J. Walter Kennedy
Citizenship Award for his dedication to community service. English averaged 21.5 points, 5.5 rebounds and 3.6 assists in 1,193 regular
season games, shooting an impressive .507 from the field and .832 from the foul line. He appeared in 68 postseason contests, averaging
24.4 points and 5.5 rebounds. A second-round selection by the Milwaukee Bucks in 1976 (23rd overall), English played two seasons in
Milwaukee (1976-78), two with the Indiana Pacers (1978-80), and 11 in Denver (1980-90) before finishing his career in 1990-91 with the
Dallas Mavericks.

English was dealt by Indiana to the Nuggets on February 1, 1980, along with a first-round draft pick for George McGinnis. He would go on to
become the Nuggets career leader in scoring (21,645) and assists (3,679). In 10 of his 11 seasons in Denver, he averaged better than 21
points, and in eight of those seasons scored more than 25 per contest. He led the Nuggets to nine straight playoff appearances from 1982-
90, including a berth in the 1985 Western Conference Final. He averaged 24.4 points during 10 playoff seasons. On March 2, 1993, English
was honoured by the Nuggets with the retirement of his uniform No. 2.

As a collegiate standout, English averaged 17.8 points and 9.6 rebounds as a four-year starter at the University of South Carolina. He
contributed career-bests of 22.6 points and 10.3 rebounds in his senior season. He earned his undergraduate degree in interdisciplinary
studies.

In 1985, English convinced fellow NBA players to donate their shares from the All-Star Game to Interaction Ethiopia, a relief fund assisting
with efforts in famine stricken Ethiopia. English visited the area during the summer of 1985.

From 2003-09, English returned to Africa with a contingent of NBA players as a camp director for the Africa 100 Camp. He has done so every
year since as a member of the NBAs Basketball Without Borders program. The basketball instructional camp for the top 100 young players
from more than 20 African countries also features extensive community outreach and incorporates educational seminars addressing the
importance of social issues such as HIC/AIDS prevention and education.
MICAH NORI
Assistant Coach
Micah Nori is in his second season as an assistant coach for the Raptors and his 13th overall with the organization.
In addition to his duties as an assistant coach, Nori oversees the advance (opponent) scouting operations for the
club. He was promoted July 1, 2009 after serving as the teams Director of NBA Scouting.

In his previous role as Director of NBA Scouting, Nori supervised the management of the video scouting/editing suite and acted as the
interface with the coaching staff as it related to advance scouting.

Nori had served since 2000 as the teams advance scout where he was responsible for scouting all upcoming opponents and preparing
reports for both the coaching staff and players on opponents play schemes, offensive/defensive tendencies and player personnel. Prior to
becoming the teams advance scout, he served as assistant to the coaching staff from 1998-2000.

Nori played baseball at Indiana University from 1993-97 where he was a four-year starter and captain of their 1997 Big Ten Championship
team. He received his Masters Degree in Sports Organization in 1998 from Miami (OH) University.

Nori and his wife, Melissa, have a son, Dante, and a daughter, Mia.

SCOTT ROTH
Assistant Coach
Scott Roth enters his first season with the Raptors after being named an assistant coach August 16, 2010. Roth
brings an extensive knowledge of basketballs global landscape having served as a player, scout and coach
overseas and in North America for 25 years.

Roth was as an assistant coach with the Golden State Warriors. Prior to joining the Warriors staff he was the head coach of the Bakersfield
Jam of the NBA D-League in 2008-09 and guided the team to its first post-season appearance with a 26-24 record.

Roth has spent seven seasons in the NBA as an assistant coach with the Dallas Mavericks (1996-2000) and Vancouver/Memphis Grizzlies
(2000-02), and four seasons as scout and advisor for the Milwaukee Bucks.

In 2000, Roth was an assistant coach on the Turkish National Team that claimed a silver medal at the European Championships held in
Istanbul. A year later he helped guide Turkey at the 2001 World Championships in Indianapolis. Roth was the head coach of the Dominican
Republic National Team in 2007 and 2008, earning a silver medal at the CBC Caribbean Championships in Puerto Rico.

Following a standout collegiate career at the University of Wisconsin, Roth was selected in the fourth round of the 1985 NBA Draft by the San
Antonio Spurs. He opted to begin his professional playing career overseas with Efes Pilsen in Turkey. He returned to North America in 1987
and appeared in 160 NBA games with the Utah Jazz (1987-88), San Antonio Spurs (1988-89) and Minnesota Timberwolves (1989-90) before
returning to Europe to finish his playing career.

Roth and his wife have, Lorie, have a daughter, Dene.


ERIC HUGHES
Assistant Coach/Basketball Development
Eric Hughes was promoted to Assistant Coach/Basketball Development on July 1, 2009. He joined the Raptors in
2007-08 as a basketball development consultant. He came to the club from Goodwin Sports Management and
Spokane Community College.

Hughes worked since 2002 as the director of summer player development for Goodwin Sports Management in Seattle, creating workout
programs and training NBA players Jamal Crawford, Kevin Durant, Al Horford, Dwight Howard, Gary Payton, Nate Robinson and Rodney
Stuckey. He had also been the head coach at Spokane Community College in Spokane, Washington during that time. He compiled an 88-61
(.590) mark in his five seasons, leading the Bigfoots to the Eastern Region championship in 2005 and 2006. He was named Eastern Region
Coach of the Year in 2005 and 2006.

Hughes also served as an assistant coach under current Atlanta Hawks assistant Bob Bender at the University of Washington from 1993-
2002, as an assistant at the University of California from 1991-93, and as a graduate assistant at Illinois State from 1989-91.

Hughes has served as the head coach for the Raptors entry in the Las Vegas Summer League the past three summers. His 2010 team
finished 5-0 and led the league in scoring.

ALVIN WILLIAMS
Director of Player Development
Alvin Williams was promoted to Director of Player Development on September 17, 2010. Prior to moving into the
teams front office, Williams served as Assistant Coach/Basketball Development for one season following a 10-
year NBA playing career.

One of the most beloved Raptors of all time, the Villanova University product spent nine seasons with the organization from 1997-2006.
Williams averaged 9.9 points and 4.3 assists in 417 regular season games and 12.5 points and 4.3 assists in 78 playoff appearances. He
ranks among the Raptors All-Time Leaders in 15 categories.

Williams has served the past two summers as an assistant coach for the Raptors entry at the Las Vegas Summer League.
FRANCESCO CUZZOLIN
Assistant Coach/Strength & Conditioning
Francesco Cuzzolin joined the Raptors on July 1, 2009 as assistant coach/strength and conditioning. He brings to
the team more than 20 years of professional experience of coaching, teaching and product development in the
field of physical fitness and rehabilitation.

Cuzzolin spent 12 of the past 13 seasons with Benetton Treviso in the Italian Serie A League where his teams won the Italian League, Italian
Supercup or European Saprta cup on 10 occasions. He also captured the Euroleague championship with Virtus Bologna in 2001. From 2006-
2008, Cuzzolin was the strength and conditioning coach for the Russian National Team, including its European Championship squad in 2007
and its 2008 appearance at the Olympic Games in Beijing.

Cuzzolin has previous experience working in an NBA environment serving on staff with the Chicago Bulls and Cleveland Cavaliers during
their summer training camps, as well as at the annual Rbk European Big Man Camp.

Cuzzolin is the president of the European Physical Conditioning Association and a professor at the University of Padua.

JON LEE
Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach
John Lee begins his second season as the teams assistant strength and conditioning coach. He will assist
Francesco Cuzzolin with the development and implementation of year-round training programs for the players, as
well as assisting the training staff with maintaining the players optimal health throughout the season.

Prior to joining the Raptors, Lee served as a fitness consultant, the strength and conditioning coach for Western
Canada Basketball Academy, the strength and conditioning coach/team manager for the Canadian Mens National Basketball team and the
interim strength and conditioning coach for the NBAs Vancouver Grizzlies.

A native of Richmond, British Columbia, Lee earned his Masters (Education) and undergraduate degrees (Physical Education and Education)
from the University of British Columbia. He is also a certified strength and conditioning specialist by the National Strength and Conditioning
Association.
SCOTT MCCULLOUGH
Head Athletic Trainer

Scott McCullough is in his fifth season with the Raptors as the teams head athletic trainer. He returned to his
native Ontario in 2006 after six seasons as the head athletic trainer with the Memphis/Vancouver Grizzlies.
Prior to that, he served as the Grizzlies assistant trainer since the teams inaugural season in 1995.

McCullough is a 1995 graduate of the Sports Injuries Management program at Sheridan College in Oakville, Ontario. He worked with the
varsity football program at the University of Toronto, the Edmonton Sports Institute and Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto.

A native of Renfrew, Ontario, he earned his Bachelors Degree in Physical Education from the University of Toronto in 1992 and a
Masters in Human Movement from A. T. Still University in 2010.

He and his wife, Lisa, reside in Oakville.

RAY CHOW
Assistant Trainer/Massage Therapist

Ray Chow is in his 15th season with the Raptors. He will also assist with strength and conditioning and the
nutrition of the players.

A native of Burma, Chow graduated from the University of Toronto with a Masters degree in molecular biology
and from the Sutherland-Chan School of Massage Therapy. He currently assists the Canadian mens basketball team and previously worked
with Canadian Olympic track and field and swimming athletes.

RORY MULLIN
Assistant Trainer/Athletic Therapist
Rory Mullin enters his season with the Raptors organization. He will assist head athletic trainer Scott McCullough
with administering treatments and overseeing the physical health of the players.

Mullin is a Certified Athletic Therapist and Acupuncturist. He holds an undergraduate degree from York University
and earned a Master of Science in Athletic Training from Indiana State University. He also received a diploma in Acupuncture and Traditional
Chinese Medicine, has studied a wide variety of courses on corrective exercise and manual osteopathy, and is a nutrition and lifestyle coach.

A native of Toronto, Mullin consulted with the Toronto Maple Leafs for seven seasons before joining the Raptors.
DR. PAUL MARKS
Team Medical Director/Orthopaedic Surgeon
Dr. Paul Marks is team medical director and Orthopaedic Surgeon and has been associated with the Raptors
medical staff since the clubs inception in 1995. He is currently an associate professor of surgery at the University
of Toronto with clinical practice at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.

Dr. Marks has served on the research Committee of the American Orthopedic Society for sports medicine. He has published numerous peer
reviewed scientific journal articles, and is currently researching clinical outcome measures as they relate to knee ligament injuries as well as
factors that lead to progression of degenerative arthritis. His research is funded by the Canadian Institute of Health Research and the
Canadian Arthritis Network.

DR. HOWARD PETROFF


Assistant Team Medical Director
Dr. Howard Petroff is in his seventh season as a member of the Raptors medical staff and provides the team with
primary care medical support. Dr. Petroff practices both Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine. He is affiliated
with Mount Sinai Hospital and the Rouge Valley Health System.

Dr. Petroff currently serves as the Lead Physician for the West Durham Family Health Team. Dr. Petroff is also a staff physician in the
Emergency Department at Mount Sinai Hospital. Previously Dr. Petroff served as the Chief of Family Practice at the Rouge Valley Health
System, completing his term in 2007. Additionally, Dr. Petroff is a lecturer in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the
University of Toronto and regularly supervises medical trainees.

JOHN ALTILIA
Manager, Team Security
John Altilia begins his first season as manager of team security. Altilia has more than 30 years of law enforcement
experience as a Detective Constable with the Toronto Police Services. He has been involved in narcotics, homicide
and organized crime investigations as an under-cover and plain-clothed officer. Altilia also served with the
intelligence unit and as part of a joint task force with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) investigating
both national and international cases.

Altilia has been part of the NBAs security team in Toronto for the past nine years, acting as the lead representative for the past five. In this
role he oversaw the League compliance at Air Canada Centre and ensured the safety of players and officials. He has assisted with League
security at All-Star Weekends in Dallas, Phoenix, New Orleans and Las Vegas.

Altilia is a native of Toronto and will travel with the team on all road trips this season.
BOB ZUFFELATO
Scout
With close to 50 years of basketball experience at the NBA, collegiate and high school levels, Bob Zuffelato is an
invaluable member of Raptors. From the time he joined the organization in September 1994 through the teams
first season of play, Zuffelato served as the director of scouting where he managed the clubs scouting network
and was responsible for evaluating professional and collegiate talent. Heading into the clubs second season, he
became the director of player personnel and was promoted to director of basketball operations in 1998. He
became the teams assistant general manager in 2001, remaining in that post for two seasons before returning to a scouting role to spend
more time with his family. In addition to his front office duties, Zuffelato also served as an assistant coach with the Raptors on two occasions,
from 1995-97, and then returned to the bench in the second half of the 1997-98 season to lend his experience.

In addition to his work with the Raptors, Zuffelato also served as an assistant coach with the Golden State Warriors (1983-86), Minnesota
Timberwolves (1989-90) and Dallas Mavericks (1990-93). His previous front office experience was highlighted by a stint as director of player
personnel for the Milwaukee Bucks from 1987-89.

Prior to making the jump to the NBA, Zuffelato was the head coach at Marshall University from 1979-83, elevating from an associate head
coach position begun two years earlier. During his eight-year period at the helm of Boston College (1969-77), Zuffelato led the Eagles to the
ECAC New England championship, the NCAA East Regional semifinals and a third-place finish in the NIT. His college coaching career began
at Hofstra University and Central Connecticut State University.

Zuffelatos basketball achievements have been recognized with his induction into three halls of fame. On October 9, 2009, he was inducted
into the New England Sports Hall of Fame. On May 11, 2001, he was inducted into the Central Connecticut State University Athletic Hall of
Fame and on April 30, 2000 he received a similar honour going into the Torrington High School Athletic Hall of Fame in his hometown of
Torrington, Connecticut.

Zuffelato and his wife, Donna, reside in Rhode Island. They have three sons, Scott, Glen and Greg and seven grandchildren.
.
2010-11 TORONTO RAPTORS
TRAINING CAMP ROSTER
(as of September 16, 2010)

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Birthdate College/Country NBA Exp.


50 Solomon Alabi C 7-1 250 03/21/1988 Florida State Rookie
13 David Andersen C 6-11 245 06/23/1980 Frankston, Australia 1 year
3 Marcus Banks G 6-2 220 11/19/1981 Nevada-Las Vegas 7 years
28 Leandro Barbosa G 6-3 175 11/28/1982 Sau Paulo, Brazil 7 years
7 Andrea Bargnani C-F 7-0 250 10/26/1985 Rome, Italy 4 years
8 Jose Calderon G 6-3 210 09/28/1981 Villanueva de la Serena, Spain 5 years
32 Ed Davis F 6-10 225 06/05/1989 North Carolina Rookie
10 DeMar DeRozan G-F 6-7 220 08/07/1989 USC 1 year
9 Joey Dorsey F-C 6-8 268 12/16/1983 Memphis 2 years
12 Ronald Dupree F 6-7 210 01/26/1981 LSU 5 years
30 Reggie Evans F 6-8 245 05/18/1980 Iowa 8 years
1 Jarrett Jack G 6-3 200 10/28/1983 Georgia Tech 5 years
15 Amir Johnson F 6-9 210 05/01/1987 Westchester HS (Los Angeles, CA) 5 years
11 Linas Kleiza G-F 6-8 245 01/03/1985 Missouri 4 years
24 Sonny Weems G-F 6-6 205 07/08/1986 Arkansas 2 years
14 Julian Wright F 6-8 235 05/20/1987 Kansas 3 years

Head Coach: Jay Triano (Simon Fraser)


Assistant Coaches: P.J. Carlesimo (Fordham)
Alex English (South Carolina)
Micah Nori (Indiana)
Scott Roth (Wisconsin)
Eric Hughes (Cal State-Hayward)
Alvin Williams (Villanova)
Head Athletic Trainer: Scott McCullough (Toronto)
Strength and Conditioning: Francesco Cuzzolin (Padua)

NUMERICAL ROSTER

1 Jarrett Jack 10 DeMar DeRozan 15 Amir Johnson


3 Marcus Banks 11 Linas Kleiza 24 Sonny Weems
7 Andrea Bargnani 12 Ronald Dupree 28 Leandro Barbosa
8 Jose Calderon 13 David Andersen 30 Reggie Evans
9 Joey Dorsey 14 Julian Wright 32 Ed Davis
50 Solomon Alabi

HOW THE TEAM WAS ASSEMBLED


Draft Trade Free Agent
2010 Davis (1st round) 2010 Wright (August 14) 2010 Dupree (September 16)
2009 DeRozan (1st round) 2010 Andersen (July 28) 2010 Kleiza (July 26)
2006 Bargnani (1st round) 2010 Barbosa (July 14) 2010 Dorsey (April 4)
2010 Alabi (June 24) 2009 Jack (July 21)
2009 Johnson (August 18) 2005 Calderon (August 3)
2009 Weems (August 18)
2009 Evans (June 9)
2009 Banks (February 13)
#50 SOLOMON ALABI
Position: Centre Birthdate: March 21, 1988 (Kaduna, Nigeria)
Height: 7-1 High School: Montverde Academy (Montverde, Florida)
Weight: 250 College: Florida State 10
NBA Experience: Rookie Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: Draft rights traded by Dallas (50th overall) in exchange for a 2013 conditional second-round
pick and cash considerations June 24, 2010.
Career Transactions: Second-round draft choice (50th overall) by Dallas in 2010; June 24, 2010: Draft rights traded by Dallas to Toronto in
exchange for a 2013 conditional second-round pick and cash considerations.
Contract Status: Signed through 2011-12 season, with a team option for the following season.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Participated with the Raptors entry in the 2010 Las Vegas Summer League Finished third on the team
averaging 5.0 rebounds in five games Shot a team-best .938 (15-for-16) from the free throw line and .565 (13-for-23) from the field Led
the bench with 10 points and six rebounds vs. Houston Was an early entry in the 2010 NBA Draft and selected 50th overall.

COLLEGE CAREER: Played three seasons at Florida State Ranks first all-time in school history averaging 2.1 blocks and 18th with a .534
field goal percentage in 77 career games Named to the All-ACC Defensive Team as a sophomore and red-shirt freshman Named to the
All-ACC Freshman Team Helped lead the Seminoles to a pair of NCAA Tournament berths (2009 and 2010) and to the ACC Tournament
Championship Game in 2009 Led the team in scoring (11.7), blocks (2.3) and free throw percentage (.794) while ranking second in
rebounds (6.2) during 32 games as a sophomore (2009-10) Scored in double-figures 18 times, including a career-high 22 points in back-
to-back games against Georgia State and Auburn Blocked a career-high seven shots against Boston College Led the team in rebounds
(5.6), blocks (2.1) and field goal percentage (.540) and started all 35 games as a redshirt freshman (2008-09) Played in nine games as a
freshman (2007-08) before ending his season early with a stress fracture in his leg.

HIGH SCHOOL CAREER: Played two seasons at Montverde Academy, located just outside of Orlando, Florida Averaged 17.5 points and
11.4 rebounds as senior and helped lead the team to a 30-0 record Also set a school record with 180 blocked shots and was named Class
2A First-Team All-State by the Orlando Sentinel during his senior year In his first season, led Montverde to an undefeated 30-0 record and
a No. 4 national ranking in the final USA Today high school boys basketball poll.

PERSONAL: A native of Kaduna, Nigeria Moved to the United State in 2005 Attended the same high school as Milwaukees Luc Richard
Mbah a Moute Starred for the Nigerian Junior National Team at the 2007 Nike All-American camp Helped Nigeria qualify for the 2007
FIBA Under-19 World Championships Played soccer before taking up basketball at age 15.

Solomon Alabi NCAA Stats


Year Team G GS MIN FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
07-08 FSU 10 1 93 15 31 .484 5 9 .556 8 12 20 0 1 11 11 35 3.9
08-09 FSU 35 35 779 122 226 .540 51 75 .680 75 122 197 12 18 56 73 295 8.4
09-10 FSU 32 32 820 133 249 .534 108 136 .794 79 119 198 16 20 61 75 374 11.6
Totals 77 68 1686 270 506 .533 164 220 .745 162 253 415 28 39 128 159 704 9.1
Three-point field goals: 2007-08: 0-0 (.000); 2008-09: 0-1 (.000); 2009-10: 0-0; Totals: 0-1 (.000).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2007-08: 18/0; 2008-09: 65/1; 2009-10: 75/2; Totals: 158/3.
#13 DAVID ANDERSEN
Position: Centre Birthdate: June 23, 1980 (Carlton, Australia)
Height: 6-11 High School: Australian Institute of Sport (Canberra, Australia)
Weight: 245 College: N/A
NBA Experience: 1 Year Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: Traded by Houston with cash considerations for a 2015 second-round draft pick July 28, 2010.
Career Transactions: Second-round draft choice (37th overall) by Atlanta in 2002; July 14, 2009: Draft rights
traded by Atlanta to Houston for cash and future considerations; August 12, 2009: Signed a multi-year contract with Houston; July 28, 2010:
Traded by Houston with cash considerations to Toronto for a 2015 second-round draft pick.
Contract Status: Signed through 2011-12 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 5.8 points and 3.3 rebounds in 63 games of his rookie campaign with Houston Reached double figures in
scoring 12 times and posted one double-digit rebounding performance Was on the inactive list for 14 games (Mar, 9; Mar. 24 Apr. 14) due
to a sore lower back Totaled 16 points (6-9 FG, 2-3 3FG) vs. Toronto on Mar. 1 Had a career-best 11 rebounds Feb. 20 vs. Indiana
Posted 18 points (7-11 FG, 3-3 3FG), seven rebounds, three assists and two steals vs. Utah on Feb. 16 Grabbed a career-high three steals
Dec. 27 in Cleveland Picked up 16 points in an overtime win at Dallas on Dec. 18 Registered 17 points (6-8 FG, 3-4 3FG) and nine
boards Dec. 16 at Denver Tallied a career-high 19 points with six rebounds at the L.A. Lakers on Nov. 15 Scored 11 points and collected
five boards in his first regular season NBA game Nov. 27 at Portland.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Played 10 seasons in Europe before coming to the NBA Played in Spain in 2008-09, in Russia from 2004-08
and in Italy from 1999-2004 Captured the Euroleague Championship in 2001 (Virtus Bologna), 2006 (CSKA Moscow) and 2008 (CSKA
Moscow) Played for Australia in the 2008 and 2004 Olympic Games 2008-09: Averaged 11.1 points and 4.1 rebounds in 23 Euroleague
games with Regal FC Barcelona Posted 10.4 rebounds and 4.2 rebounds in 40 Spanish League outings Helped lead FC Barcelona to
the ACB Spanish National Championship and a berth in the Euroleague Final Four 2007-08: Played final season with CSKA Moscow where
he averaged 13.7 points and 6.7 rebounds in 18 Russia-A Superleague outings Averaged 12.8 points and 5.8 rebounds in 25 Euroleague
contests ... Helped CSKA to the Euroleague title and Russian National Championship 2006-07: In Russian League play, appeared in 59
games with CSKA Moscow, averaging 11.2 points and 5.2 rebounds Averaged 9.8 points and 5.0 rebounds in 25 Euroleague contests
Led CSKA to the Russian National Championship and the Russian National Cup 2005-06: Captured the Euroleague Championship with
CSKA Moscow Appeared in 12 Euroleague affairs, averaging 14.8 points and 7.7 rebounds Saw action in 28 games in Russian League
play where he contributed 14.3 points and 6.6 rebounds CSKA captured the Russian National Championship and Russian National Cup
Suffered a broken ankle in January and missed the remainder of the season 2004-05: In first season with CSKA Moscow led the team to
aRussian National Championship and Russian National Cup Named to All-Euroleague First Team Averaged 12.4 points and 7.0
rebounds while shooting .573 per cent from the field in 23 Euroleague contests Appeared in 56 Russian League games where he averaged
13.4 points and 7.1 rebounds 2003-04: Played his lone season with Monte dei Paschi Siend in the Italy SerieA league Averaged 8.8
points and 4.8 rebounds in the Italian league and 9.1 points and 4.6 rebounds in the Euroleague Named Finals MVP en route to the Italian
National Championship Captured Italian SerieA regular season championship 2002-03: In his final season with Virtus Kinder Bologna
he sustained a shoulder injury in March that ended his season Averaged 10.7 points and 5.3 rebounds in 14 games in SerieA action
Took part in eight Euroleague contests and averaged 8.8 points and 4.8 rebounds 2001-02: Averaged 8.2 points and 5.5 rebounds in 43
Italian league games Contributed 8.7 points and 4.3 rebounds in 20 Euroleague games Won the Italian National Cup 2000-01:
Helped lead Kinder Bologna to Euroleague title and Italian National Championship and Italian National Cup Averaged 8.6 points and 4.5
rebounds in Italy-A1 League and 7.3 points and 3.7 rebounds in Euroleague competition 1999-2000: Played first season in Europe with
Kinder Bologna.

PERSONAL: Grew up in Frankston, Victoria in Australia Second youngest in his family, has three brothers, Brett, Stuart and Grant, and
one sister, Nina ... Holds dual citizenship (Australian and Danish) Enjoys relaxing down on his farm and spending time with family and
friends when back home in Australia Started playing basketball at Frankston East Primary School at age five Played with Frankston
Blues Junior Program from ages 11-15, winning a championship with his U-12 team in his first season Played for State of Victoria at the U-
16 Australian Junior Championships and was selected for the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) Basketball Development Program in Australias
Capital, Canberra Earned an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 19, Houston at LA Lakers, 11/15/2009 Off. Rebounds 5, Houston vs. Indiana, 2/20/2010
FGM 9, Houston at LA Lakers, 11/15/2009 Def. Rebounds 9, Houston at Denver, 12/16/2009
FGA 16, Houston at Dallas, 12/18/2009 Total Rebounds 11, Houston vs. Indiana, 2/20/2010
3PM 3, Houston vs. Utah, 2/16/2010 (twice) Assists 3, Houston vs. Utah, 2/16/2010 (4 times)
3PA 4, Houston at Cleveland, 12/27/2009 (twice) Steals 3, Houston at Cleveland, 12/27/2009
FTM 3, Houston vs. Sacramento, 3/03/2010 (3 times) Blocks 1, Houston vs. Toronto, 3/01/2010 (12 times)
FTA 5, Houston at Milwaukee, 2/17/2010 Minutes 29, Houston at Oklahoma City, 11/29/2009
#13 DAVID ANDERSEN
David Andersen NBA Career Stats
Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
09-10 Hou 63-0 891 147-340 .432 46-67 .687 54 154 208 44 15 37 12 367 3.3
Totals 63-0 891 147-340 .432 46-67 .687 54 154 208 44 15 37 12 367 3.3
Three-point field goals: 2009-10: 27-78 (.346); Totals: 27-78 (.346).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2009-10: 119/0; Totals: 119/0.

David Andersen Euroleague Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
00-01 Bol 22-7 398 55-110 .550 48-58 .828 29 53 82 10 12 34 10 160 7.3
01-02 Bol 22-11 472 72-149 .483 47-70 .671 29 66 95 9i 19 26 4 191 8.7
02-03 Bol 8-5 195 27-65 .415 16-19 .842 11 27 38 5 4 11 7 70 8.8
03-04 Mss 21-8 426 83-165 .503 25-39 .641 33 64 97 15 13 28 6 191 9.1
04-05 CSKA 23-20 555 102-178 .573 82-99 .828 45 116 161 19 19 28 11 286 12.4
05-06 CSKA 12-12 337 66-129 .512 44-48 .917 20 72 92 13 10 18 2 177 14.8
06-07 CSKA 25-6 560 87-188 .463 52-67 .776 30 94 124 22 13 30 10 244 9.8
07-08 CSKA 25-20 612 122-239 .510 50-59 .847 40 105 145 30 14 29 9 320 12.8
08-09 FCB 23-9 484 101-199 .508 32-40 .800 22 73 95 19 9 33 12 255 11.1
Totals 181-98 4039 715-1412 .506 396-499 .794 259 670 929 142 113 237 72 1894 10.5
Three-point field goals: 2000-01: 2-8 (.250); 2001-02: 0-0; 2002-03: 0-0; 2003-04: 0-3 (.000); 2004-05: 0-1 (.000); 2005-06: 1-2 (.500); 2006-07: 18-37 (.486); 2007-08: 26-48 (.542);
2008-09: 21-52 (.404); Totals: 68-151 (.450).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2000-01: 46/0; 2001-02: 51/0; 2002-03: 14/0; 2003-04: 54/0; 2004-05: 55/0; 2005-06 30/0; 2006-07: 50/0; 2007-08: 61/0; 2008-09: 39/0; Totals: 400/0.
#3 MARCUS BANKS
Position: Guard Birthdate: November 19, 1981 (Las Vegas, Nevada)
Height: 6-2 High School: Cimarron-Memorial (Las Vegas, Nevada)
Weight: 220 College: UNLV 03
NBA Experience: 7 Years Years with Raptors: Two

How Acquired: Traded by Miami with forward Shawn Marion and cash considerations for centre Jermaine
ONeal, forward Jamario Moon and a conditional draft pick on February 13, 2009.
Career Transactions: First-round draft choice (13th overall) by Memphis in 2003; June 26, 2003: Draft rights traded by Memphis with draft
rights to centre Kendrick Perkins to Boston for draft rights to guard Troy Bell and guard/forward Dahntay Jones; January 26, 2006: Traded by
Boston with guard Ricky Davis, centre Mark Blount, forward Justin Reed and two second-round draft picks to Minnesota for forward Wally
Szczerbiak, centre Michael Olowokandi, forward/centre Dwayne Jones and a future first-round draft pick; July 20, 2006: Signed as a free
agent by Phoenix; February 6, 2008: Traded by Phoenix with forward Shawn Marion to Miami for centre Shaquille ONeal; February 13, 2009:
Traded by Miami with forward Shawn Marion and cash considerations for centre Jermaine ONeal, forward Jamario Moon and a conditional
draft pick.
Contract Status: Signed through 2010-11 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 5.0 points, 1.2 assists and 11.1 minutes in 22 games ... Was inactive for 36 games Scored a season-high
15 points Mar. 1 at Houston Was the leading scorer off the bench (8 points) Jan. 3 vs. San Antonio Made 10 consecutive appearances
Dec. 13 Jan. 3, averaging 5.6 points Grabbed a career-high six rebound Dec. 18 vs. New Jersey Missed two games Jan. 10-11 with
an upper respiratory infection.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 6.0 points, 2.2 assists and 16.4 minutes in 345 games, with 37 starts Has seen action in 13
playoff games, averaging 4.2 points, 1.2 assists and 13.3 minutes With Toronto, has averaged 4.4 points, 1.1 assists and 10.1 minutes in
28 games 2008-09: Averaged career lows of 2.5 points and 1.3 assists in 22 games ... Appeared in just six games with Toronto, totaling
14 points, six rebounds and 40 minutes Placed on the inactive list Mar. 25 ... Underwent surgery to remove a bone spur on his right big toe
Mar. 24 ... Had a high of six points and three assists Feb. 20 vs. Cleveland Missed two games with back spasms (Feb. 24 vs. Minnesota
and Feb. 22 vs. New York) ... Acquired Feb. 13 from Miami along with forward Shawn Marion and cash in exchange for Jermaine ONeal,
Jamario Moon and a conditional draft pick ... Had a season-high 11 points at Portland on Nov. 26 2007-08: Split the season between
Phoenix and Miami, averaged 6.6 points, 1.7 assists and 15.8 minutes in 36 games (three starts) Played in 24 games for the Suns and
averaged 5.2 points, 1.0 assists and 12.9 minutes Saw action in 12 games (two starts) with Miami and averaged 9.5 points, 3.0 assists and
21.6 minutes Scored in double figures nine times, including three games with at least 20 points Was a DNP-CD 27 times Suffered
a pulled right hamstring Mar. 8 at Atlanta which caused him to miss the final 21 games of the season Recorded back-to-back 20-point
games for the first time in his career with 20 against Golden State on Mar. 7 and 21 points against Toronto on Mar. 5 Scored 17-point fourth
quarter against Denver on Jan. 7; hitting a career-high seven three-point field goals en route to a season-high 23 points 2006-07:
Appeared in 45 games (one start) for the Phoenix Suns and averaged 4.9 points, 1.3 assists and 11.2 minutes Was a DNP-CD on 31
occasions and a healthy scratch on the inactive list six times Led the Suns in scoring, assists and blocks one time each and in steals in
six contests Scored in double figures five times (all off the bench), including a pair of 20-point outings Recorded a season-high 21 points
Feb. 14 at Seattle Playoffs: Appeared in a pair of games for Phoenix and totaled two points and one assist in seven minutes 2005-06:
Split the season between the Boston Celtics and Minnesota Timberwolves and averaged 10.0 points, 3.8 assists and 25.8 minutes in 58
games, with a career-high 29 starts Averaged 12.2 points, 5.1 assists and 32.0 minutes in his starting assignments Saw action in 18
games with the Celtics and averaged 5.5 points, 1.8 assists and 14.9 minutes Appeared in 40 games (28 starts) as a member of the
Timberwolves and averaged 12.0 points, 4.7 assists and 30.7 minutes Led the Timberwolves in scoring six times and in assists on 18
occasions Scored in double figures a career-high 30 times (20 as a starter), including a career-high four 20-point performances Scored
in double figures a personal-high five consecutive games from Apr. 11-19 Handed out a career-best 10 assists at Atlanta on Apr. 5
Played a career-high 43 minutes at New Jersey on Mar. 23 Grabbed a career-high seven rebounds against Miami on Mar. 21 Scored a
season-high 26 points (his career high for a game he started) and recorded career highs in both field goals made (12) and attempted (19)
against Houston on Mar. 7 Made his debut with the Wolves on Jan. 30 against Boston and tallied 20 points, six assists, one rebound and
one steal in 21 minutes Sat out the first 21 games of the season (Nov. 2 Dec. 14) due to a stress fracture in his left tibia 2004-05: Saw
action in 81 games (two starts) for Boston, averaging 4.6 points, 1.9 assists, 1.6 rebounds and 14.1 minutes Led the team in assists on five
occasions Scored in double figures 11 times, including one 20-point effort Recorded a season-best 20 points at Orlando on Nov. 29
Playoffs: Came off the bench in all seven games for the Celtics in their opening round series against Indiana, averaging 4.6 points, 1.6
rebounds and 15.1 minutes Scored a postseason career-high 11 points in Game 1 Registered a postseason career high in minutes
played (25) in Game 4 2003-04: Appeared in 81 games (two starts) as a rookie with Boston and averaged 5.9 points, 2.2 assists and 17.1
minutes In his two starts, averaged 8.0 points, 6.5 assists, 1.50 steals, 1.0 rebounds and 38.0 minutes Led the Celtics in scoring twice
and assists eight times Scored in double figures 18 times, including a pair of 20-point performances Had 21 multi-steal games
Registered career highs in points (28), free throws made (12) and free throws attempted (14) against Atlanta on Apr. 14 Made first NBA
start at Portland on Feb. 21 and finished with 10 points, a season-high seven assists, two steals and one rebound in 37 minutes Recorded
a career-high seven steals against Golden State on Apr. 2 Was part of a trade to the Los Angeles Lakers along with Chucky Atkins, Chris
Mihm and a second-round draft choice in exchange for Gary Payton, Rick Fox and a first-round draft choice Aug. 6, 2004, but the trade was
amended Aug. 13, 2004 with the Celtics retaining Banks and the second-round draft choice and the Lakers acquiring Jumaine Jones
Playoffs: Came off the bench in all four games for the Celtics in their opening round series against Indiana, averaging 5.0 points, 1.8
rebounds and 15.0 minutes Doled out a postseason career-high four assists in Game 4.
#3 MARCUS BANKS
COLLEGE CAREER: Played two seasons at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas (2001-03) and two seasons (1999-01) at Dixie State
College in St. George, Utah Started all 63 games at UNLV and averaged 18.1 points, 4.3 assists, 3.3 rebounds and 2.51 steals Was
named first-team All-Mountain West Conference as a senior in 2002-03 after averaging 20.3 points (.514 FG%, .757 FT%), 5.5 assists, 3.3
rebounds and 2.84 steals in 32 games Was the MWC Co-Defensive Player of the Year in 2002-03, sharing the award with BYUs Travis
Hansen Ranked seventh nationally in steals Led the MWC in assists (5.5) and steals (2.84) and finished second in scoring (20.3)
Earned Second Team All-MWC honors as a junior in 2001-02 after averaging 15.8 points, 3.3 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 2.16 steals in 31
games Was named the MWC Defensive Player of the Year Led the MWC in steals and ranked sixth in scoring as a junior Scored a
season-high 36 points against San Diego State (his NCAA Division I high) In two seasons at Dixie State College, averaged 17.3 points, 4.6
rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.94 steals in 70 games Was named Region 18 Player of the Year and a first-team NJCAA All-American as a
sophomore in 2000-01 ... Led Dixie State to a 35-2 record during the 2000-01 season and a third-place finish in the NJCAA Tournament where
he was a member of the All-Tournament team Earned Scenic West Athletic Conference All-Region First Team hounors as a freshman after
averaging 17.9 points, 3.6 rebounds, 3.4 assists and 1.85 steals in 33 games.

PERSONAL: Full name is Arthur Lemarcus Banks III Chose to attend UNLV because he wanted to stay close to his family so they could
see him play Received the NBAs Community Assist Award for November of 2006 for Marcus Banks Thanksgiving Feast which fed 10
families from Phoenix Day, an organization that assists single working mothers in need of child care Lists the mighty Green Bay Packers
as his favourite NFL team.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 28, Boston vs. Atlanta, 4/14/2004 Off. Rebounds 4, Minnesota vs. Memphis, 4/19/2006
FGM 12, Minnesota vs. Houston, 3/7/2006 Def. Rebounds 6, Toronto vs. New Jersey, 12/18/2009
FGA 19, Minnesota vs. Houston, 3/7/2006 Total Rebounds 7, Minnesota vs. Miami, 3/21/2006
3PM 7, Phoenix vs. Denver, 1/7/2008 Assists 10, Minnesota at Atlanta, 4/5/2006
3PA 8, Phoenix at Utah, 1/10/2008 (twice) Steals 7, Boston vs. Golden State, 4/2/2004
FTM 12, Boston vs. Atlanta, 4/14/2004 Blocks 2, Miami at Cleveland, 12/28/2008 (6 times)
FTA 14, Boston vs. Atlanta, 4/14/2004 Minutes 43, Minnesota at New Jersey, 3/23/2006

Marcus Banks NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Bos 81-2 1385 117-442 .400 99-131 .756 30 103 133 175 88 125 13 480 5.9
04-05 Bos 81-2 1145 115-286 .402 121-163 .742 29 97 126 155 63 79 13 372 4.6
05-06 Bos-Min 58-29 1496 219-468 .468 118-147 .803 23 112 135 220 54 119 11 578 10.0
06-07 Pho 45-1 503 84-196 .429 48-60 .800 10 28 38 60 23 40 3 221 4.9
07-08 Pho-Mia 36-3 569 86-191 .450 27-35 .771 4 41 45 61 14 37 13 239 6.6
08-09 Mia-Tor 22-0 206 21-57 .368 11-18 .611 1 17 18 28 11 14 2 56 2.5
09-10 Tor 22-0 244 39-73 .534 24-29 .828 3 20 23 26 12 20 2 109 5.0
Totals 345-37 5544 741-1713 .433 448-583 .768 100 418 518 725 265 434 57 2055 6.0
Three-point field goals: 2003-04: 27-86 (.314); 2004-05: 21-59 (.356); 2005-06: 22-63 (.349); 2006-07: 5-29 (.172); 2007-08: 40-102 (.392); 2008-09: 3-19 (.333);
2009-10: 7-24 (.292); Totals: 125-382 (.327).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2003-04: 171/2; 2004-05: 146/2; 2005-06: 162/0; 2006-07: 70/0; 2007-08: 65/0; 2008-09: 26/0; 2009-10: 30/0; Totals: 670/4.

Marcus Banks NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Bos 4 60 7-16 .438 4-4 .1000 1 6 7 7 2 3 1 20 5.0
04-05 Bos 7 106 13-29 .448 3-6 .500 1 10 11 7 4 6 0 32 4.6
06-07 Pho 2 7 0-2 .000 2-2 .1000 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1.0
Totals 13 173 20-47 .426 9-12 .750 2 16 18 15 6 9 1 54 4.2
Three-point field goals: 2003-04: 2-5 (.400); 2004-05: 3-6 (.500); 2006-07: 0-1 (.333); Totals: 5-12 (.417).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2003-04: 9/0; 2004-05: 16/0; 2006-07: 0/0; Totals: 25/0.
#28 LEANDRO BARBOSA
Position: Guard Birthdate: November 28, 1982 (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
Height: 6-3 High School: N/A
Weight: 175 College: N/A
NBA Experience: 7 Years Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: Traded by Phoenix with forward-centre Dwayne Jones for forward Hedo Turkoglu on July 14, 2010.
Career Transactions: First-round draft choice (28th overall) by San Antonio in 2003; June 26, 2003: Draft
rights traded by San Antonio to Phoenix for a future first-round pick; July 14, 2010: Traded by Phoenix with forward-centre Dwayne Jones to
Toronto for forward Hedo Turkoglu.
Contract Status: Signed through 2011-12 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 9.5 points, 1.6 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 17.9 minutes Saw action in a career-low 44 games Averaged
13.8 points in five starts Scored in double figures 18 times, including two 20-point efforts Suns scored 100 or more points in 40 of his 44
games, averaging 113.1 points with him and 106.9 points without Became just the third Sun in franchise history Mar. 28 to reach 700 three-
pointers made in a Phoenix uniform (Nash, Majerle) Underwent surgery Jan. 26 to remove a cyst in his right wrist and missed 23 games
Missed the first 12 games of December with a sprained left ankle after landing on a defenders foot while attempting a three-pointer Nov.
29 at Toronto Started the first two games of the season in place of Jason Richardson and averaged 20.5 points, including a season-high
24-point effort Oct. 30 vs. Golden State.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Voted 2006-07 NBA Sixth Man of the Year One of the NBAs best reserves, over the last five seasons has
averaged 14.7 points, 2.5 rebounds and 2.8 assists in 27.4 minutes, including .402 percent from three-point range, in 333 games (57 starts)
Has averaged 12.6 points, 2.6 assists and 25.1 minutes in 466 regular season games in his seven-year NBA career Owns postseason
averages of 10.2 points, 2.0 assists and 23.3 minutes in 64 appearances Played in Brazil from 1999-2003 ... In his second season with
Baura Tilibra in 2002-03, averaged 28.2 points, second to the legendary Oscar Schmidt; among the league leaders averaging 7.0 assists and
4.0 rebounds ... Named Brazilian League Rookie of the Year after averaging 15.8 points, 6.4 assists and 1.7 steals in his first full season for
Baura Tilibra in 2001-02 ... Averaged 16.2 points and 3.0 rebounds while shooting .529 from the field and .812 at the line in six games for
Brazil in the 2010 FIBA World Championships Was the youngest player (19) to earn a roster spot on the Brazilian National Team that
competed at the 2002 World Championships in Indianapolis ... Began his professional career in 1999-00 playing for Palmieras in the second
division ... 2008-09: Averaged 14.2 points, 2.6 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 24.4 minutes in 70 games Established new career highs in
shooting percentage from both the field (.482) and the free-throw line (.881); ranked 10th in the NBA from the charity stripe Led the team
in scoring 13 times, had 47 double-digit scoring efforts, including 19 20-point outings, two 30-point games and one 40-point night ... Averaged
17 points when playing 20 or more minutes vs. 7.2 points when seeing less than 20 minutes a night ... In his last 34 games of the year,
averaged 16.4 points on 51 per cent shooting, including 12 20-point efforts during that stretch ... Made 66-of-154 (.429) three-point attempts
in his last 45 games ... Scored a career-high 41 points on Feb. 20 vs. Oklahoma City, joining Michael Jordan (three times), Larry Bird, Julius
Erving and Walt Frazier as the only players in NBA history to record at least 40 points, seven rebounds, seven assists and six steals in a
single game Made a career-high 33-straight free throws from Jan. 25 Feb. 22 a streak that started in the same game that his previous
career-best streak of 30 consecutive free throws made came to an end 2007-08: Averaged 15.6 points, 2.8 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 29.5
minutes in a career-best 82 games Scored more total points off the bench than any player in the NBA ... Had four 30-point efforts and 22
20-point games ... Ranked 12th in the NBA in 3FGM with 164 and averaged two three-pointers per game (16th in the NBA) ... In 12 starts,
averaged 21.4 points, 3.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists, .540 FG and .487 3FG ... Tallied a then career-best 39 points with a career-high eight made
3FGs Nov. 10 vs. Orlando Playoffs: Averaged 10.4 points, four boards and 1.8 assists in five postseason games ... Totaled 40 points in the
final three games after scoring 12 combined in the first two games of the Opening Round vs. San Antonio ... 2006-07: Named 2006-07 NBA
Sixth Man of the Year on Apr. 23 Posted career highs in scoring (18.0), assists (4.0), rebounds (2.7), steals (1.20) and minutes played
(32.7) in 80 games Ranked fifth in the NBA with a career-high 190 three-point field goal made and for the second consecutive season
ranked among the leagues top 10 in three-point field goal percentage (.434, T-7th) Scored 10-plus points 73 times, 20-plus points a
career-high 33 times and 30-plus points 4 times Scored 17 consecutive points, one shy of a club record, in the first half at Sacramento on
Mar. 25 Matched his personal best in scoring with 32 points Mar. 12 vs. Houston ... Had a then career high of 32 points with seven three-
point field goals made vs. Charlotte on Mar. 7 Hit first career game-winner with a three-pointer with 1.5 seconds left Jan. 2 at Chicago
Playoffs: Scored 10-plus points nine times, 20-plus points three times Scored a playoff career-high 26 points in three games vs. the L.A.
Lakers (Game 1 and 2 on April 22 and 24, 2007 and Game 7 May 6, 2006) Averaged 21.2 points in five first round games vs. the Lakers,
including 16-of-42 (.381) shooting from behind the arc ... 2005-06: Averaged 13.1 points, 2.6 rebounds and 2.8 assists with a team-high .444
three-point percentage in 57 games Made 11 starts ... Scored 10-plus points 41 times and 20-plus points nine times ... Had a season-high
28 points on 11-of-15 shooting at Toronto on Mar. 3 ... Playoffs: Averaged 14.2 points in a career-high 20 games Scored in double figures
14 times and had 20-plus points four times Led the Suns in scoring with a game-high 24 points (10-of-13 shooting) in Game 4 of the
conference finals vs. Dallas on May 30 Scored all of the teams 25 bench points in Game 6 of the conference semifinals at Los Angeles
Clippers on May 18, including a stretch where he scored 11 points in the final 1:35 of the first quarter Had a playoff career-high 26 points
on 10-of-12 shooting (.833) in first-round series clinching victory in Game 7 vs. Los Angeles Lakers on May 6 In first NBA playoff start
scored 22 points in 47 minutes in place of a suspended Raja Bell in Game 6 at Lakers on May 4 2004-05: Averaged 7.0 points, 2.1
rebounds and 2.0 assists in 17.3 minutes in 63 games (six starts) Averaged 14.2 points, 4.0 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.3 steals in his six
starts Scored in double figures 17 times and 20-plus points once Numbers increased after the All-Star break, averaging 8.6 points, 2.8
rebounds, 2.5 assists, and shooting .500 FG over final 28 games Dished out a season-high seven assists to go along with his 14 points
and five rebounds vs. L.A. Lakers on Apr. 5 Scored season-high 22 points vs. L.A. Clippers on Feb. 23 in one of his six starts Missed
14 games due to injury, including a nine-game stint (Jan. 19 Feb. 2) on the injured list with a sprained left ankle In first start of the season
at Washington on Jan. 15 responded with 15 points, including a season-high five three-point field goals Scored 19 points off the bench vs.
Orlando on Dec. 13 Playoffs: Averaged 2.5 points, 1.4 rebounds and 9.8 minutes in 12 playoff outings 2003-04: In first NBA season
averaged 7.9 points, 1.7 rebounds, 2.4 assists in 21.2 minutes in 70 games ... Inherited the starting point guard job Jan. 5 after the Stephon
#28 LEANDRO BARBOSA
Marbury trade and averaged 10.0 points, 2.4 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 1.6 steals in 28.0 minutes ... Ranked in the top 10 among NBA
rookies in scoring (7.9, 9th), assists (2.4, T-8th), field goal percentage (.448, 6th), three-point field goal percentage (.395, 1st), three-point
field goals made (83, 2nd) and steals (1.33, T-3rd) ... Scored in double figures in 23 games, including a personal-best seven consecutive
contests (Mar. 29 Apr. 13) ... Recorded a season-high five steals at Houston on Mar. 15 ... In first NBA start, poured in a season-high 27
points (11-18 FG, 2-6 3FG, 3-4 FT), with three rebounds, four assists and one turnover in 39 minutes Jan. 5 vs. Chicago ... It was also the
most points scored by a Suns rookie in their first start (22, Negele Knight) ... It was the most points scored by an international player in the
first start since 2001-02 (27, Pau Gasol) ... Had four points in five minutes in NBA debut vs. Hawks on Nov. 12.

PERSONAL: Pronounced lee-AN-dro BAR-bow-sa His brother Arturo, who was a member of the elite Brazilian Special Forces, introduced
Leandro to basketball when he was five ... Speaks Portuguese and English ... Has a 6-10 wingspan and grew a half-inch during the 2006
offseason Participated in the NBAs Basketball Without Borders Americas community outreach program in his native country Brazil in
2004, 2006 and 2007 Became the fourth Brazilian to play in the NBA following Rolando Ferreira (Portland, 1988-89), Joao Jose Vianna
(Dallas, 1991-92) and Nene (Denver, 2002-03).

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 41, Phoenix vs. Oklahoma City, 2/20/2009 Off. Rebounds 3, Memphis at Phoenix, 11/16/2005 (twice)
FGM 16, Phoenix vs. Oklahoma City, 2/20/2009 Def. Rebounds 9, Philadelphia at Phoenix, 11/17/2006
FGA 26, Phoenix at Orlando, 11/10/2007 Total Rebounds 10, Philadelphia at Phoenix, 11/17/2006
3PM 8, Phoenix at Orlando, 11/10/2007 Assists 12, Memphis at Phoenix, 11/11/2006
3PA 14, Phoenix at Toronto, 12/5/2007 Steals 6, Oklahoma City at Phoenix, 2/20/2009 (twice)
FTM 11, Phoenix vs. Dallas, 2/14/2008 (twice) Blocks 2, Denver at Phoenix, 4/13/2010 (6 times)
FTA 12, Indiana at Phoenix, 1/9/2008 (twice) Minutes 48, Phoenix at Utah, 11/183/2006

Leandro Barbosa NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Pho 70-46 1498 210-470 .447 47-61 .770 23 100 123 165 93 120 7 550 7.9
04-05 Pho 63-6 1085 168-354 .367 55-69 .797 32 98 130 126 30 87 7 442 7.0
05-06 Pho 57-11 1592 273-567 .481 111-147 .755 31 119 150 158 48 89 6 744 13.1
06-07 Pho 80-18 2613 529-1111 .476 196-232 .845 22 192 214 317 96 146 15 1444 18.1
07-08 Pho 82-12 2420 472-1021 .462 175-213 .822 40 191 231 216 75 117 18 1283 15.6
08-09 Pho 70-11 1705 366-759 .482 171-194 .881 34 147 181 162 82 93 7 993 14.2
09-10 Pho 44-5 785 155-365 .425 64-73 .877 11 58 69 64 23 46 12 418 9.5
Totals 466-109 11702 2173-4647 .468 819-989 .828 193 905 1098 1208 442 698 72 5874 12.6
Three-point field goals: 2003-04: 83-210 (.395); 2004-05: 51-139 (.367); 2005-06: 87-196 (.444); 2006-07: 190-438 (.434); 2007-08: 164-422 (.389); 2008-09: 90-240 (.375); 2009-10:
44-136 (.324); Totals: 709-1781 (.398).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2003-04: 184/6; 2004-05: 127/0; 2005-06: 145/3; 2006-07: 210/3; 2007-08: 195/1; 2008-09: 115/0; 2009-10: 71/1; Totals: 1047/13.

Leandro Barbosa NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
04-05 Pho 12 116 12-35 .343 2-4 .500 5 12 17 12 3 8 0 30 2.5
04-05 Pho 20 632 103-219 .470 50-58 .862 5 27 32 54 15 29 4 283 14.2
06-07 Pho 11 349 64-158 .405 28-39 .718 7 31 38 24 12 22 2 174 15.8
07-08 Pho 5 142 19-55 .345 10-11 .909 2 18 20 9 3 4 0 52 10.4
09-10 Pho 16 249 43-103 .417 17-24 .708 2 19 21 20 5 15 2 115 7.2
Totals 64 1490 241-570 .423 107-136 .787 21 107 128 119 38 75 8 654 10.2
Three-point field goals: 2004-05: 4-10 (.400); 2005-06: 27-69 (.391); 2006-07: 28-39 (.305); 2007-08: 4-18 (.222); 2009-10: 12-35 (.343); Totals: 65-191 (.340).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2004-05: 8/0; 2005-06: 66/1; 2006-07: 30/1; 2007-08: 10/0; 2009-10: 33/0; Totals: 147/2.
#7 ANDREA BARGNANI
Position: Centre-Forward Birthdate: October 26, 1985 (Rome, Italy)
Height: 7-0 High School: Farmesina (Rome, Italy)
Weight: 250 College: N/A
NBA Experience: 4 Years Years with Raptors: Four

How Acquired: First-round draft choice (first overall) by Toronto in 2006.


Contract Status: Signed a contract extension through 2014-15 season, with an early termination option.

2009-10 SEASON: Set career highs by averaging 17.2 points, 6.2 rebounds and 1.39 blocks in 80 games (all starts) Shot a career-best
.470 from the field Led the team in three-pointers made (121), three-pointers attempted (325) and blocks (111) ... Ranked 17th in the NBA
with 1.39 blocks Led the team in scoring 15 times and rebounding 10 times Had a career-high 27 games with 20+ points Match his
career-high with five three-points Apr. 12 at Detroit and led the team with 33 points Reached the 100-block plateau for the first time in his
career Apr. 4 vs. Golden State Earned his career-high 10th double-double Mar. 26 vs. Denver with 14 points and a team-high 15 rebounds
Scored a career-high 34 points Feb. 2 at Indiana Averaged 19.0 points, 5.8 rebounds and 1.7 blocks during 10 games in February ...
Had a streak of 15 consecutive games with at least one block between Jan. 17 and Feb. 24 Missed two games - Jan. 22 at Milwaukee with
a sore lower back and Dec. 9 at Milwaukee with a sore right ankle Grabbed a career-high 17 rebounds Jan. 11 at Indiana Recorded
back-to-back double-doubles for the first time in his career Nov. 20 vs. Miami (24 pts/11 rebs) and Nov. 18 at Utah (10 pts/11 rebs) Scored
a game-high 28 points in 30 minutes during the season opener Oct. 28 vs. Cleveland.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 13.7 points and 4.8 rebounds in 301 NBA regular season games Is shooting .815 (661-811)
from the charity stripe Averaging 8.9 points and 2.8 rebounds in 11 postseason outings Played three seasons with Benetton in Italys
Lega A and one season with Stella Azzura Roma in the Serie B2 Division Averaged 13.0 points, 6.0 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 1.3 blocks in
85 career Lega A games with Benetton Played in 38 Euroleague games with Benetton, where he averaged 6.8 points and 2.9 rebounds
Played in five Toshiba Vegas Summer League games with the Raptors in 2006, averaging a team-high 13.2 points, with 3.8 rebounds and 1.0
blocks in 26.2 minutes Scored 20 points in his Summer League debut, going 7-of-11 from the field Had 13 points, five rebounds, one
steal and two blocks in 22 minutes as a member of Benetton on Oct. 20, 2003 in a preseason loss, 86-83, to the Raptors at Air Canada Centre
2008-09: Averaged 15.4 points, 5.3 rebounds, 1.24 blocked shots and 31.4 minutes in 78 games ... Averaged 17.7 points and 5.9 rebounds
in 59 starts Paced the team in scoring on 15 occasions Topped 20 or more points 23 times Scored in double figures in 41 of his final
45 starts, with 20 or more points in 24 of those contests Posted six double-doubles Missed three of the final five games with a sore left
heel ... Tied a career-high with six blocked shots Apr. 12 vs. Philadelphia ... Led the team with 23 points Apr. 4 at New York ... Sat out the Mar.
22 contest vs. New York (sore left heel); his first game missed since Dec. 9, 2007 vs. Houston (130 games) ... Matched his season high with
10 field goals Mar. 20 vs. Charlotte ... Scored a game-high 27 points and added nine rebounds Mar. 15 vs. Indiana ... Led the team in scoring
for the second time in as many games with a team high-tying 26 points Feb. 24 vs. Minnesota (28 points Feb. 22 vs. New York) ... Appeared
in 200th career game Feb. 20 at New York, becoming the 11th player in franchise history to play 200 games Averaged 19.8 points and 6.2
rebounds, while shooting .487 (111-for-228) from the field and .480 (36-for-75) from three-point range in January Had a streak of 15
consecutive games with 15 or more points from Dec. 31 Jan. 25 Moved into the starting lineup Dec. 31 and started all 45 of his remaining
appearances Scored a then career-high 31 points, with a career-best nine made free throws, Jan. 14 vs. Chicago ... Set an NBA record for
the longest streak of consecutive games with two or more three-pointers by a starting centre with 10 (Dec. 31 Jan. 16) Scored a team-
best 25 points Jan. 7 at Washington Started in place of Jermaine ONeal (right knee contusion) Dec. 31 vs. Denver and posted team highs
with 26 points and five blocks ... Matched his then career-high with 11 rebounds and added a team-best 19 points and four blocks Nov. 30 at
Los Angeles Scored 29 points in a career-high 49 minutes Nov. 21 vs. New Jersey ... Led the team in scoring with a team-high 25 points
Nov. 19 at Miami ... Scored 12 points and added four rebounds and three assists Nov. 16 vs. Miami in first regular season start since March
23, 2008 (vs. Denver) ... Led the bench with 19 points and added five rebounds and three blocks Oct. 31 vs. Golden State 2007-08:
Averaged 10.2 points and 3.7 rebounds in 78 games, with 53 starts ... Totalled 20-plus points on 11 occasions Made three or more three-
pointers in 13 games Made 61-of-67 (.910) free throws over the seasons final 32 games Started for the Sophomore team in T-Mobile
Rookie-Sophomore game during All-Star Weekend, finishing with eight points in 17:14 minutes Made seven-of-eight field goal attempts for
16 first-quarter points Mar. 23 vs. Denver Played a season-high 48 minutes, scoring 27 points with a career high-tying five three-pointers,
Mar. 7 vs. Washington Left during the third quarter Mar. 5 at Miami with a shifted front tooth after a flagrant foul by Alexander Johnson
Made 18 consecutive free throws (Feb. 13 Mar. 5) Scored in double figures in nine of 10 games from Jan. 23 Feb. 13, averaging 15.8
points Scored a season-high 28 points Feb. 1 vs. L.A. Lakers ... Averaged 15.1 points and 4.7 rebounds while shooting .857 (30-for-35)
from the line in 12 February games Scored a team-high 27 points on career highs of 12 field goals made and 25 attempts and added a
game high-tying nine rebounds Feb. 29 vs. Indiana ... Had a team-high 25 points to go with seven rebounds and five assists Feb. 24 vs. New
York Dished out a career-high seven assists Jan. 23 at Boston Played in his 100th career game in the NBA Jan. 18 vs. Atlanta Missed
four games with a hyper-extended left knee (Dec. 3-9) ... Scored a team-high 26 points Nov. 30 vs. Cleveland ... Made second consecutive
start Nov. 21 at Memphis, finishing with lone double-double of the season (13 points, 11 rebounds) ... Scored 16 first-half points against the
Mavericks on Nov. 20 and finished with 20 Led the team with 21 points and six rebounds Nov. 2 at New Jersey Led the team with 20
points opening night Oct. 31 vs. Philadelphia Playoffs: Averaged 6.4 points, 1.4 rebounds and 20.8 minutes in five playoff games vs.
Orlando, all starts Had highs of nine points in Games 2 and 3 2006-07: Averaged 11.6 points, fourth on the team, 3.9 rebounds and 25.1
minutes in 65 games, including two starts Named to the All-Rookie First Team and finished second in Rookie of the Year voting Selected
as T-Mobile Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month for January and February Ranked third among rookies in scoring and fifth with 0.82
blocked shots Had four games of 20+ points and two of 10+ rebounds Had a string of nine consecutive games with a made three pointer
from Feb. 28 Mar. 16, shooting .400 (24-for-60) from that range during the stretch Underwent a successful emergency appendectomy
Mar. 21 and missed 14 games Returned to action Apr. 18 vs. Philadelphia to score a bench-high 17 points Registered a team-high 20
#7 ANDREA BARGNANI
points on eight-of-12 shooting from the floor Feb. 28 at Houston Grabbed a career-high 11 rebounds Feb. 24 at Charlotte Started for the
Rookie team in the T-Mobile Rookie-Sophomore Challenge on Feb. 17 at the 2007 All-Star Game in Las Vegas, finishing with 12 points in 23
minutes Led all bench scorers with 22 points and made four-of-eight three-point attempts Feb. 13 at Chicago Netted a team-high 22
points on eight-of-13 shooting from the field, including four-of-seven from beyond the arc, Jan. 9 at New Jersey Connected on the game-
winning basket in overtime Dec. 22 at Portland, finishing with 11 points Registered lone double-double of the season with 18 points and 10
rebounds Dec. 17 vs. Golden State; also blocked a career-high six shots in that contest Scored a season-high 23 points Dec. 23 at
Orlando, making a career-best five three-pointers Made his first NBA start Dec. 10 vs. Portland, and scored eight points Recorded a pair
of blocked shots in his first NBA game Nov. 1 at New Jersey to tie Chris Bosh for the franchise rookie debut record ... Playoffs: Averaged 11.0
points, 4.0 rebounds and 30.2 minutes in six games Started the final three games of the first-round series vs. New Jersey and averaged
17.0 points (17-28 FG, .607), 5.0 rebounds and 40 minutes Was six-for-nine (.667) from three-point range over those final three games
Had a high of 18 points in Game 5 ... 2005-06: Led Benetton to Italys Lega A Championship, downing Climarnio Bologna in the championship
series, 3-1 Was named Top European Young Player of the Year Averaged 15.3 points, 7.1 rebounds, 1.7 blocks and 1.8 steals in 47
games for Benetton in Lega A play Posted a season-high 25 points against Rome Shot .528 (153-290) from the field, .408 (89-218) from
three-point range and .798 (146-183) from the charity stripe Led Lega A with 82 blocks In Euroleague competition, averaged 10.9 points,
4.1 rebounds and 1.3 blocks Shot .558 (43-77) from the field, .434 (23-53) from three-point land and .712 (42-59) at the charity stripe
Recorded a season-best 20 points against Panathinaikos and Strasbourg Had a high of nine rebounds versus Efes Pilsen and Panathinaikos
2004-05: Helped Benetton to a second consecutive Italian Cup Averaged 12.2 points and 5.4 rebounds in 28 Lega A contests, shooting
a career-best .623 (114-183) from the field Averaged 3.7 points and 2.1 rebounds in 18 Euroleague contests Was 6-for-12 (.500) from
three-point range 2003-04: Was a member of Benettons Italian Cup winning team Saw limited playing time in his first season with
Benetton, averaging 4.9 points and 2.0 rebounds in 10 Lega A outings Shot .545 (12-22) from the field Averaged 2.4 points and 1.5
rebounds in eight Euroleague games 2002-03: Averaged 13.2 points and 4.5 rebounds in 23 games for Stella Azzura Roma in Serie B2
Division Shot .588 (87-148) from the field, .364 (24-66) from three-point range and .817 (58-71) from the foul line Played in eight
Euroleague contests, where he averaged 2.4 points and 1.5 rebounds.

PERSONAL: Pronounced AN-dre-ah BARN-neon-ee First European to be selected with the number one pick in an NBA Draft Joined
Andrew Bogut (Australia, Milwaukee, 2006) and Yao Ming (China, Houston, 2002) as the only international players to be first overall draft
picks Selected uniform number 11 but gave it to T.J. Ford when Ford was acquired from Milwaukee Raptors Senior Vice-President of
Basketball Operations Maurizio Gherardini was general manager of Benetton Treviso during Bargnanis three seasons with the club Was
a teammate at Benetton of former Raptor Jorge Garbajosa (2003-04) Played for the Italian Under-18 and Under-16 National Teams.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 34, Toronto at Indiana, 2/2/2010 Off. Rebounds 5, Toronto vs. Golden State, 04/04/2010 (twice)
FGM 14, Toronto at Indiana, 2/2/2010 Def. Rebounds 13, Toronto at Indiana, 1/11/2010
FGA 25, Toronto vs. Indiana, 2/29/2008 Total Rebounds 17, Toronto at Indiana, 1/11/2010
3PM 5, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010 (9 times) Assists 7, Toronto at Boston, 1/23/2008
3PA 10, Toronto vs. New Jersey, 11/21/2008 (3 times) Steals 4, Toronto vs. LA Clippers, 2/8/2008 (twice)
FTM 9, Toronto vs. New York, 2/22/2009 (twice) Blocks 6, Toronto vs. Philadelphia, 4/12/2009 (twice)
FTA 12, Toronto vs. New York, 2/22/2009 Minutes 49, Toronto vs. New Jersey, 11/21/2008

Andrea Bargnani NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
06-07 Tor 65-2 1629 267-625 .427 117-142 .824 52 203 283 50 32 107 53 751 11.6
07-08 Tor 78-53 1861 280-725 .386 142-169 .840 50 238 288 89 23 88 37 792 10.2
08-09 Tor 78-59 2453 431-958 .450 221-266 .831 70 346 416 94 34 135 97 1202 15.4
09-10 Tor 80-80 2799 537-1143 .470 181-234 .774 105 388 493 93 25 120 111 1376 17.2
Totals 301-194 8743 1515-3451 .439 661-811 .815 277 1175 1452 326 114 450 298 4121 13.7
Three-point field goals: 2006-07: 100-268 (.373); 2007-08: 90-261 (.345); 2008-09: 119-291 (.408); 2009-10: 121-325 (.376); Totals: 430-1145 (.376).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2006-07: 180/0; 2007-08: 211/1; 2008-09: 242/2; 2009-10: 215/3; Totals: 848/6.

Andrea Bargnani NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
06-07 Tor 6 181 22-46 .478 15-19 .789 3 21 24 6 5 7 3 66 11.0
07-08 Tor 5 104 13-39 .333 2-2 .1000 1 6 7 2 4 2 3 32 6.4
Totals 11 285 35-90 .389 17-21 .810 4 27 31 8 9 9 6 98 8.9
Three-point field goals: 2006-07: 7-17 (.400); 2007-08: 4-16 (.250); Totals: 11-33 (.333).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2006-07: 16/0; 2007-08: 15/0; Totals: 31/0.

Andrea Bargnani Italian Lega A Stats


Year Team G FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT REB AST ST BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Benetton 10 12-22 .545 7-16 .438 20 5 5 2 49 4.9
04-05 Benetton 28 114-183 .623 56-75 .747 151 26 65 25 341 12.2
05-06 Benetton 47 153-290 .528 146-183 .798 336 38 86 82 719 15.3
Totals 85 279-495 .564 209-274 .763 507 69 156 109 1109 13.0
Three-point field goals: 2003-04: 6-11 (.545); 2004-05: 19-77 (.247); 2005-06: 89-218 (.408); Totals: 114-306 (.373).

Andrea Bargnani Euroleague Stats


Year Team G FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT REB AST ST BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Benetton 8 5-6 .833 6-8 .750 12 0 2 1 19 2.4
04-05 Benetton 12 12-24 .500 2-5 .400 25 2 2 2 44 3.7
05-06 Benetton 18 43-77 .558 42-59 .712 74 9 24 17 197 10.9
Totals 38 60-107 .561 50-72 .694 111 11 28 20 260 6.8
Three-point field goals: 2003-04: 1-5 (.200); 2004-05: 6-12 (.500); 2005-06: 23-53 (.434); Totals: 30-70 (.429).
#8 JOSE CALDERON
Position: Guard Birthdate: September 28, 1981 (Villanueva de la Serena, Spain)
Height: 6-3 High School: Tau Cermica (Vitoria, Spain)
Weight: 210 College: N/A
NBA Experience: 5 Years Years with Raptors: Five

How Acquired: Signed as a free agent by Toronto on August 3, 2005.


Contract Status: Signed a contract extension through 2012-13 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 10.3 points and a team-high 5.9 assists in 68 appearances (39 starts) Ranked third in the NBA with a 4.08
assist-per-turnover ratio (404 assists, 99 turnovers) Set a career high with seven three-pointers Mar. 13 at Golden State; also had a
season-high 24 points and season-high 12 assists against the Warriors Led the team in assists 40 times and in scoring twice Averaged
10.3 points and 6.3 assists during 39 games as a starter Started the first 22 games and the final 17 games of the season Missed 14
games due to injury Placed on the inactive list Dec. 8-9 with a sore left hip and returned to play seven minutes Dec. 11 vs. Atlanta before
missing the next 10 games (Dec. 13 Jan. 3) with the same injury Was inactive Feb. 3 vs. New Jersey with a sore right ankle and Mar. 1
at Houston with a right elbow laceration Had a career-high streak of 124 consecutive minutes without a turnover between Nov. 27 Dec.
1 Recorded his 2,000th career assist in the first quarter Nov. 9 at San Antonio.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 9.8 points and 6.6 assists in 359 regular season NBA games He is the franchise leader in free
goal percentage at .878 (538-613) Owns averages of 12.5 points, 7.0 assists and 24.2 minutes in 11 playoff appearances Played six
seasons in the Spanish pro leagues, including 2001-05 with Tau Cermica Saski Baskonia Vitoria, averaging 10.9 points, 2.2 rebounds and
2.0 assists in 214 games Competed for Tau Vitoria in three Euroleague campaigns where he averaged 9.0 points, 2.5 rebounds and 2.1
assists in 58 games Was a member of the Spains silver medal team at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing Injured his hamstring and missed
the 2010 FIBA World Championships Helped Spain to the 2006 FIBA World Championship title, averaging 7.2 points, 3.2 assists and less
than one turnover per game Was a teammate of former Raptor Jorge Garbajosa on Spains 2006 World Championship team and its 2004
and 2008 Olympic Games entries Named to Spains National Team for the 2002 World Championship of Basketball in Indianapolis
2008-09: Averaged career highs of 12.8 points, 8.9 assists (fourth in the NBA) and 34.3 minutes in 68 games (all starts) Shot an NBA all-
time single-season record .981 per cent (151-for-154) from the foul line Led the NBA in assist-per-turnover ratio (4.21) for the second
consecutive year Paced the team in assists 58 times Had 28 games with 10 or more assists Registered 22 double-doubles, second
on the team Missed 14 games with a strained right hamstring Dished a franchise high-tying 19 assists and scored 21 points Mar. 29 vs.
Chicago Became the all-time franchise leader in assists (1,795) Mar. 13 vs. Detroit in logging a 20-point, 11-assist game Recorded 16
assists Mar. 3 at Houston Missed the second of two free throws Jan. 30 vs. Milwaukee, ending a team-record streak of 87 consecutive free
throws dating back to the previous season - the second longest streak in NBA history Passed Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf for second all-time in
consecutive made free throws by going four-for-four Jan. 23 at Chicago Missed 10-of-11 games between Jan. 4-21 with a strained right
hamstring Registered 16 assists and 21 points Dec. 29 at Golden State Had a perfect shooting game connecting on eight-for-eight from
the field, five-of-five from three-point range and one-for-one at the charity stripe to finish with 22 points Dec. 14 vs. New Orleans Tied
Chauncey Billups team record of 51 consecutive free throws Dec. 9 at Cleveland and broke the record Dec. 10 vs. Indiana Recorded his
1,500th career assist Dec. 5 at Utah Posted season highs in points (26) and minutes (44) Nov. 21 vs. New Jersey Missed his first game
since March 21, 2007 (104 games) due to a strained right hamstring Nov. 16 vs. Miami Set a career-high with nine free throws Nov. 5 vs.
Detroit Scored a game-high 25 points and added a game-best nine assists Nov. 1 at Milwaukee Registered first double-double of the
season with a game-high 16 points and 13 assists Oct. 31 vs. Golden State 2007-08: Averaged 11.2 points and a team-best 8.3 assists in
all 82 regular season games Produced then career highs in every statistical category except field goal percentage Ranked fifth in the
NBA in assists (8.3) Averaged 13.4 points, 9.1 assists and 34.4 minutes in 56 games as a starter compared to 7.4 points, 6.6 assists and
21.5 minutes in 26 games in a reserve role Paced the Raptors in assists a team-high 59 games Had 31 games with 10 or more assists
Finished second to Chris Bosh with 25 double-doubles Led the NBA with a 5.38 (678/126) assist-to-turnover ratio ... Played 15 games
without posting a turnover (min. 10 minutes played) Shot .908 (109-for-120) from the charity stripe ... Finished the season ranked 10th in
the NBA in three-point percentage (.429, 79-for-184) and 18th in field goal percentage (.519, 367-for-707) Averaged 14.1 points and 8.4
assists, while shooting .609 FG, .514 3FG and .944 FT, in February Posted a season high with four three-point field goals Jan. 29 at
Washington ... Recorded a double-double in nine of 11 games from Jan. 23 Feb. 20, averaging 17.4 points and 10.8 assists Scored a
season-high 24 points and added 13 assists and three steals Jan. 23 at Boston Recorded his 1,000th career assist Jan. 16 vs. Sacramento
as part of a game-high 14-assist performance Played a career-high 54 minutes and scored 22 points during a double-overtime win Jan. 13
vs. Portland Had 16 assists and added 15 points and a season high-tying seven rebounds Dec. 21 at Seattle Recorded 16 assists and
added 18 points Dec. 14 at Indiana Collected his second-consecutive double-double with an 11-point, 11-assist effort Dec. 1 at Washington
Completed 80 consecutive minutes without a turnover (Nov. 23 - Nov. 25) with 25 assists Made his first start of the season Nov. 21 at
Memphis, finishing with a game-high eight assists and 10 points in 40 minutes Collected his first double-double of the season Nov. 16 vs.
Indiana with a game-high 10 assists and 15 points Playoffs: Averaged a series-best 7.0 assists, with 11.8 points in 24.0 minutes in five
games Finished with a 5.83 assist-to-turnover ratio (35 assists/six turnovers) Had 18 points and set playoff career highs with four made
three-point field goals, a game-high 13 assists and seven rebounds in Game 3 in Toronto Recorded 18 points and five assists and made
three-of-five from three-point range in Game 2 at Orlando Dished a game-high eight assists to go with nine points and three rebounds at
Orlando in Game 1 2006-07: Averaged 8.7 points and 5.0 assists, second on the team, in 77 games, with 11 starts Averaged 13.3
points, 8.8 assists and 33.4 minutes as a starter Ranked fourth in the NBA with a 3.52 assist per turnover ratio (387 assists, 110 turnovers)
Recorded double figures in points in 30 games Had nine games with 10 or more assists Had seven double-doubles on the season
Upped his field goal percentage to .521 (263-505) from .423 (132-312) in 2005-06 and his three-point percentage from .163 (7-43) to .333
(25-75) Returned to action Mar. 23 vs. Denver after missing three games with a sprained left ankle Had a stretch of four double-doubles
in five games Jan. 27 Feb. 7 Averaged 14.2 points, shooting .607 (54-89) from the field, and 9.0 assists over a 10-game stretch from Jan.
17 Feb. 7 Had a season-high 24 points with 11 assists Jan. 31 vs. Washington Doled out a team-best 12 assists and added 16 points
Jan. 9 at New Jersey Posted his first double-double of the season (12 points, 12 assists) Jan. 5 vs. Atlanta Equalled his season-high
#8 JOSE CALDERON
with 12 assists against the Hawks Made first start of the season Dec. 30 at Memphis, registering 13 points to go with three assists and
three rebounds Returned to the lineup Dec. 22 at Portland, missing two games after he left the Dec. 17 game vs. Golden State in the fourth
quarter after suffering a contusion in his left lower back Playoffs: Averaged 13.0 points, 5.3 assists (second on the team) and 30.5 minutes
(third) in six appearances vs. New Jersey Had 12 points on a perfect six-of-six shooting from the field in Game 2 Contributed team highs
of 25 points (most ever by a Raptors reserve) and eight assists in a Game 5 win at Air Canada Centre 2005-06: Averaged 5.5 points, 2.3
rebounds, 4.5 assists (second on the team) and 23.2 minutes in 64 games, including 11 starts Averaged 9.0 points, 4.5 rebounds, 7.5
assists and 1.4 steals in his 11 starts Led the team in assists 28 times Finished with second-most assists for a rookie in team history
(288) Recorded double figures in points on 10 occasions and in assists five times Had two point/assist double doubles Led the team
in free-throw percentage at .848 (78-92) Ranked 14 th in the league in assists-to-turnover ratio (2.85) Designated inactive for 10 games
(Mar. 15-29 - left Achilles tendinitis, Dec. 30, Jan. 3, 4 - sore right heel and Dec. 18-19 - bruised right heel) Registered 13 points, four
rebounds and a team-best 10 assists for the second double-double of his career Jan. 15 vs. New York Tallied 15 points, a game high-tying
11 assists and seven rebounds en route to the first double-double of his career Dec. 16 vs. Golden State Scored eight points and recorded
career highs of nine rebounds and 13 assists in 41:34 minutes Dec. 6 at Washington Recorded 12 assists Nov. 13 vs. Seattle Scored
a season-high 20 points (6-8 FG) Nov. 4 vs. New Jersey 2004-05: With Tau Cermica, finished second in the Euroleague Final Four, losing
to Maccabi Tel Aviv in the championship game Averaged 14.5 points and 3.5 rebounds in two games during the Final Four Defeated
Benetton in the semifinals and averaged 9.5 points and 5.0 rebounds in the two-game series In 39 regular season games, averaged 12.4
points, 2.6 rebounds and 3.0 assists, while shooting .567 (114-201) from the field and .823 (107-130) from the free throw line Netted a
season-best 21 points in back-to-back games vs. Ulker and Pau-Orthez 2003-04: Won the 2004 Spanish National Cup (Kings Cup) with
Tau Cermica Averaged 8.0 points, 2.6 rebounds and 2.0 assists in a career-high 41 regular-season games Shot .592 (87-147) from the
floor Averaged 7.2 points and 2.0 assists in 19 Euroleague games 2002-03: Captured a silver medal with the Spanish National Team at
the 2003 European Championship Played behind former NBA guard and European League star Elmer Bennett at point for most of the
season for Tau Ceramica, but minutes increased after Bennett was sidelined by injury Averaged a career-high 17.5 points while shooting
.857 (72-84) from the charity stripe In Euroleague action, averaged 7.5 points and 2.4 rebounds while shooting .405 from three-point range
Tallied 18 points vs. Panathinaikos Notched six assists without a turnover in 30 minutes vs. Zalgiris Kaunas 2001-02: After switching
to Fuenlabrada in the ACB, saw his playing time curtailed to 18.6 minutes per game Averaged 9.7 points and 1.7 assists while shooting
.832 from free-throw line 2000-01: In his ACB debut for Lucentum Alicante, averaged 8.6 points and 25.3 minutes to help his club to the
ACB championship 1999-2000: Played in the LEB (lower division) for Lucentum Alicante and averaged 9.0 points and 2.1 rebounds.

PERSONAL: Is an athlete ambassador for Right To Play, an international organization that uses specially-designed sport and play programs
to improve health, build life skills, and foster peace for children and communities affected by war, poverty and disease Captured the bronze
medal with Spain at the 2000 European Under-20 Championship Won the gold medal at the 1998 European Junior Championship ... Owns
a pig farm in Spain.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 27, Toronto vs. San Antonio, 2/11/2008 Off. Rebounds 3, Toronto vs. Chicago, 12/14/2005 (twice)
FGM 12, Toronto vs. San Antonio, 2/11/2008 Def. Rebounds 7, Toronto vs. Golden State, 12/16/2005 (twice)
FGA 21, Toronto vs. Washington, 3/7/2008 Total Rebounds 9, Toronto at Washington, 12/6/2005
3PM 7, Toronto at Golden State, 03/13/2010 Assists 19, Toronto vs. Chicago, 3/29/2009
3PA 8, Toronto at Golden State, 3/13/2010 (twice) Steals 4, Toronto vs. Detroit, 3/13/2009 (4 times)
FTM 9, Toronto vs. Detroit, 11/5/2008 Blocks 2, Toronto vs. Atlanta, 4/7/2009
FTA 9, Toronto vs. Detroit, 11/5/2008 (twice) Minutes 54, Toronto vs. Portland, 1/13/2008
#8 JOSE CALDERON
Jose Calderon NBA Career Stats
Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
05-06 Tor 64-11 1487 132-312 .423 78-92 .848 30 111 141 288 42 101 4 349 5.5
06-07 Tor 77-11 1613 263-505 .521 117-143 .818 21 113 134 387 63 110 5 668 8.7
07-08 Tor 82-56 2484 367-707 .519 109-120 .908 34 202 236 678 87 126 6 922 11.2
08-09 Tor 68-68 2333 320-644 .497 151-154 .981 16 178 194 607 74 143 7 873 12.8
09-10 Tor 68-39 1817 274-668 .482 83-104 .798 23 119 142 404 47 99 7 699 10.3
Totals 359-185 9,734 1356-2736 .496 538-613 .878 124 723 847 2364 313 579 29 3511 9.8
Three-point field goals: 2005-06: 7-43 (.163); 2006-07: 25-75 (.333); 2007-08: 79-184 (.429); 2008-09: 82-202 (.406); 2009-10: 68-171 (.398); Totals: 261-675 (.387).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2005-06: 93/0; 2006-07: 136/0; 2007-08: 134/0; 2008-09: 114/0; 2009-10: 135-1; Totals: 612/1.

Jose Calderon NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
06-07 Tor 6 146 35-69 .507 5-6 .833 2 8 10 32 5 15 0 78 13.0
07-08 Tor 5 120 22-50 .440 5-5 1.000 4 14 18 35 1 6 0 59 11.8
Totals 11 266 57-119 .479 10-11 .909 6 22 28 77 6 21 0 137 12.5
Three-point field goals: 2006-07: 3-12 (.250); 2007-08: 10-21 (.476); Totals: 13-33 (.394).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2006-07: 12/0; 2007-08: 15/0; Totals: 27/0.

Jose Calderon Spanish League Stats


Year Team G-GS FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT REB AST ST BLK PTS AVG
99-00 Alicante 28 76-126 .603 57-76 .750 59 50 43 5 251 9.0
00-01 Alicante 34 87-171 .509 48-74 .649 78 48 44 9 294 8.6
01-02 Fuenlabrada 35 70-150 .467 99-119 .832 54 59 44 6 338 9.7
02-03 Tau Ceramica 37 54-107 .505 72-84 .857 77 69 36 5 649 17.5
03-04 Tau Ceramica 41 87-147 .592 61-75 .813 106 84 53 8 326 8.0
04-05 Tau Ceramica 39 114-201 .567 107-130 .823 100 117 55 1 482 12.4
Totals 214 488-902 .541 444-558 .796 474 427 275 34 2340 10.9
Three-point field goals: 1999-2000: 14-39 (.359); 2000-01: 24-67 (.358); 2001-02: 33-94 (.351); 2002-03: 26-69 (.377); 2003-04: 29-81 (.358); 2004-05: 49-108
(.454); Totals: 175-458 (.382).

Jose Calderon Euroleague League Stats


Year Team G-GS FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT REB AST ST BLK PTS AVG
02-03 Tau Ceramica 17 30-58 .517 28-32 .875 41 23 19 2 127 7.5
03-04 Tau Ceramica 19 24-46 .522 44-53 .830 27 38 21 4 137 7.2
04-05 Tau Ceramica 22 51-92 .554 58-69 .841 75 58 32 0 256 11.6
Totals 58 105-196 .536 130-154 .844 143 119 72 6 520 9.0
Three-point field goals: 2002-03: 13-32 (.406); 2003-04: 15-37 (.405); 2004-05: 32-76 (.421); Totals: 60-145 (.414).
#32 ED DAVIS
Position: Forward Birthdate: June 5, 1989 (Washington, D.C.)
Height: 6-10 High School: Benedictine HS (Richmond, Virginia)
Weight: 225 College: North Carolina
NBA Experience: Rookie Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: First-round draft choice (13th overall) by Toronto in 2010.


Contract Status: Signed through 2011-12 season, with a team option for the following two seasons.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Participated with the Raptors entry in the 2010 Las Vegas Summer League Finished third on the team in
scoring (12.6) and second in rebounds (6.0) Tied for the team lead with nine blocks Had 15 points and eight rebounds during his
professional debut vs. Phoenix Scored 17 points, grabbed seven rebounds and swatted five shots in his final game vs. Sacramento.

COLLEGE CAREER: Played two seasons at North Carolina and was part of the Tar Heels 2009 National Championship team Became the
third-fastest Tar Heel to block 100 shots (51 games) behind Rasheed Wallace (47) and Sam Perkins (50) Led the team his sophomore year
averaging 8.4 rebounds and shooting .578 (111-for-192) from the field Suffered a season-ending injury Feb. 10 with a broken lunate bone
in his left wrist during a game vs. Duke Shot .500 or better from the floor in 18-of-23 games and reached double figures in scoring 17 times
Had a season-high 22 points Dec. 1, 2009 vs. Michigan State Grabbed a career-high 16 rebounds Jan. 4, 2010 at College of Charleston
and again Feb. 7, 2010 at Maryland Selected to the ACC All-Freshman team in 2009 Appeared in all 38 games and finished second on
the team with 6.5 rebounds Ranked second among ACC freshmen in rebounds and blocks Scored 11 points and grabbed eight
rebounds during the National Championship game vs. Michigan State Averaged 8.0 points and 6.5 boards at the ACC Tournament in
Tampa Averaged 8.2 points, 5.5 rebounds and shot .571 (20-for-35) from the floor in six NCAA Tournament games.

HIGH SCHOOL CAREER: Led Benedictine High School to a pair of Virginia State Championships Averaged 22.0 points, 14.0 rebounds
and seven blocks during his senior year Named 2008 Mr. Basketball in Virginia by the Roanoke News Played in the 2008 McDonalds
All-American game and 11 points and six rebounds Averaged 18.5 points, 13.2 rebounds and 4.4 blocks as a junior Led Benedictine to
a 29-3 record and a state championship Played first two years at Mechanicsville (Va.) Hanover High School.

PERSONAL: Son of Angela Jones and Terry Davis Father, Terry, played 10 seasons (1989-2001) in the NBA with Miami, Dallas, Denver
and Washington.

Ed Davis NCAA Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
08-09 UNC 38-2 716 99-191 .518 55-96 .573 83 167 250 22 14 40 65 253 6.7
09-10 UNC 23-23 641 111-192 .578 87-132 .659 66 154 220 22 10 46 64 309 13.4
Totals 61-25 1357 210-383 .548 142-228 .622 149 321 470 44 24 86 129 562 9.2
Three-point field goals: 2008-09: 0-0 (.000); 2099-10: 0-0; Totals: 0-0 (.000).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2008-09: 74/1; 2009-10: 42-0; Totals: 116/1.
#10 DeMAR DeROZAN
Position: Guard-Forward Birthdate: August 7, 1989 (Compton, California)
Height: 6-7 High School: Compton (Compton, California)
Weight: 220 College: USC
NBA Experience: 1 Year Years with Raptors: One

How Acquired: First-round draft choice (ninth overall) by Toronto in 2009.


Contract Status: Signed through 2010-11 season, with a team option for the following two seasons.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 8.6 points and 2.9 rebounds during 77 appearances Became the fourth rookie to start on opening night for
Toronto, joining Damon Stoudamire (1995), Vince Carter (1998) and Joey Graham (2005) Started 65 consecutive games to begin the
season, averaging 8.5 points and 3.0 rebounds in those games Ranked third in franchise history with 65 starts during a rookie campaign
Ranked 13th among NBA rookies in points (8.9) and fifth in field goal percentage (.498) Led the team in scoring and rebounding three
times each Set career highs in points (24), field goals (9), rebounds (14) and minutes (38) during the season finale Apr. 14 vs. New York
Came off the bench for the first time Mar. 26 vs. Denver and led the reserves in scoring with 15 points Won the inaugural NBA All-Star
Dunk-In by defeating L.A. Clippers guard Eric Gordon during halftime of the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam at All-Star Weekend in
Dallas ... Advanced to the Sprite Slam Dunk contest where he finished second to New Yorks Nate Robinson ... Missed five games (Jan. 27
Feb. 3) with a sprained right ankle ... Led the team with 21 point Dec. 2 at Atlanta ... Scored eight points and grabbed five rebounds in 24
minutes during his NBA debut Oct. 28 vs. Cleveland.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Helped lead the Raptors to a 5-0 mark at the 2010 Las Vegas Summer League Was named to the All-
Tournament Team Averaged 21.0 points, third in the League, and 4.5 rebounds Shot .580 (29-50) from the field Had three games of
20+ points, with a high of 23 against Houston and New York Participated with the Raptors entry in the 2009 Las Vegas Summer League
Finished second on the team in scoring at 17.0 and third in rebounds at 4.8 Started all five games, scoring in double figures in each
Had a high of 20 points three times: vs. Detroit, Phoenix and Milwaukee Had a high of six rebounds against Portland and Milwaukee.

COLLEGE CAREER: Played one season at the University of Southern California Ranked third on the Trojans in points (13.6), second in
rebounds (5.7), third in assists (1.5) and second in field-goal percentage (.523, eighth-best in the Pac-10) Started all 35 games, scoring in
double figures 28 times and posting four double doubles ... Earned first-team Pac-10 All-Freshman honours and was named Pac-10 Tournament
MVP ... His 485 points ranked third all-time in school history for a freshman and his 201 rebounds ranked fourth ... Averaged 19.8 points in
USCs five postseason games Scored a career-high 25 points on 10-for-16 shooting to lead USC to a win over Arizona State in the Pac-10
Tournament final ... Totalled 21 points, along with a career-high 13 rebounds, against UCLA in the tournament semifinal Had second
double-double Feb. 15 at Arizona State with 16 points and 10 rebounds Scored 22 points (19 in the second half) on 8-for-13 shooting vs.
Arizona State on Jan. 15 Registered first career double-double with 14 points and a regular season-best 12 rebounds Jan. 2 at Oregon
Totalled 18 points vs. Oral Roberts on Dec. 28 Had 18 points (8-11 FG) with six rebounds vs. North Dakota State on Dec. 20 Scored 14
points and added two steals in the opener vs. UC Irvine on Nov. 15.

HIGH SCHOOL CAREER: Was named a 2007-08 McDonalds All-American, 2007-08 Best in the West First Team selection and second-
leading vote getter, 2008 Parade All-American First Team selection and a L.A. Times All-Star ... Shared the 2008 Southern California
Interscholastic Basketball Coaches Association I-AA Player of the Year honours, was named to the California All-State team and was named
Moore League MVP ... Ranked as the 2008 No. 1 high school senior basketball player by Draft Express, No. 2 by HoopScoopOnline, No. 3
by Rivals.com, No. 4 by HoopsReport.com, No. 6 by ScoutHoops.com (No. 1 small forward), No. 6 in Sports Illustrateds Takkle Top 25 and
No. 8 by ESPN.com Averaged 29.2 points, 7.9 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 3.0 steals in leading Compton High to a 24-6 record and its
second consecutive Moore League championship ... Scored 30 or more points 12 times, with a high game of 47 in a 100-88 win vs. Gahr on
Dec. 27, 2007 ... Had 45 points vs. J. Serra on Dec. 15, 2007 As a junior, averaged 22.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 3.2 steals
to lead Compton to a 26-7 record and the Moore League championship ... Averaged 22.6 points and 8.4 rebounds as a sophomore and 26.1
points and 8.4 rebounds as a freshman.

PERSONAL: Son of Frank and Diane First dunked a basketball in sixth grade ... Captured the Slam Dunk competition at the McDonalds
All-America game, getting perfect scores on his last two dunks ... In his final dunk labeled tap the baby, he bounced the ball off the glass,
tapped the board with one hand and dunked with the other ... Scored 10 points on 5-for-10 shooting for the West squad at the McDonalds All-
America game ... Was also named to USA TODAYs 2008 All-USA Second Team and invited to play in the Jordan Brand Classic at Madison
Square Garden ... Scored a team-high 17 points to help lead Team USA to a 98-78 win vs. the World Select Team at the 11th Annual Nike
Hoop Summit in Portland in April 2008.
#10 DeMAR DeROZAN
CAREER HIGHS:
Points 24, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010 Off. Rebounds 4, Toronto at Oklahoma City, 2/28/2010
FGM 9, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010 Def. Rebounds 9, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010
FGA 12, Toronto vs. Atlanta, 3/17/2010 (3 times) Total Rebounds 9, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010 (twice)
3PM 1, Toronto at Boston, 11/27/2009 (4 times) Assists 3, Toronto vs. Cleveland, 2/26/2010
3PA 2, Toronto at Denver, 11/17/2009 Steals 2, Toronto at New Jersey, 2/19/2010 (6 times)
FTM 11, Toronto at New York, 1/15/2010 Blocks 2, Toronto vs. Chicago, 11/11/2009
FTA 14, Toronto at New York, 1/15/2010 Minutes 38, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010

DeMar DeRozan NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
09-10 Tor 77-65 1664 255-512 .498 148-194 .763 66 157 223 53 43 62 18 662 8.6
Totals 77-65 1664 255-512 .498 148-194 .763 66 157 223 53 43 62 18 662 8.6
Three-point field goals: 2009-10: 4-16 (.250); Totals: 4-16 (.250).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2009-10: 176/0; Totals: 176/0.
#9 JOEY DORSEY
Position: Forward-Centre Birthdate: December 16, 1983 (Baltimore, Maryland)
Height: 6-8 High School: Laurinburg Prep (Laurinburg, North Carolina)
Weight: 268 College: Memphis 08
NBA Experience: 2 Years Years with Raptors: One

How Acquired: Signed as a free agent on April 4, 2010.


Career Transactions: Second-round draft choice (33rd overall) by Portland in 2008; June 26, 2008: Draft
rights traded by Portland to Houston in a three-team deal in which Houston also acquired the draft rights to
forward Donte Green and a 2009 second-round draft choice from Memphis, Memphis acquired draft rights to forward Darrell Arthur from
Portland and Portland acquired draft rights to forward Nicholas Batum from Houston; February 18, 2010: Traded by Houston with forward Carl
Landry, guard Larry Hughes and cash considerations to Sacramento as part of a three-team deal; March 28, 2010: Waived by Sacramento;
April 4, 2010: Signed for the remainder of the 2009-10 season by Toronto.
Contract Status: Signed through 2010-11 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Signed with the Raptors on Apr. 4 but did not dress for any of the remaining seven games Appeared in 15 games with
Houston and Sacramento Averaged 1.5 points, 2.9 rebounds and 7.1 minutes Set career highs in points (seven), rebounds (12),
offensive boards (six) and minutes (20) Feb. 5 at Memphis as a member of the Rockets Traded to Sacramento with forward Carl Landry,
guard Larry Hughes and cash considerations as part of a three-team deal Waived by Sacramento Mar. 28 D-League: Appeared in 16
games (all starts) for the Rio Grande Valley Vipers Averaged 14.9 points and 13.3 rebounds in 31.6 minutes Collected nine double-
doubles and scored in double-figures 12 times Set season highs with 27 points and 22 rebounds, while shooting a perfect 11-for-11 from
the field Jan. 6 vs. Bakersfield Had nine games with five or more offensive rebounds.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Helped the Raptors entry to a 5-0 mark at the 2010 Las Vegas Summer League Averaged 7.0 points and tied
for the league lead at 9.8 rebounds Had 13 points and 12 rebounds vs. Houston Averaged 1.4 points and 2.4 rebounds in 18 games with
Houston and Sacramento Averaged 9.8 points, a league-best 14.8 rebounds and 2.60 blocks in five games for Houston at the 2009 NBA
Las Vegas Summer League Averaged 10.0 points and 9.0 rebounds in three games for Houston at the 2008 NBA Las Vegas Summer
League 2008-09: Averaged 0.7 points and 0.3 rebounds in three games with Houston Placed on the inactive list for 37 games and drew
DNP-CDs for 19 games Recorded his first NBA basket Dec. 22 at New Jersey Registered his first NBA rebound Nov. 29 vs. San Antonio
Made his NBA debut Nov. 9 at L.A. Lakers D-League: Assigned to the Rio Grande Valley Vipers on Dec. 26 Averaged 9.7 points, 9.0
rebounds and 1.0 assists in seven games (five starts) with the Vipers Recalled from Rio Grande Valley on a rehabilitation assignment on
Jan. 10.

COLLEGE CAREER: Completed a four-year collegiate career at the University of Memphis Helped the Tigers reach the 2008 national
championship game in San Antonio Finished as the schools all-time leader in field goal percentage (.614) and second in blocked shots
(264) Ranked first all-time C-USA (Conference USA) history for total rebounds (1,209) and second all-time in school history Named
Conference USA Defensive Player of the Year twice and named to the All-Defensive Team following his junior and senior seasons Grabbed
10 or more rebounds in 55 career games and posted 26 double-doubles over 149 career games Earned first-team All-Conference USA
honors as a junior and second-team accolades as a senior.

PERSONAL: Born Richard Elmer Dorsey Goes by the nickname Joey, which was given to him by his mother, Charlene Played at
Laurinburg Prep (NC) in 2003-04, averaging 16.0 points, 10.2 rebounds and 2.3 blocked shots in his final season Helped lead Laurinburg
to a 28-7 record and a No. 6 final national ranking Attended Mt. Zion Christian Academy in Durham, North Carolina in 2002-03.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 7, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010 Off. Rebounds 6, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010
FGM 3, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010 Def. Rebounds 6, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010
FGA 5, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010 Total Rebounds 12, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010
3PM None Assists 1, Houston vs. Philadelphia, 2/6/2010 (3 times)
3PA None Steals 1, Sacramento vs. Detroit (3 times)
FTM 1, Sacramento vs. Minnesota, 3/14/2010 (5 times) Blocks 1, Sacramento at Houston (twice)
FTA 4, Sacramento vs. Detroit, 2/23/2010 Minutes 19, Houston at Memphis, 2/5/2010

Joey Dorsey NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
08-09 Hou 3-0 6 1-2 .500 0-0 .000 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 0.7
09-10 Hou-Sac 15-0 107 9-20 .450 5-12 .417 16 27 43 2 3 6 2 23 1.5
Totals 18-0 113 10-22 .455 5-12 .417 16 28 44 3 3 6 2 25 1.4
Three-point field goals: 2008-09: 0-0; 2009-10: 0-0; Totals: 0-0.
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2008-09: 0/0; 2009-10: 21/0; Totals: 21/0.

Joey Dorsey D-League Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
08-09 RGV 7-5 207 27-43 .628 14-36 .389 22 41 63 7 7 21 11 68 9.7
09-10 RGV 16-16 505 97-150 .647 44-88 .500 75 137 212 27 18 60 22 238 14.9
Totals 23-21 712 124-193 .642 58-124 .468 97 178 275 34 25 81 33 306 13.3
Three-point field goals: 2008-09: 0-0; 2009-10: 0-0; Totals: 0-0.
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2008-09: 26/0; 2009-10: 62/0; Totals: 88/0.
#12 RONALD DUPREE
Position: Forward Birthdate: January 26, 1981 (Biloxi, Mississippi)
Height: 6-7 High School: Biloxi High School (Biloxi, Mississippi)
Weight: 210 College: LSU 03
NBA Experience: 5 years Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: Signed as a free agent September 16, 2010.


Career Transactions: September 29, 2003: Signed as free agent by Detroit; October 23, 2003: Waived by
Detroit; January 7, 2004: Signed to the first of consecutive 10-day contracts by Chicago; January 28, 2004: Signed by Chicago for the
remainder of the season; July 21, 2004: Signed as free agent by Detroit; October 31, 2005: Traded by Detroit to Minnesota in exchange for
a second-round draft pick; July 18, 2006: Signed as free agent by Detroit; December 14, 2007: Waived by Detroit; April 3, 2008: Signed to 10-
day contract by Seattle; April 13, 2008: Signed by Seattle for the remainder of the season; September 25, 2009: Signed by Utah.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Appeared in 154 regular season games with Chicago, Detroit, Minnesota and Seattle ... A member of Detroits
Eastern Conference Championship team in 2005 Has career averages of 3.6 points, 2.2 rebounds and 11.3 minutes over five seasons in
the NBA Participated with the Torontos entry in the 2010 Las Vegas Summer League, averaging 10.0 points, 4.0 rebounds and shooting
.500 (15-for-30) from the field in five games Scored a team-high 24 points and added eight rebounds in a victory over New Orleans
2007-08: Played in five games combined for Detroit and Seattle, averaging 0.8 points in 4.2 minutes D-League: Played in nine games (two
starts) for Tulsa, averaging 17.2 points and 5.9 rebounds ... 2006-07: Appeared in 19 games for Detroit, averaging 1.3 points and 0.9
rebounds in 4.9 minutes per game 2005-06: Played 36 games for Minnesota, averaging 2.2 points and 1.4 rebounds 2004-05: Appeared
in 47 game with Detroit, averaging 3.2 points and 2.0 rebounds in 10.0 minutes Led the Pistons twice in scoring, posting a career-high 20
points (8-11 FG) in 18 minutes vs. Milwaukee on Apr. 15 2003-04: Played in 47 games (8 starts) for Chicago, setting career-highs in
minutes (19.0), points (6.2), rebounds (3.6) and assists (1.2) D-League: Started in 15 games with Huntsville ... Averaged 16.9 points and
4.6 rebounds.

COLLEGE CAREER: Averaged 13.4 points and 7.0 rebounds in 129 career games at LSU from 1999-2003 Named All-SEC Second Team
in his final three seasons Finished as LSUs sixth all-time rebounder and eighth highest scorer One of just four players (Shaquille
ONeal, Durand Macklin, Bob Pettit) to finish in top 10 scoring and rebounding in LSU careers Finished his career with 33 double-doubles
and had 86 double-figure scoring games over the last 95 games (final three years).

PERSONAL: Full name is Ronald Edmund Dupree, Jr. Son of Ronald Sr. and Dianne Dupree Majored in electrical engineering
Favorite food is pancakes A consensus Top 50 national player, averaged 25.6 points and 11.1 rebounds per game as a senior at Biloxi High
School Was a member of National Honour Society Traveled to Baton Rouge, La. and hometown of Biloxi, Miss., to distribute relief
supplies following Hurricane Katrina.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 20, Detroit vs. Milwaukee, 4/15/2005 Off. Rebounds 5, Chicago at Miami, 01/07/2004
FGM 8, Detroit vs. Milwaukee, 04/15/2005 Def. Rebounds 8, Chicago vs. Atlanta, 04/09/2004
FGA 15, Chicago vs. Cleveland, 03/01/04 Total Rebounds 10, Chicago vs. Atlanta, 04/09/2004
3PM 1, Detroit vs. Memphis, 01/06/2005 (5 times) Assists 4, Chicago vs. New Orleans, 01/10/2004
3PA 2, Chicago at Indiana, 04/14/2004 (twice) Steals 4, Detroit vs. Chicago, 03/10/2004
FTM 5, Chicago vs. Indiana, 02/10/2004 Blocks 3, Detroit vs. Milwaukee, 04/15/2005
FTA 6, Detroit at Charlotte, 04/20/2005 (4 times) Minutes 39, Chicago vs. New York, 01/17/2004

Ronald Dupree NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Chi 47-8 893 111-282 .394 66-105 .629 55 112 167 55 32 51 18 292 6.2
04-05 Det 47-0 472 61-127 .480 29-47 .617 34 61 95 24 7 22 10 152 3.2
05-06 Min 36-0 265 33-63 .524 14-41 .341 21 28 49 14 12 14 0 80 2.2
06-07 Det 19-0 94 11-31 .355 3-9 .333 5 12 17 5 5 3 1 25 1.3
07-08 Det-Sea 5-0 21 1-3 .333 2-2 1.000 1 7 8 1 1 0 0 4 0.8
Totals 154-8 1745 217-506 .429 114-204 .559 116 220 336 99 57 90 29 553 3.6
Three-point field goals: 2003-04: 4-9 (.444); 2004-05: 1-2 (.500); 2005-06: 0-1 (.000); 2006-07: 0-0 (.000); 2007-08: 0-0 (.000); Totals: 5-12 (.417).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2003-04: 134/0; 2004-05: 60/0; 2005-06: 44/0; 2006-07: 12/0; 2007-08: 0/0; Totals: 158/3.

Ronald Dupree NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
04-05 Det 14 38 2-7 .286 0-0 .000 2 4 6 0 0 1 0 4 0.3
Totals 14 38 2-7 .286 0-0 .000 2 4 6 0 0 1 0 4 0.3
Three-point field goals: 2004-05: 0-0 (.000); Totals: 0-0 (.000).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2004-05: 6/0; Totals: 6/0.

Ronald Dupree NBDL Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
03-04 Hun 15-15 483 104-187 .556 45-59 .763 25 44 69 22 23 42 5 254 16.9
07-08 Tul 9-3 306 76-129 .589 18-29 .621 13 44 57 21 10 28 4 175 19.4
08-09 Tul-Uta 49-45 1716 331-650 .478 204-274 .745 60 263 323 189 57 128 30 859 17.5
Totals 73-63 2505 491-966 .508 362-362 .738 98 351 449 232 90 198 39 1288 17.6
#30 REGGIE EVANS
Position: Forward Birthdate: May 18, 1980 (Pensacola, Florida)
Height: 6-8 High School: Woodham (Pensacola, Florida)
Weight: 245 College: Iowa 02
NBA Experience: 8 Years Years with Raptors: One

How Acquired: Traded by Philadelphia for guard-forward Jason Kapono on June 9, 2009.
Career Transactions: September 30, 2002: Signed as a free agent by Seattle; February 23, 2006: Traded by Seattle to Denver for guard Earl
Watson, forward Bryon Russell and a future second-round pick in a four-team trade. Denver also acquired guard-forward Ruben Patterson
and guard Charles Smith from Portland; Portland acquired guard Voshon Lenard from Denver and centre Brian Skinner from Sacramento;
Sacramento acquired forward-centre Vitaly Potapenko from Seattle and forward Sergei Monia from Portland; September 8, 2006: Re-signed
by Denver; September 10, 2007: Traded by Denver with the rights to forward Ricky Sanchez to Philadelphia in exchange for forwards Steven
Hunter and Bobby Jones; June 9, 2009: Traded by Philadelphia to Toronto for guard-forward Jason Kapono.
Contract Status: Signed through 2010-11 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 3.4 points and a career-low 3.8 rebounds in 28 games (one start) Missed the first 51 games of the season
with a left midfoot sprain sustained during a preseason game Oct. 14 against Boston (in Hartford) Made his season debut Feb. 10 vs.
Philadelphia and contributed with two points and three rebounds in five minutes Scored a season-high 13 points Feb. 26 vs. Cleveland
Grabbed a season-high nine rebounds Mar. 24 vs. Utah.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: In 542 games (271 starts), averaging 4.2 points, 6.7 rebounds and 19.1 minutes Ranked among the NBAs
top-10 in rebounds per 48 minutes leaders in six consecutive seasons (2003-09) Has grabbed 20+ rebounds three times and recorded 25
double-doubles ... Has appeared in 27 postseason contests, with 11 starts, averaging 4.0 points and 6.0 rebounds in 17.1 minutes 2008-
09: Averaged 3.3 points, 4.6 rebounds and 14.4 minutes in 79 games Drew seven starting assignments, averaging 5.7 points, 6.7
rebounds and 22.3 minutes Ranked seventh in the NBA in rebounds per 48 minutes (15.3) Also ranked fourth in offensive rebounds per
48 minutes (5.7) Scored in double-figures six times and grabbed 10+ rebounds on four occasions Tallied 10+ points in four of the final
14 contests (6.5 ppg) after doing so twice in his first 65 games (2.6 ppg) Recorded a season-high 13 points vs. Milwaukee on Apr. 2 Had
11 points and eight rebounds at Washington on Feb. 25 Missed the Jan. 24 contest vs. New York with the flu Collected a season-best
12 rebounds in a season-high 31 minutes Dec. 29 at Utah Playoffs: Totaled seven points and 10 rebounds in 36 minutes against Orlando
2007-08: Appeared in a career-high 81 games with 61 starts, averaged 5.2 points, 7.5 rebounds and a career-high 1.06 steals in 23.2
minutes Came off the bench in 20 of his final 37 games after starting the first 44 games of the season Ranked tied for ninth in the NBA
in rebounds per 48 minutes (15.5) Grabbed 10-plus boards 21 times and had four double-doubles Scored 10-plus points six times over
the final 23 games after doing so four times the first 58 games Sixers were 9-1 when he scored 10-plus points Over the final 23 games,
had 32 steals to 26 turnovers Posted a season-high 13 points with 13 rebounds Mar. 1 at Phoenix Corralled a season-best 16 boards
Dec. 19 at Indiana Playoffs: Appeared in all six of the Sixers first round games vs. Detroit, averaging 6.8 points and 7.8 rebounds in 24.7
minutes Recorded a double-double in Games 1 and 2 2006-07: Appeared in 66 games (11 starts) for Denver, averaging 4.9 points, 7.0
rebounds and 17.1 minutes Led the NBA in rebounds per 48 minutes (19.7) Shot a career-high .544 (117-215) from the floor
Recorded six double-doubles and grabbed 10-plus boards 19 times Led the Nuggets in rebounding 17 times Had season highs of 19
points and 20 rebounds at San Antonio on Apr. 18 Grabbed 18 caroms vs. Seattle on Dec. 28 Missed two games (Dec. 8-9) due to strep
throat 2005-06: Split the season between Seattle and Denver Averaged a career-high 5.7 points while adding 7.5 rebounds in 20.8
minutes In 41 games with 23 starts for Seattle, averaged 5.9 points and 6.7 rebounds in 19.2 minutes For the Nuggets, appeared in 26
games with two starts, averaging 5.2 points and 8.7 rebounds in 23.3 minutes Recorded at least 10 boards in four of his last seven games
Corralled his 2,000th career rebound at Phoenix on Mar. 25 Scored a career-high 22 points (8-13 FG) and grabbed nine rebounds in 30
minutes vs. Seattle on Mar. 24; set career highs for FGM (8) and FGA (13) in that contest Made his first start as a Nugget grabbing a
season-high 20 rebounds (19 defensive) at Toronto on Mar. 10 Scored his 1,000th career point Dec. 31 at Memphis Scored 21 points
and grabbed 18 rebounds Dec. 20 at Phoenix Playoffs: Saw action in all five of Denvers first round games vs. the L.A. Clippers, averaging
3.8 points and 6.5 rebounds in 13.8 minutes per game 2004-05: Saw action in 79 games, starting all (career high) Averaged 4.9 points
and a career-high 9.3 rebounds in 23.8 minutes Paced the Sonics in rebounding and ranked 12th in the NBA Led the team on the glass
48 times Grabbed 10-plus boards 39 times and tallied seven double-doubles Hauled down 19 rebounds at Chicago on Mar. 15
Recorded a career-high 21 caroms Feb. 5 vs. Charlotte Had a 17-rebound game at Golden State on Jan. 28 Had 10-plus boards insix
straight games from Feb. 1-13 Missed three games due to gastroenteritis (Jan. 5-9) Playoffs: Started all 11 games for Seattle during its
run to the Western Conference Semifinals, averaging 3.7 points and 7.4 rebounds in 18.9 minutes Grabbed a playoff career-best 15
boards (including eight offensive) in his postseason debut vs. Sacramento on Apr. 23 2003-04: Played in 75 games with 27 starts, and
averaged 2.9 points and 5.4 rebounds in 17.1 minutes Led the Sonics in rebounding 23 times Grabbed 10 or more rebounds in nine
games Pulled down a season-high 14 rebounds vs. the Lakers on Apr. 2 Scored a season-high 16 points Jan. 4 at Sacramento 2002-
03: Appeared in 67 games with 60 starts, averaging 3.2 points and 6.6 rebounds in 20.4 minutes Notched two double-doubles Recorded
10-plus boards 14 times Spent 10 games on the injured list from Jan. 7-25 with an acromio clavicular sprain in his right shoulder ...
Grabbed a season-high 17 rebounds at Cleveland on Dec. 16.
#30 REGGIE EVANS
COLLEGE CAREER: Averaged 15.3 points and 11.5 rebounds in 69 games during two years at Iowa Tied for 30th in career scoring with
1,054 points, becoming just the fourth Iowa player to score 1,000 points in only two seasons Named Associated Press Honourable Mention
All-American in both junior and senior seasons Named second-team All-Big Ten both junior and senior seasons Played in 34 of 35
games with 31 starts as a senior Led the team in rebounding (11.1) and ranked second in scoring (15.4), while shooting .496 from the field
Earned All-Tournament honours at Big Ten Tournament Tied a career-high with 18 rebounds in Big Ten Tournament win over Purdue,
matching his own tournament record Led the nation in rebounding as a junior with 11.9 per game and double-doubles with 22 Also led
the nation in both free throws made (218) and free throws attempted (346) Named Most Outstanding Player as the Hawkeyes won the Big
Ten Tournament Played first two years at Coffeyville Junior College Helped junior college team post 41-23 record in two seasons Led
the conference in rebounding as a freshman and sophomore Led the region in rebounds as a sophomore and ranked second as a
freshman.

PERSONAL: Nickname is Joker Idolized Michael Jordan as a kid Favorite meal is breakfast (bacon, eggs, grits and toast) One of
12 players selected to the USA Basketball World Championships for Young Men team between his junior and senior seasons at Iowa Along
with U.S. teammates, earned the gold medal at the FIBA World Championships for Young Men Tournament in Saitama, Japan.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 22, Denver vs. Seattle, 3/24/2006 Off. Rebounds 9, Seattle at Chicago, 3/15/2005
FGM 8, Denver vs. Seattle, 3/24/2006 Def. Rebounds 19, Denver at Toronto, 3/10/2006
FGA 13, Denver vs. Seattle, 3/24/2006 Total Rebounds 21, Seattle vs. Charlotte, 2/5/2005
3PM 1, Philadelphia at Boston, 1/18/2008 Assists 4, Seattle at Portland, 3/24/2005 (twice)
3PA 1, Philadelphia at Charlotte, 4/7/2009 (8 times) Steals 4, Philadelphia vs. Seattle, 3/7/2008 (6 times)
FTM 8, Seattle at Memphis, 3/29/2005 Blocks 3, Denver vs. Minnesota, 4/16/2007
FTA 14, Seattle at Memphis, 3/29/2005 Minutes 40, Seattle vs. Charlotte, 2/5/2005

Reggie Evans NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
02-03 Sea 67-60 1365 66-140 .471 80-145 .519 167 278 445 34 38 52 11 212 3.2
03-04 Sea 75-27 1280 67-165 .406 83-148 .561 156 252 408 33 54 65 10 217 2.9
04-05 Sea 79-79 1881 131-275 .476 125-234 .534 254 482 736 58 58 104 15 387 4.9
05-06 Sea-Den 67-25 1393 132-269 .491 115-217 .530 171 331 502 38 40 85 10 379 5.7
06-07 Den 66-11 1127 117-215 .544 91-183 .497 156 304 460 45 42 95 16 325 4.9
07-08 Phi 81-61 1879 152-346 .439 120-257 .467 224 387 611 65 86 108 8 425 5.2
08-09 Phi 79-7 1140 79-178 .444 104-175 .594 135 226 361 26 41 69 8 262 3.3
09-10 Tor 28-1 311 34-69 .493 27-60 .450 30 75 105 8 14 22 4 96 3.4
Totals 542-271 10377 777-1656 .469 745-1428 .522 1293 2335 3628 307 373 600 82 2300 4.2
Three-point field goals: 2002-03: 0-0; 2003-04: 0-3 (.000); 2004-05: 0-2 (.000); 2005-06: 0-1 (.000); 2006-07: 0-0; 2007-08: 1-1 (1.000); 2008-09: 0-1 (.000);
2009-10: 0-0 (.000); Totals: 1-8 (.125).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2002-03: 173/2; 2003-04: 176/0; 2004-05: 202/0; 2005-06: 165/0; 2006-07: 144/0; 2007-08: 213/0; 2008-09: 161/0; 2009-10: 44/0;
Totals: 1279/2.

Reggie Evans NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
04-05 Sea 11 208 15-37 .405 11-21 .524 27 54 81 5 5 11 3 41 3.7
05-06 Den 5 69 3-7 .429 13-18 .722 8 15 23 0 2 6 1 19 3.8
07-08 Phi 6 148 13-26 .500 15-24 .625 16 31 47 3 5 13 0 41 6.8
08-09 Phi 5 36 2-9 .222 3-4 .750 2 8 10 0 3 2 0 7 1.4
Totals 27 461 33-79 .418 42-67 .627 53 108 161 8 15 32 4 108 4.0
Three-point field goals: 2004-05: 0-0; 2005-06: 0-2 (.000); 2007-08: 0-0; 2008-09: 0-0; Totals: 0-2 (.000).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2004-05: 32/0; 2005-06: 19/0; 2007-08: 41/0; 2008-09: 7/0; Totals: 67/0.
#1 JARRETT JACK
Position: Guard Birthdate: October 28, 1983 (Fort Washington, Maryland)
Height: 6-3 High School: Worchester Academy (Worchester, Massachusetts)
Weight: 200 College: Georgia Tech 05
NBA Experience: 5 Years Years with Raptors: One

How Acquired: Signed as a free agent July 21, 2009.


Career Transactions: First-round draft choice (22nd overall) by Portland in 2005; June 28, 2005: Draft rights
traded by Denver to Portland for draft rights to forwards Linas Kleiza and Rudy Sanchez; July 9, 2008: Traded by Portland with forward Josh
McRoberts and guard Brandon Rush to Indiana for forwards Ike Diogu and Jerryd Bayless; July 13, 2009: Signed an offer sheet with Toronto;
July 21, 2009: Signed as a free agent by Toronto.
Contract Status: Signed through 2012-13 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 11.4 points, 5.0 assists and 27.4 minutes in 82 appearances Set career highs with 82 three-pointers made
and a .412 (82-for-199) three-point shooting percentage Scored in double figures 45 times with five games of 20 or more Led the team
with 60 steals Was one of two Raptors that participated in all 82 contests (Johnson) Started 43 consecutive games (Dec. 8-Mar. 14),
averaging 12.8 points, 5.4 assists and 30.1 minutes Led the team in assists 35 times, scoring six times and bench scoring on 17 occasions
Recorded a career-high 12 assists Apr. 12 at Detroit Recorded 10 assists without scoring Mar. 31 vs. L.A. Clippers, joining Jason Kidd
(Dallas) and Chris Duhon (New York) as the only players to record 10+ assists without scoring in 2009-10 Tied a career-high with four
steals Mar. 7 vs. Philadelphia ... Scored a team-high 23 points Feb. 20 vs. Washington Posted a game-high eight assists and played 30
minutes without committing a turnover Feb. 10 vs. Philadelphia Scored a season-high 27 points Jan. 22 vs. Milwaukee Completed a
streak of 75 consecutive minutes without a turnover (Dec.18-27) Made his first start this season Dec. 8 vs. Minnesota Scored 18 points
Nov. 24 vs. Indiana and was a perfect 7-for-7 from the field against his former team ... Matched his then career-high with 11 assists Nov. 22
vs. Orlando.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 10.6 points, 4.2 assists and 28.3 minutes in 404 games, with 195 starts Is shooting at a .851
clip (1,013-1,191) from the charity stripe Has played in 288 straight games, the fourth-longest active streak in the NBA 2008-09: The
only Pacer to play in all 82 games Started 53 of the final 58 games Averaged career bests of 13.1 points and 3.4 rebounds, with 4.1
assists (second best on the team) Ranked 29th in the NBA in free throw percentage at .852 Recorded career highs in FGM (386), FGA
(853) and 3FGA (221) Over the final 52 games, averaged 15.1 points and scored 20 or more points on 10 occasions with two games of 30-
plus points Had 25 multiple steals games Averaged 1.13 steals in the last 52 games Dealt a game-high 10 assists in the season finale
vs. Milwaukee on Apr. 15 Posted at least five assists in each of the seasons last 10 games, averaging 6.8 in that span Tied a career best
with four steals Mar. 31 vs. Chicago and at Sacramento on Mar. 3 Had 31 points Mar. 21 at Charlotte, where he went 13-for-14 from the
floor and 4-for-4 at the foul line Scored a career-high 33 points at New York on Feb. 23 Hit the game-winning shot at the buzzer en route
to 29 points, including a career-best four 3-pointers, Jan. 2 at New York 2007-08: One of two Portland players to play in all 82 games,
finishing the season with averages of 9.9 points, 2.9 rebounds, 3.8 assists and 27.2 minutes ... Ranked 14th in NBA in free throw percentage
at .867 Paced the Trail Blazers in assists 15 times, scoring on five occasions and rebounding twice ... Scored in double-digits 42 times with
five games of 20-plus points ... As a starter, averaged 12.1 points and 5.1 assists, shooting .902 (46-50) from the foul line Had three
double-doubles Had back-to-back 21-point outings in wins vs. the Lakers on Feb. 29 and at the Clippers on Feb. 27 Tied a career best
with four steals vs. Seattle on Feb. 21 After totaling seven points and eight assists in the seasons first three games (all as a starter),
averaged 15.8 points and 3.1 assists in the Blazers next eight games (all as a reserve) 2006-07: Averaged 12.0 points, 2.6 rebounds, a
team-leading 5.3 assists, 1.09 steals and 33.6 minutes in 79 appearances, all as a starter ... Posted three double-doubles and scored in
double figures in 50 of 79 games ... Had two games of 30-plus points and 20 or more points eight times Led the team in points nine times
and assists a club-high 46 times ... Dealt 10 or more assists on four occasions ... Was the first Portland player to score 20-plus points and
hand out 10 or more assists in the same game in three seasons Shot a team-best .871 (243-for-279) from the foul line ... Ranked 11th in
the NBA in assists Paced Portland with 86 steals and had a career-high four steals four times ... Missed three games in January with a
concussion Had 11 assists Jan. 7 at Miami Notched his third double-double of the season with a season-high 30 points and 10 assists
at Milwaukee on Dec. 6 Contributed 20 points and 10 assists to go with four steals Nov. 12 vs. Dallas Had 12 points and 10 assists Nov.
3 at Golden State 2005-06: Averaged 6.7 points, 2.0 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 20.2 minutes in a team-high 79 appearances ... Was the
first Trail Blazers rookie since Arvydas Sabonis in 1995-96 to log 1,500-plus minutes (1,599) ... Led the team in points five times and assists
18 times ... Scored 10-plus points 21 times and 20 or more points twice ... Scored in double figures in eight of his last 12 appearances and
in that span averaged 12.6 points - nearly twice his average (6.7 ppg) for the season Started four games from Mar. 29 Apr. 2 Had a
season-best 20-point outing at Phoenix on Mar. 23.

COLLEGE CAREER: Finished his career at Georgia Tech ranked fifth in career assists (543), fifth in steals (183), 14th in free throw percentage
(.796) and 25th in scoring (1,265 points) ... Was just the sixth player in school history to record 1,000 points and 500 assists ... Started every
game of his collegiate career, except Senior Day of his junior season As a junior, finished second in the ACC in average minutes (34.1),
third in free throw percentage (.866), fourth in field goal percentage (.514), sixth in assists (4.5), seventh in steals (1.8) and 12th in scoring
(15.5) ... Scored in double figures in 28 of 32 games In his sophomore campaign, ranked fourth in the ACC in assists (5.6), fifth in steals
(2.0), eighth in free throw percentage (.802), 17th in scoring (12.5) and 18th in rebounding (4.9) ... Was named the Most Outstanding Player
of the NCAA Regional Tournament at St. Louis after scoring 29 points to lead Georgia Tech past Kansas in OT of the regional final ... Hit the
game winner in the Yellow Jackets ACC Tournament win over North Carolina ... As a freshman, ranked fourth in the ACC and sixth in the
nation with an average of 6.0 assists.
#1 JARRETT JACK
PERSONAL: His father, Joe, played college football under the legendary Eddie Robinson at Grambling State College major was marketing
As a 7th grader, remembers asking NBA All-Star Hakeem Olajuwon for his autograph Enjoys all types of Christian music.

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 33, Indiana at New York, 2/23/2009 Off. Rebounds 3, Indiana at LA Lakers, 1/9/2009 (4 times)
FGM 13, Indiana at Charlotte, 3/21/2009 Def. Rebounds 9, Portland at Toronto, 1/13/2008
FGA 22, Portland at Milwaukee, 12/6/2006 Total Rebounds 9, Portland vs. Denver, 2/4/2008 (3 times)
3PM 4, Indiana at New York, 1/2/2009 Assists 12, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010
3PA 7, Indiana at Philadelphia, 2/5/2009 (3 times) Steals 4, Toronto vs. Philadelphia, 3/7/2010 (9 times)
FTM 13, Portland at Charlotte, 2/9/2007 Blocks 2, Indiana at Charlotte, 2/18/2009 (3 times)
FTA 16, Portland at Charlotte, 2/9/2007 Minutes 48, Indiana at LA Clippers, 12/19/2008 (3 times)

Jarrett Jack NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
05-06 Por 79-4 1599 189-428 .442 128-160 .800 18 142 160 219 41 102 2 526 6.7
06-07 Por 79-79 2651 320-705 .454 243-279 .871 18 190 208 417 86 187 9 946 12.0
07-08 Por 82-16 2229 267-620 .431 215-248 .867 31 203 235 313 61 178 1 814 9.9
08-09 Ind 82-53 2716 386-853 .453 224-263 .852 44 232 276 338 88 184 17 1074 13.1
09-10 Tor 82-43 2243 323-671 .481 203-241 .842 30 192 222 413 60 163 6 931 11.4
Totals 404-195 11,438 1485-3277 .453 1013-1191 .851 141 959 1100 1700 336 814 35 4291 10.6
Three-point field goals: 2005-06: 20-76 (.263); 2006-07: 63-180 (.350); 2007-08: 65-190 (.342); 2008-09: 78-221 (.353); 2009-10: 82-199 (.412); Totals: 308-866 (.356).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2005-06: 138/0; 2006-07: 202/0; 2007-08: 129/0; 2008-09: 179/0; 2009-10; 151/0; Totals: 799/0.
#15 AMIR JOHNSON
Position: Forward Birthdate: May 1, 1987 (Los Angeles, California)
Height: 6-9 High School: Weschester (Los Angeles, California)
Weight: 210 College: N/A
NBA Experience: 5 Years Years with Raptors: One

How Acquired: Traded by Milwaukee with guard Sonny Weems for guard-forward Carlos Delfino and guard
Roko Ukic on August 18, 2009.
Career Transactions: Second-round draft choice (56th overall) by Detroit in 2005; June 23, 2009: Traded by Detroit to Milwaukee for centre
Fabricio Oberto; August 18, 2009: Traded by Milwaukee with guard Sonny Weems to Toronto for guard-forward Carlos Delfino and guard
Roko Ukic; July 8, 2010: Re-signed to a multi-year contract extension by Toronto.
Contract Status: Signed through 2014-15 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged career highs in points (6.2), rebounds (4.8) and minutes (17.7) while appearing in a career-best 82 games
One of two Raptors to see action in every game (Jack) Scored in double-figures 21 times and posted double-digit totals on the glass five
times Posted a franchise single-season record by shooting .623 from the field (min. 200 shots), passing the previous record set by John
Thomas (.577) during the 1998-99 season Led the team in rebounds six times and bench scoring 10 times Averaged 17.8 points, 6.0
rebounds and 33.0 minutes during five games as a starter Averaged 18.8 points, 5.5 rebounds and 33.5 minutes in the final four games of
the season Played a career-high 40 minutes Apr. 14 vs. New York Set a career high with 26 points and matched career highs in field
goals made (10), free throws made (6) and assists (4) Apr. 12 at Detroit Had 18 points and a season-high 13 rebounds Apr. 9 at Atlanta with
a career-high nine defensive boards Scored 16 points and grabbed 10 rebounds for his first double-double of the season Apr. 6 at
Cleveland ... Made his first start Mar. 5 vs. New York and scored 14 points Attempted a career-high eight free throws Dec. 18 vs. New
Jersey.
PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 4.7 points, 4.2 rebounds and 15.2 minutes in 217 games Is shooting .599 (422-705) from the
field in his career Has appeared in 11 playoff games, averaging 2.1 points, 1.5 rebounds and 5.0 minutes 2008-09: Appeared in 62
games (with a career-high 24 starts), averaging 3.5 points, 3.7 rebounds and 0.97 blocks in 14.7 minutes In 24 games as a starter,
averaged 4.8 points, 4.9 rebounds and 1.04 blocks in 19.6 minutes In 38 games off the bench, averaged 2.7 points, 3.0 rebounds and 0.88
blocks in 11.6 minutes Shot .642 (52-for-81) as a starter and .548 (45-for-82) as a reserve Led the team for a second consecutive
season in field goal percentage at .595 Scored 10-plus points four times Played 20-plus minutes in 16 games, averaging 6.9 points, 6.7
rebounds, 0.50 steals, 1.69 blocks and 25.0 minutes Grabbed 102 offensive rebounds Paced the Pistons in rebounding four times
Grabbed five-plus rebounds 21 times, including a career-high 14 rebounds in a season-best 38 minutes vs. Sacramento on Jan. 2 Tallied
a season-high four blocks Dec. 27 at Milwaukee Blocked two or more shots in 17 games ... Tied his season-high with 12 points vs. New
York on Nov. 26 Equaled his career high with three steals Nov. 5 at Toronto ... Posted a season high-tying 12 points at Charlotte on Nov.
3 ... Playoffs: Appeared in three games, totaling two points and three rebounds in 13 minutes 2007-08: Saw action in 62 games, averaging
3.6 points, 3.8 rebounds and 1.32 blocks in 12.3 minutes Led the team in field goal percentage at .558 Paced the team in scoring once
and rebounds five times Scored 10-plus points three times Played 20-plus minutes in 11 games Pistons 10-1 in those games
averaging 7.1 points, 7.4 rebounds, 2.82 blocks and 24.4 minutes Scored a season-high 14 points (5-6 FG, 4-4 FT) with nine rebounds vs.
New York on Apr. 8 Grabbed five-plus rebounds 23 times, including a season-high nine rebounds on five occasions Posted a career-
high seven blocks in a season-high 31 minutes Feb. 13 vs. Indiana Blocked three or more shots in nine games Playoffs: Saw time in
eight games, averaging 2.6 points and 1.6 rebounds in 5.4 minutes Recorded playoff career highs in points (10) and rebounds (6) at
Philadelphia on May 1 2006-07: Appeared in eight games, averaging 5.9 points, 4.6 rebounds and 1.63 blocks in 15.5 minutes Played
a season-high 37 minutes at Boston on Apr. 18, scoring a then career-high 20 points (10-14 FG) and grabbing a season-best 12 rebounds
Played 35 minutes vs. Philadelphia on Apr. 15 and totaled 12 points, 10 rebounds, three assists and six blocks Averaged 10.8 points, 8.0
rebounds, 2.75 blocks and 25.8 minutes over the last four games of the season Drew nine DNP-CDs and spent 34 games on the inactive
list ... D-League: Made two NBA Development League assignments during the season and averaged 18.9 points, 9.6 rebounds, 2.1 assists,
3.13 blocks and 35.2 minutes in 22 games with the Sioux Falls Skyforce Recorded 10 double-doubles Was named NBA D-League
Performer of the Week for Apr. 2, averaging 27.5 points, 15.5 rebounds, 4.5 blocks, 4.0 assists and 2.0 steals ... Scored in double-figures in
20-of-22 games, including a season-high 34 points (14-14 FT), with 14 rebounds, vs. Dakota on Mar. 30 Grabbed 10-plus rebounds 11
times, including a season-high 19 boards (10 offensive) Mar. 24 vs. Tulsa 2006-07: Averaged 6.7 points, 1.3 rebounds, 1.0 assists and
13.0 minutes in three games during his rookie campaign in Detroit Scored a season-high 18 points (6-6 FG, 2-2 3FG, 4-4 FT) with two
rebounds and two assists in a season-high 18 minutes Apr. 17 at Milwaukee D-League: Played in 17 games (12 starts) with the Fayetteville
Patriots, averaging 17.2 points, 7.2 rebounds and 1.5 blocks in 27.7 minutes Recorded four double-doubles Grabbed a season-high 14
rebounds Apr. 8 at Florida ... Twice scored a season-high 25 points at Florida on Apr. 8 and at Roanoke on Mar. 15.

HIGH SCHOOL CAREER: Named a 2005 McDonalds High School All-American Was selected 2005 Mr. Basketball in California Earned
Los Angeles Player of the Year honours by the Los Angeles Times Scored 17 points (8-11 FG) for the West squad at the Roundball Classic
(2005) Tallied seven rebounds and two blocks in 19 minutes for the West team at the McDonalds High School All-America game (2005)
Averaged 21.0 points, 15.0 rebounds and 8.0 blocks during his senior season at Westchester Led Westchester to a state championship
and a top-five national ranking.
PERSONAL: Is the last player to go directly from high school to the NBA Has nearly a seven-foot wingspan His cousin, Kevin Burnett,
is a linebacker for the San Diego Chargers Lists Kevin Garnett as his favourite NBA player growing up and his hobbies include playing
video games Would like to study computer science in the future and learn how to design and develop computer games Took part in the
2008 Celebrity Wheelchair Game for the Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan and the Detroit Medical Center.
#15 AMIR JOHNSON
CAREER HIGHS:
Points 26, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010 Off. Rebounds 6, Detroit vs. Sacramento, 1/2/2009 (3 times)
FGM 10, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010 (twice) Def. Rebounds 9, Toronto at Atlanta, 4/9/2010
FGA 14, Detroit at Boston, 4/18/2007 Total Rebounds 14, Detroit vs. Sacramento, 1/2/2009
3PM 2, Detroit at Milwaukee, 4/17/2006 Assists 4, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010 (twice)
3PA 2, Detroit at Boston, 4/18/2007 (twice) Steals 3, Detroit at Toronto, 11/5/2008 (twice)
FTM 6, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010 (3 times) Blocks 7, Detroit vs. Indiana, 2/13/2008
FTA 8, Toronto vs. New Jersey, 12/18/2009 Minutes 40, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010

Amir Johnson NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
05-06 Det 3-0 39 7-10 .700 4-4 1.000 3 1 4 3 0 4 2 20 6.7
06-07 Det 8-0 124 18-33 .545 11-14 .786 15 22 37 3 5 9 13 19 5.9
07-08 Det 62-0 764 92-165 .558 37-55 .673 87 148 235 29 24 39 82 221 3.6
08-09 Det 62-24 911 97-163 .595 23-35 .657 102 130 232 20 20 33 60 217 3.5
09-10 Tor 82-5 1453 208-334 .623 95-149 .638 154 241 395 48 44 63 66 511 6.2
Totals 217-29 3290 422-705 .599 170-257 .661 361 542 903 103 93 148 223 1016 4.7
Three-point field goals: 2005-06: 2-3 (.667); 2006-07: 0-3 (.000); 2007-08: 0-0; 2008-09: 0-0; 2009-10: 0-4 (.000); Totals: 2-10 (.200).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2006-06: 7/0; 2006-07: 19/0; 2007-08: 141/1; 2008-09: 171/2; 2009-10: 255/1; Totals: 593/4.

Amir Johnson NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
07-08 Det 8 43 9-12 .750 3-6 .500 3 10 12 1 0 2 3 21 2.6
08-09 Det 3 13 1-1 .1000 0-0 ----- 1 2 3 0 0 0 1 2 0.7
Totals 11 55 10-13 .769 3-6 .500 4 12 16 1 0 2 4 23 2.1
Three-point field goals: 2007-08: 0-1 (.000); 2008-09: 0-0; Totals: 0-1 (.000).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2007-08: 7/0; 2008-09: 3/0; Totals: 10/0.

Amir Johnson NBDL Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
05-06 Fay 18-12 508 119-178 .669 70-97 .722 54 74 128 21 16 42 27 309 17.2
07-08 SF 22-22 775 157-252 .623 100-134 .746 76 136 212 46 26 70 69 415 18.9
Totals 40-34 1283 276-430 .642 170-231 .736 130 210 340 67 42 112 96 742 18.6
Three-point field goals: 2005-06: 1-1; (1.000); 2006-07: 1-3 (.333); Totals: 2-4 (.500).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2005-6: 67/0; 2007-08: 97/0; Totals: 164/0.
#11 LINAS KLEIZA
Position: Forward Birthdate: January 3, 1985 (Kaunas, Lithuania)
Height: 6-8 High School: Montrose Christian (Rockville, Maryland)
Weight: 245 College: Missouri 05
NBA Experience: 4 Years Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: Signed as a free agent by Toronto on July 26, 2010.


Career Transactions: First-round draft choice (27th overall) by Portland in 2005; June 28, 2005: Draft rights
traded by Portland with draft rights to forward Rudy Sanchez to Denver for draft rights to guard Jarrett Jack; August 10, 2009: Signed with
Olympiakos of the Greek League; July 8, 2010: Signed an offer sheet with Toronto; July 26, 2010: Signed as a free agent by Toronto.
Contract Status: Signed through 2012-13 season, with a player option for the following season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 14.0 points and 5.1 rebounds in 31 regular-season appearances with Olympiakos Shot .596 from the field,
.374 from three-point range and .800 from the foul line Scored in double figures in 26 games, with 20 or more on five occasions Had a
high of 27 points, with a season-best 3-5 3FG, against C.C. Marousi on Nov. 1 Had 25 points and a season-high 13 rebounds Jan 3 vs.
AEK Posted double figures in rebounds in four games In 22 Euroleague outings, contributed 17.1 points and 6.5 rebounds Finished
second in the league in scoring (19.7 points per game) in Euroleague regular season play Scored in double figures in 21 of his 22 games
Topped 20 points in six contests Had a high of 26 points in consecutive games against Assec Prokom on March 23 and 25 Grabbed
10+ boards four times, with a high of 11 in three games Made five-of-eight three-pointers Dec. 2 against Orleans Was 14-of-16 from the
charity stripe Nov. 26 versus Paritzan.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 8.3 points and 3.5 rebounds in 301 regular season NBA games Owns averages of 5.8 points,
3.2 rebounds and 16.8 minutes in 12 playoff appearances Has represented Lithuania in world competition Averaged 11.1 points, 4.6
rebounds and 18.6 minutes in eight games at the 2008 Beijing Olympics Averaged 9.9 points, 5.3 rebounds and 23.9 minutes in nine
games for Lithuania at Eurobasket 07 Europes Olympic Qualifying Tournament Helped Lithuania finish third Averaged 10.1 points and
5.6 rebounds for Lithuania at the 2006 FIBA World Championships Played on the Lithuanian Junior National Team which took second
place at the 2003 World Junior Championships Led the tournament in scoring, averaging 29.1 points on .584 shooting in eight games
2008-09: Played in 82 games, averaging 9.9 points and 4.0 rebounds in 22.2 minutes Started seven times Only Nugget to appear every
game . Scored in double figures 39 times, including eight games of 20+ points Led the Nuggets in scoring five times and in rebounds twice
Grabbed his 1,000th career rebound at Dallas on Mar. 27 Had 18 points and a season high-tying nine rebounds (3rd time) vs. Utah on
Jan. 25 Registered a season-high 27 points (11-17 FG) vs. Sacramento on Jan. 20 Tallied 26 points and five rebounds in a season-high
37 minutes on Jan. 17 vs. Orlando Scored his 2,000th career point at Atlanta on Dec. 29 Notched 25 points (13-15 FT) vs. Milwaukee
on Nov.18; his 13 FT makes and 15 FT attempts tied career-highs (2nd time each) ... Playoffs: Averaged 14.0 points and 6.5 rebounds in 30.5
minutes in four first-round games vs. the Los Angeles Lakers Started the last three games Shot .537 (22-41) from the field Ranked
fourth on the team in scoring and third in rebounding Scored a career playoff-high 23 points off the bench in Game 1 2007-08: Appeared
in 79 games, averaging career highs for points (11.1), rebounds (4.2), assists (1.2), steals (0.56), minutes (23.9) and field goal percentage
(.472) Started 13 times, averaging 17.1 points Posted his only double-double of the season with 23 points and 11 rebounds vs. New
Jersey on Jan. 25 Made a game-winning, 22-foot turnaround jumper as time expired at Sacramento on Dec. 23 Scored his 1,000th
career point at Dallas on Dec. 6 Missed three games (Nov. 23-24; Feb. 23) due to a left ankle sprain Playoffs: Appeared in all five games
vs. San Antonio, averaging 1.6 points and 1.6 rebounds in 13.2 minutes 2006-07: Played in a team-high 79 games, starting 14 times
Averaged 7.6 points and 3.4 rebounds Scored at least 20 points four times and grabbed double-digit rebounds twice Hit the game-
winning three-pointer at L.A. Clippers on Apr. 7 Playoffs: Appeared in three games, averaging 2.0 points and 1.3 rebounds in 4.7 minutes
... 2005-06: Played in 61 games as a rookie, starting twice Averaged 3.5 points and 1.9 rebounds in 8.5 minutes Scored in double
figures four times DNP-CD 19 times Missed one game (Mar. 17) due to a sprained left ankle and was a healthy inactive once (Nov. 11)
Averaged 11.5 points and 4.5 rebounds in his two starts Played in his first career NBA game vs. Portland on Nov. 4.

COLLEGE CAREER: Named Honorable Mention All-Big 12 by the league coaches as a sophomore Earned All-Big 12 Tournament
honours in 2005 after averaging 29.5 points and 9.0 rebounds in two games As a sophomore, led team in scoring (16.1), rebounding (7.6)
and minutes played (31.5) Ranked ninth in the Big 12 in scoring and fifth in rebounding In his freshman campaign, averaged 11.1 points
and 8.4 rebounds in 23.1 minutes Was the teams third-leading scorer and top rebounder before missing the last 14 games of the season
due to a dislocated right shoulder.

PERSONAL: Name is pronounced (LYNN-us CLAY-za) Has an older brother, Zilvinas Speaks four languages: English, Lithuanian,
Russian and German Likes to watch TV and movies in his spare time Parents moved to the U.S. in the mid-90s and he came over at
the age of 16.
#11 LINAS KLEIZA
CAREER HIGHS:
Points 41, Denver vs. Utah, 1/17/2008 Off. Rebounds 7, Denver at Golden State, 3/7/2007
FGM 13, Denver vs. Utah, 1/17/2008 Def. Rebounds 9, Denver at LA Lakers, 1/5/2007
FGA 21, Denver vs. Utah, 1/17/2008 Total Rebounds 11, Denver at Philadelphia, 3/19/2008 (twice)
3PM 5, Denver at Portland, 12/23/2008 (four times) Assists 4, Denver vs. Seattle, 3/16/2008 (3 times)
3PA 10, Denver vs. Seattle, 10/31/2007 Steals 3, Denver at New Orleans, 1/28/2008 (twice)
FTM 13, Denver vs. Milwaukee, 11/18/2008 (twice) Blocks 3, Denver vs. Dallas, 4/6/2007
FTA 15, Denver vs. Milwaukee, 11/18/2008 (twice) Minutes 42, Denver vs. Utah, 1/17/2008

Linas Kleiza NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
05-06 Den 61-11 519 77-173 .445 57-81 .704 38 78 116 15 10 16 13 213 3.5
06-07 Den 79-11 1488 200-474 .422 115-135 .852 77 189 266 45 28 79 14 508 7.6
07-08 Den 79-56 1889 311-659 .472 164-213 .770 92 241 333 95 44 89 19 880 11.1
08-09 Den 82-68 1824 289-646 .447 148-204 .725 92 235 327 64 31 82 14 813 9.9
Totals 301-185 5720 877-1952 .449 484-633 .765 299 743 1042 219 113 266 60 2504 8.3
Three-point field goals: 2005-06: 2-13 (.154); 2006-07: 83-221 (.376); 2007-08: 94-277 (.339); 2008-09: 87-267 (.326); Totals: 266-778 (.342).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2005-06: 87/0; 2006-07: 200/0; 2007-08: 181/0; 2008-09: 155/0; Totals: 612/1.

Linas Kleiza NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
05-06 Den 3 14 3-8 .375 0-0 1 3 4 2 0 0 0 6 2.0
06-07 Den. 5 66 3-13 .231 1-2 .500 0 8 8 2 0 0 0 8 1.6
07-08 Den 4 122 22-41 .537 9-13 .692 8 18 26 3 1 5 0 56 14.0
Totals 12 202 28-62 .452 10-15 .667 9 29 38 7 1 5 0 70 5.8
Three-point field goals: 2005-06: 0-1 (.000); 2006-07: 1-6 (.167); 2007-08: 3-14 (.214); Totals: 4-21 (.190).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2005-06: 3/0; 2006-07: 6/0; 2007-08: 11/0; Totals: 20/0.

Linas Kleiza Greek League Stats


Year Team G FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT REB AST ST BLK PTS AVG
09-10 Olympiakos 31 121-203 .596 80-100 .800 158 42 5 21 433 14.0
Totals 31 121-203 .596 80-100 .800 158 42 5 21 433 14.0
Three-point field goals: 2009-10: 37-99 (.374); Totals: 37-99 (.374).

Linas Kleiza Euroleague League Stats


Year Team G-GS FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT REB AST ST BLK PTS AVG
09-10 Olympiakos 22 102-189 .540 83-104 .798 143 28 4 15 377 17.1
Totals 22 102-189 .540 83-104 .798 143 28 4 15 377 17.1
Three-point field goals: 2009-10: 30-86 (.349); Totals: 30-86 (.349).
#24 SONNY WEEMS
Position: Guard Birthdate: July 8, 1986 (West Memphis, Arkansas)
Height: 6-6 High School: West Memphis (West Memphis, Arkansas)
Weight: 205 College: Arkansas 08
NBA Experience: 2 Years Years with Raptors: One

How Acquired: Traded by Milwaukee with forward Amir Johnson for guard-forward Carlos Delfino and guard
Roko Ukic on August 18, 2009.
Career Transactions: Second-round draft choice (39th overall) by Chicago in 2008; June 26, 2008: Draft rights traded by Chicago to Denver
for a 2009 second-round draft pick; July 31, 2009: Traded by Denver with forward Walter Sharpe to Milwaukee for forward Malik Allen; August
18, 2009: Traded by Milwaukee with forward Amir Johnson to Toronto for guard-forward Carlos Delfino and guard Roko Ukic.
Contract Status: Signed through 2010-11 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Registered a career-high 7.5 points in a career-high 69 games Averaged 11.7 points, 4.3 rebounds and shot .560 from
the field (102-for-182) in a career-high 19 games as a starter Led the team in scoring five times Finished in double figures in scoring 22
times Missed three games due to injury strained rib cage (Jan. 19) and two games with a sore left foot (Oct. 28-30) Placed on the
inactive list for five games and drew DNP-CDs eight times ... Started the final 12 games of the season (Mar. 26 Apr. 14), averaging 13.0
points, 4.3 rebounds and shooting .558 (72-for-129) from the floor Matched career highs Apr. 14 vs. New York with nine field goals and
three steals Tied a career high playing 40 minutes Apr. 12 at Detroit Scored a career-high 21 points Apr. 7 vs. Boston and also tied a
career high by converting on five free throws Shot a perfect 8-for-8 from the floor Mar. 31 vs. L.A. Clippers Tied a career high with two
blocks Mar. 24 vs. Utah ... Recorded his first 20-point game Mar. 5 vs. New York Made his first career three-pointer in the third quarter Feb.
10 vs. Philadelphia extending the teams streak of consecutive games with a three-pointer to 912 games ... Earned his first career double-
double Feb. 3 vs. New Jersey (14 points, 11 rebounds) Started five consecutive games (Jan. 27 - Feb. 3), averaging 8.6 points and 4.8
rebounds.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has appeared in 81 games with Denver and Toronto Averaging 6.6 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.3 assists
Shooting .505 (244-for-483) from the field Helped the Raptors to a 5-0 mark in the 2010 Las Vegas Summer League Finished second
on the team at 17.5 points per game Had a high of 19 points in games against Phoenix, New York and Sacramento 2008-09: Averaged
1.6 points in 4.6 minutes in 12 appearances with the Nuggets Drew a DNP-CD 27 times Spent three separate stints with the D-Leagues
Colorado 14ers Tallied a season high-tying four points with a season-high two rebounds, two assists and 10 minutes at Minnesota on Apr.
5 Scored four points at Washington on Feb. 6 and vs. Orlando on Jan. 17 Missed the first 14 games of the season due to a left groin
strain D-League: Played in 22 games with the Colorado 14ers, averaging 20.5 points, 4.5 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 28.2 minutes Led
the 14ers to the D-League championship, averaging 22.8 points in four postseason games ... Poured in 25 points in Game 2 and 28 in Game
1 in the title series against Utah Registered 32 points, seven rebounds and six assists in 44 minutes at Reno on Apr. 11 Tallied 36 points
to go along with nine rebounds in 34 minutes at Erie on Mar. 27 Registered his first double-double of the season in the D-League with 24
points and 10 rebounds vs. Fort Wayne on Dec. 30.
COLLEGE CAREER: Played two years at Arkansas and two at Arkansas-Fort Smith Junior College Averaged 13.3 points and 4.6 rebounds
in 69 games at Arkansas Averaged a team-high 15.0 points, 4.5 rebounds and 2.6 assists in 34 games in his senior campaign Named
first-team All-SEC by the league coaches Scored 20 or more points 10 times Posted a career-high 31 points (12-14 FG) vs. Indiana in
the first round of the NCAA Tournament As a junior, averaged 11.8 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists in 35 outings ... Scored in double
figures 23 times Contributed 15 points vs. Florida in the SEC Tournament finals on his way to All-Tournament Team honours Grabbed
a career-high 13 rebounds vs. Marist Had a career-best nine rebounds vs. Auburn At Arkansas-Fort Smith, averaged 15.6 points, 4.4
rebounds and 2.1 assists in 36 games as a sophomore Helped team to a 33-3 record and a NJCAA Tournament title Named to the All-
Tournament Team ... Averaged 14.8 points, 5.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 2.0 steals as a freshman Earned All-Conference and All-Region
honours.
PERSONAL: Also competed in football and track in high school High-jumped 610" in high school Captured the collegiate slam dunk
national title in the 20th annual State Farm College Slam Dunk and 3-Point Championships held in conjunction with the 2008 Final Four
Also won slam dunk titles at the high school and junior college level.
#24 SONNY WEEMS
CAREER HIGHS:
Points 21, Toronto vs. Boston, 4/7/2010 Off. Rebounds 4, Toronto vs. New Jersey, 2/3/2010
FGM 9, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010 (4 times) Def. Rebounds 7, Toronto vs. New York, 3/5/2010 (3 times)
FGA 22, Toronto vs. Chicago, 4/11/2010 Total Rebounds 11, Toronto vs. New Jersey, 2/3/2010
3PM 1, Toronto vs. L.A. Clippers, 3/31/2010 (twice) Assists 5, Toronto at Cleveland, 4/6/2010 (twice)
3PA 2, Denver vs. Sacramento, 1/20/2009 Steals 3, Toronto vs. New York, 4/14/2010 (twice)
FTM 5, Toronto vs. Boston, 4/7/2010 (twice) Blocks 2, Toronto vs. Utah, 3/24/2010 (twice)
FTA 6, Toronto vs. Charlotte, 12/30/2009 (twice) Minutes 40, Toronto at Detroit, 4/12/2010 (twice)

Sonny Weems NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
08-09 Den 12-0 55 8-25 .320 3-8 .375 0 4 4 3 1 6 0 19 1.6
09-10 Tor 69-19 1368 236-458 .515 44-64 .688 42 150 192 101 39 65 25 518 7.5
Totals 81-19 1423 244-483 .505 47-72 .653 42 154 196 104 40 71 25 537 6.6
Three-point field goals: 2008-09: 0-3 (.000); 2009-10: 2-15 (.113); Totals: 2-18 (.111).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2008-09: 8/0; 2009-10: 126/1; Totals: 134/1.

Sonny Weems NBDL Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
08-09 Col 22-8 622 190-389 .488 53-75 .707 27 72 99 65 22 61 14 461 20.5
Totals 22-8 622 190-389 .488 53-75 .707 27 72 99 65 22 61 14 461 20.5
Three-point field goals: 2008-09: 18-70 (.257); Totals: 18-70 (.257).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2008-09: 76/4; Totals: 76/4.
#14 JULIAN WRIGHT
Position: Forward Birthdate: May 20, 1987 (Chicago, Illinois)
Height: 6-8 High School: Homewood-Flossmor (Flossmor, Illinois)
Weight: 235 College: Kansas 07
NBA Experience: 3 Years Years with Raptors: First

How Acquired: Traded by New Orleans for guard Marco Bellinelli on August 11, 2010.
Career Transactions: First-round draft choice (13th overall) by New Orleans in 2007; August 11, 2010: Traded
by New Orleans to Toronto for guard Marco Bellinelli.
Contract Status: Signed through 2010-11 season.

2009-10 SEASON: Averaged 3.8 points and 2.1 rebounds in 12.8 minutes in 68 games (14 starts) Had five games scoring in double figures
Notched season-high 16 points (7-10 FG) vs. Minnesota on Apr. 11 Had 10 points at Golden State on Mar. 17 Totaled 13 points and
season highs of eight rebounds, five steals and four assists Mar. 12 vs. Denver Scored 10 points in first start since Nov. 8 vs. Oklahoma
City on Mar. 10 Had 11 points and seven rebounds Oct. 30 vs. Sacramento.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Has averaged 4.0 points, 2.3 rebounds and 12.7 minutes in 179 games, with 34 starts In 15 postseason
contests, averaged 3.7 points, 1.6 rebounds and 10.9 minutes 2008-09: Averaged career highs of 4.4 points, 2.8 rebounds and 14.5
minutes in 54 games (19 starts) Averaged 7.7 points and 5.1 rebounds in 19 appearances as a starter Recorded six 10+ point and one
20+ scoring performances Grabbed a career-high 14 rebounds and added 11 points on Mar. 25 at the New York Knicks en route to his lone
career double-double Rejected a season-high four blocks Mar. 22 vs. Golden State Equaled a career high with 20 points Mar. 7 vs.
Oklahoma City In the month of March averaged 23.6 minutes, 8.1 points and 4.6 rebounds while starting in 14 of 16 games; also shot 50
percent (55-110) from the field Playoffs: Scored four points and grabbed three rebounds in Game 4 vs. Denver Recorded two points,
one rebound, one assist and one block in Game 1 at Denver 2007-08: Finished his rookie campaign averaging 3.9 points, 2.1 rebounds
and 11.2 minutes over 57 games (one start) Scored 10+ points seven times, while recording one 20+ point game Totaled 11 points on
3-of-6 shooting and had a season-high nine rebounds (four offensive), two assists and three steals in 19 minutes Apr. 2 at Orlando In
March, averaged 7.3 points, 3.2 rebounds and hit .533 FG (40-of-75) in 19.2 minutes (13 games) Had a career-high 20 points with eight
rebounds Mar. 7 vs. New Jersey after posting 13 points and seven rebounds the previous game (Mar. 5) vs. Atlanta Saw his first NBA
action Nov. 2 vs. Portland, scoring four points and grabbing three rebounds in 11 minutes Playoffs: Played in 11 of the 12 playoff contests
Hit on 20-of-44 shots from the field (45.5%) Had 10 steals and 18 rebounds Scored in nine of his 11 appearances Had a playoff
career-high 11 points on Apr. 27 at Dallas.

COLLEGE CAREER: Averaged 10.4 points and 6.3 rebounds in two seasons at Kansas Appeared in 71 games, starting 52 ... Garnered
All-America Honourable Mention from The Associated Press Earned All-Big 12 First Team honours as a sophomore and Big 12 All-
Freshman Team selection in 2005-06 ... Averaged 12.0 points and 7.8 rebounds (led team, fourth in Big 12) his sophomore season, leading
the Jayhawks to their third straight conference title, second consecutive Big 12 Tournament Championship and a trip to the Elite Eight of the
NCAA Tournament Scored a career-high 33 points against Missouri and grabbed a career-high 13 rebounds against Texas Recorded
three-plus blocks six times and three-plus steals nine times Posted six double-doubles and 11 double-digit rebounding efforts Averaged
8.5 points and 1.27 blocks (eighth in the Big 12) his freshman season Led the Jayhawks in scoring six times and in rebounding seven times
Led the team in field goal percentage with a .564 mark.

PERSONAL: Full name is Julian Emil-Jamaal Wright Nickname is Ju-Ju Lists singing as his greatest talent other than basketball
Is an avid bowler A McDonalds High School All-America selection at Homewood-Flossmoor H.S. (Illinois) Won the prestigious Mr.
Basketball of Illinois award as a high school senior in 2005, joining an impressive list of 15 players since 1981 that have captured the honour
and played in the NBA, highlighted by Derrick Rose (Chicago Bulls) and Kevin Garnett (Boston Celtics).

CAREER HIGHS:
Points 20, New Orleans vs. Oklahoma City, 3/7/2009 Off. Rebounds 7, New Orleans at New York, 3/27/2009
FGM 8, New Orleans vs. LA Clippers, 4/1/2009 (3 times) Def. Rebounds 7, New Orleans at Golden State, 4/3/2009 (4 times)
FGA 14, New Orleans at New York, 3/27/2009 Total Rebounds 14, New Orleans at New York, 3/27/2009
3PM 1, New Orleans vs. Philadelphia, 2/5/2010 (15 times) Assists 4, New Orleans vs. Denver, 3/12/2010 (twice)
3PA 3, New Orleans at Minnesota, 4/9/2008 (twice) Steals 5, New Orleans vs. Denver, 3/12/2009
FTM 7, New Orleans vs. LA Clippers, 4/15/2008 Blocks 4, New Orleans vs. Golden State, 3/22/2009
FTA 8, New Orleans at Miami, 4/2/2008 Minutes 40, New Orleans at Phoenix, 3/14/2010

Julian Wright NBA Career Stats


Year Team G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
07-08 NO 57-1 640 90-169 .533 33-52 .635 33 84 117 40 27 34 12 233 3.9
08-09 NO 54-19 772 109-234 .466 17-30 .567 46 106 152 43 35 43 19 237 4.4
09-10 NO 68-14 870 116-232 .500 25-41 .610 58 86 144 41 29 44 18 259 3.8
Totals 179-34 2282 315-635 .496 75-123 .610 43 202 413 124 91 121 49 719 4.0
Three-point field goals: 2007-08: 10-24 (.417); 2008-09: 2-21 (.095); 2009-10: 2-6 (.333); Totals: 14-51 (.275).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2007-08: 107/0; 2008-09: 49/0; 2009-10: 45/0; Totals: 137/0.

Julian Wright NBA Playoff Stats


Year Team G MIN FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF REB AST ST TO BLK PTS AVG
07-08 NO 11 131 20-44 .455 5-6 .833 6 12 18 5 10 5 1 47 4.3
08-09 NO 4 32 3-7 .429 2-4 .500 0 6 6 2 0 1 1 8 2.0
Totals 15 163 23-51 .451 7-10 .700 6 18 24 7 10 6 2 55 3.7
Three-point field goals: 2007-08: 2-9 (.222); 2008-09: 0-0; Totals: 2-9 (.222).
Personal fouls / Disqualifications: 2007-08: 8/0; 2008-09: 6/0; Totals: 14/0.
Washington Wizards
BOSTON CELTICS
TEAM DIRECTORY
President of Basketball Operations.......................................Danny Ainge
Head Coach...................................................................Glenn Doc Rivers
Assistant Coaches........................................Lawrence Frank, Armond Hill,
..............................................Kevin Eastman, Clifford Ray, Mike Longabardi
Athletic Trainer..........................................................................Ed Lacerte
Strength and Conditioning........................................................Bryan Doo
266 Causeway Street, 4th Floor PR staff............................................Jeff Twiss, Heather Walker, Brian Olive
Television............................Mike Gorman, Tom Heinsohn, Greg Dickerson
Boston, MA 02114
Radio.............................................................Sean Grande, Cedric Maxwell
(617) 854-8000 DOC RIVERS
Arena......................................................TD Garden (18,624), opened 1995
www.celtics.com Head Coach

BACKGROUND SERIES FACTS VS. CELTICS


History..........................................................................Founded 1946 Current Streak........................................................................Lost 8
Colours......................................Green, Gold, Beige, Brown and Black Current Home Streak.............................................................Lost 6
NBA Titles...............17 (1957, 59. 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 68, Current Road Streak..............................................................Lost 4
..............................................................69, 74, 76, 81, 84, 86, 08) Last Home Win..........................................January 26, 2007 (96-90)
Conference Titles...........................................................................21 Last Home Loss..............................................April 7, 2010 (115-104)
Division Titles.................................................................................28 Last Road Win.........................................January 23, 2008 (114-112)
2009-10 Record..........................................50-32 (.610), 1st in Atlantic Last Road Loss.........................................January 2, 2010 (103-96)
2010 NBA Playoffs.....Defeated Miami 4-1; Defeated Cleveland 4-2; Largest Margin of Victory........................................31, April 20, 1997
..................................Defeated Orlando 4-2; Lost to L.A. Lakers 4-3 Largest Margin of Defeat.........................................28, April 12, 1996

2009-10 RAPTORS vs. CELTICS


SEASON SERIES (0-4) TORONTO RAPTORS VS. BOSTON
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Bosh 3-3 122 29-45 .644 0-0 18-19 .947 9 26 35 6 8-1 5 13 3 76 25.3
Bargnani 4-4 139 26-59 .441 8-21 .381 8-10 .800 5 13 18 1 12-0 1 8 10 68 17.0
Jack 4-2 120 22-43 .512 7-12 .583 13-15 .867 0 7 7 21 9-0 4 8 0 64 16.0
Turkoglu 4-4 112 15-30 .500 6-0 .600 3-9 .333 0 14 14 19 12-0 5 9 2 39 9.8
DeRozan 4-3 79 15-25 .600 1-1 1.000 2-4 .500 3 4 7 1 12-0 4 3 0 33 8.3
Calderon 3-2 79 10-20 .500 0-3 .000 4-5 .800 2 3 5 16 5-0 1 7 0 24 8.0
Weems 4-1 59 10-19 .526 0-0 8-9 .889 2 7 9 5 9-0 2 1 2 28 7.0
Belinelli 4-0 61 9-21 .429 4-10 .400 2-3 .667 1 2 3 4 4-0 0 3 0 24 6.0
Nesterovic 3-0 37 8-13 .615 0-0 0-0 4 2 6 1 4-0 0 1 1 16 5.3
Banks 1-0 20 1-4 .250 1-3 .333 2-2 1.000 0 0 0 3 1-0 0 2 1 5 5.0
Wright 4-0 47 7-14 .500 2-5 .400 3-3 1.000 1 7 8 4 3-0 1 4 0 19 4.8
Johnson 4-0 60 3-11 .273 0-0 6-8 .750 6 7 13 3 13-0 4 5 3 12 3.0
Evans 1-1 16 1-6 .167 0-0 0-0 2 1 3 0 4-0 0 1 0 2 2.0
Mensah-Bonsu (TOT) 2-0 9 0-2 .000 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 0 2-0 1 0 0 0 0.0
Mensah-Bonsu (TOR) 2-0 9 0-2 .000 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 0 2-0 1 0 0 0 0.0
RAPTORS 4 960 156-312 .500 29-65 .446 69-87 .793 36 93 129 84 98-1 28 65 22 410 102.5
CELTICS 4 960 164-297 .552 31-76 .408 89-113 .788 37 102 139 107 79-0 40 61 17 448 112.0

2009-10 CELTICS vs. RAPTORS


SEASON SERIES (4-0) BOSTON CELTICS VS. TORONTO
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
R. Allen 4-4 143 29-56 .518 6-17 .353 13-16 .813 3 7 10 14 10-0 6 6 0 77 19.3
Rondo 3-3 115 22-38 .579 2-3 .667 9-11 .818 5 12 17 31 4-0 9 10 1 55 18.3
Pierce 3-3 98 16-34 .471 2-9 .222 20-22 .909 1 9 10 16 6-0 4 4 0 54 18.0
Wallace 4-2 115 23-39 .590 10-20 .500 9-10 .900 2 17 19 6 12-0 8 1 6 65 16.3
Garnett 2-2 55 13-18 .722 0-0 5- 6 .833 1 7 8 6 6-0 1 3 1 31 15.5
Perkins 4-4 121 21-27 .778 0-1 .000 13-21 .619 10 20 30 7 8-0 3 13 5 55 13.8
Finley (TOT) 2-1 39 7-11 .636 6-7 .857 1-2 .500 1 8 9 1 1-0 1 1 0 21 10.5
Finley (BOS) 1-0 24 5-7 .714 4-5 .800 0-0 0 6 6 1 1-0 0 0 0 14 14.0
Robinson (TOT) 2-0 44 7-21 .333 2-9 .222 3-4 .750 0 2 2 7 1-0 2 2 0 19 9.5
House 3-0 59 9-24 .375 6-18 .333 2-2 1.000 1 3 4 6 5-0 0 0 1 26 8.7
T. Allen 3-1 59 7-14 .500 0-1 .000 7-12 .583 3 3 6 9 7-0 4 6 2 21 7.0
Davis 3-0 58 7-17 .412 0-1 .000 7-9 .778 8 9 17 1 5-0 2 5 0 21 7.0
Daniels 2-0 26 4-8 .500 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 3 1-0 0 0 0 8 4.0
Hudson 2-0 14 2-3 .667 1-1 1.000 0-0 1 1 2 2 1-0 1 3 0 5 2.5
Williams 4-0 31 4-6 .667 0-0 2-2 1.000 2 4 6 1 7-0 1 3 0 10 2.5
Giddens 3-1 23 2-4 .500 0-0 2-2 1.000 0 2 2 1 2-0 1 2 1 6 2.0
Scalabrine 3-0 17 0-2 .000 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 3 4-0 0 0 0 0 0.0
CELTICS 4 960 164-297 .552 31-76 .408 89-113 .788 37 102 139 107 79-0 40 61 17 448 112.0
RAPTORS 4 960 156-312 .500 29-65 .446 69-87 .793 36 93 129 84 98-1 28 65 22 410 102.5
BOSTON CELTICS
ALL-TIME RAPTORS vs. CELTICS: 20-37 (Home 12-17, Road 8-20)

Season Date Score Site Season Date Score Site


2009-10 April 7 L 115-104 Toronto 2002-03 March 2 W 104-92 Toronto
(0-4) January 10 L 114-107 Toronto (2-1) February 28 L 90-85 Boston
January 2 L 103-96 Boston November 29 W 98-95 Boston
November 27 L 116-103 Boston
2001-02 January 31 W 97-92 Toronto
2008-09 January 12 L 115-109 (OT) Boston (2-2) January 21 L 106-97 Boston
(0-4) January 11 L 94-88 Toronto December 2 L 85-69 Toronto
November 23 L 118-103 Toronto November 23 W 91-89 Boston
November 10 L 94-87 Boston
2000-01 February 5 W 110-98 Toronto
2007-08 January 23 W 114-112 Boston (3-1) January 12 W 93-72 Boston
(1-3) December 16 L 90-77 Toronto November 7 W 105-75 Toronto
December 7 L 112-84 Boston November 3 L 93-91 Boston
November 4 L 98-95 (OT) Toronto
1999-00 March 3 W 114-104 Toronto
2006-07 March 26 L 95-87 Boston (2-2) March 1 W 96-94 Boston
(3-1) January 26 W 96-90 Toronto January 19 L 94-90 Boston
January12 W 95-86 Boston November 2 L 103-90 Toronto
December 1 W 106-102 Toronto
1999 April 8 L 101-89 Toronto
2005-06 April 4 L 124-120 Toronto (2-1) March 7 W 105-92 Toronto
(1-3) March 22 L 110-96 Boston February 5 W 103-92 Boston
March 5 L 100-93 Toronto
November 18 L 100-93 Boston 1997-98 December 17 L 88-83 Toronto
(0-3) November 18 L 122-109 Toronto
2004-05 April 17 L 103-98 Toronto November 14 L 103-99 Boston
(1-3) March 16 L 110-109 Boston
January 12 W 104-93 Toronto 1996-97 April 20 W 125-94 Toronto
December 3 L 91-89 Boston (1-2) February 3 L 114-102 Toronto
December 11 L 115-113 (3OT) Boston
2003-04 February 29 L 91-82 Toronto
(1-3) February 27 L 88-75 Boston 1995-96 April 12 L 136-108 Boston
December 12 L 114-111 Boston (1-3) January 21 W 97-95 Toronto
December 3 W 105-95 Toronto December 15 L 122-103 Boston
December 12 L 116-96 Toronto

2010-11 SCHEDULE
Date Site Time (ET)
Sunday, November 21 Toronto 1:00 p.m.
Friday, November 26 Boston 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, January 2 Toronto 6:00 p.m.
Friday, January 7 Boston 7:30 p.m.
CHICAGO BULLS
TEAM DIRECTORY
Executive Vice-President, Basketball Operations................John Paxson
Head Coach........................................................................Tom Thibodeau
Assistant Coaches..........................Ron Adams, Andy Greer, Rick Brunson
Athletic Trainer.....................................................................Fred Tedeschi
PR staff.............Tim Hallam, Sebrina Brewster, Matt Yob, Shaun Hickombottom
Television.................................................................Neil Funk, Stacey King
United Center Radio....................................Chuck Swirsky, Bill Wennington, Steve Kaskul
Arena.................................................United Center (20,917), opened 1994
1901 West Madison Street
(312) 455-4000 TOM THIBODEAU
www.bulls.com Head Coach

BACKGROUND SERIES FACTS VS. BULLS


History.......................................................................Founded in 1966 Current Streak........................................................................Lost 1
Colours........................................................................Red and Black Current Home Streak.............................................................Lost 1
NBA Titles............................................6 (1991, 92, 93, 96, 97, 98) Current Road Streak..............................................................Won 3
Conference Titles.............................................................................6 Last Home Win......................................November 11, 2009 (99-89)
Division Titles...................................................................................7 Last Home Loss......................................January 14, 2009 (109-98)
2009-10 Record.........................................41-41 (.500), 3rd in Central Last Road Win.......................................December 5, 2009 (110-78)
2010 NBA Playoffs..........................................Lost to Cleveland 4-1 Last Road Loss.............................................April 16, 2008 (107-97)
Largest Margin of Victory.................................32, December 5, 2009
Largest Margin of Defeat..................................37, February 19, 1998

2009-10 RAPTORS vs. BULLS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (2-1) TORONTO RAPTORS VS. CHICAGO
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Bosh 2-2 62 18-33 .545 0-0 17-17 1.000 11 12 23 4 4-0 4 1 2 53 26.5
Bargnani 3-3 105 16-41 .390 3-12 .250 8-9 .889 5 14 19 1 10-0 2 3 3 43 14.3
Calderon 3-3 76 12-21 .571 4-9 .444 5-5 1.000 0 2 2 13 2-0 1 4 1 33 11.0
Banks 1-0 7 4-4 1.000 1-1 1.000 0-0 0 0 0 2 0-0 0 2 0 9 9.0
Weems 2-1 44 9-25 .360 0-2 .000 0-0 2 4 6 3 2-0 3 0 1 18 9.0
Turkoglu 3-3 90 9-32 .281 4-13 .308 4-8 .500 5 26 31 18 7-0 5 3 0 26 8.7
Jack 3-0 78 9-22 .409 2-8 .250 5-6 .833 1 5 6 13 4-0 2 6 0 25 8.3
Belinelli 3-0 62 7-18 .389 1-8 .125 6-6 1.000 3 7 10 5 7-0 1 3 0 21 7.0
Wright 2-0 38 6-13 .462 1-7 .143 1-1 1.000 0 9 9 3 6-0 0 4 1 14 7.0
DeRozan 3-2 56 7-20 .350 1-2 .500 5-5 1.000 4 9 13 2 1-0 0 4 2 20 6.7
Evans 1-0 9 3-3 1.000 0-0 0-2 .000 0 4 4 0 1-0 1 1 0 6 6.0
Johnson 3-1 54 6-14 .429 0-0 2-2 1.000 4 6 10 1 10-0 0 2 2 14 4.7
Nesterovic 3-0 24 6-11 .545 0-0 0-1 .000 1 4 5 1 2-0 2 1 1 12 4.0
Mensah-Bonsu (TOT) 1-0 9 1-3 .333 0-0 1-2 .500 2 1 3 0 0-0 0 2 1 3 3.0
Mensah-Bonsu (TOR) 1-0 9 1-3 .333 0-0 1-2 .500 2 1 3 0 0-0 0 2 1 3 3.0
OBryant 1-0 5 0-1 .000 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 1-0 0 0 0 0 0.0
RAPTORS 3 720 113-261 .433 17-62 .274 54-64 .844 38 103 141 66 57-0 21 36 14 297 99.0
BULLS 3 720 107-250 .428 9-43 .209 48-68 .706 35 92 127 62 53-2 16 37 18 271 90.3

2009-10 BULLS vs. RAPTORS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (1-2) CHICAGO BULLS VS. TORONTO
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Rose 3-3 99 21-46 .457 0-3 .000 7-10 .700 2 7 9 18 2-0 2 4 1 49 16.3
Deng 3-3 101 17-38 .447 1-5 .200 6-7 .857 1 18 19 7 2-0 4 7 4 41 13.7
Noah 3-3 89 15-23 .652 0-0 9-12 .750 13 24 37 12 10-1 0 5 3 39 13.0
Gibson 3-3 86 14-23 .609 0-0 4-10 .400 8 8 16 2 12-0 3 7 5 32 10.7
Brown (TOT) 1-1 32 4-9 .444 1-5 .200 1-2 .500 1 2 3 1 1-0 3 1 0 10 10.0
Salmons 2-2 75 7-23 .304 2-11 .182 2-2 1.000 1 8 9 3 3-0 2 0 0 18 9.0
Hinrich 2-1 65 5-19 .263 3-6 .500 4-5 .800 1 6 7 7 3-0 1 6 1 17 8.5
Pargo 3-0 53 9-27 .333 1-9 .111 2-3 .667 1 4 5 5 4-0 2 3 0 21 7.0
Miller 3-0 52 5-16 .313 1-3 .333 8-10 .800 3 6 9 4 3-0 0 3 1 19 6.3
Gray 1-0 10 3-7 .429 0-0 0-1 .000 1 2 3 0 2-0 0 0 0 6 6.0
Warrick (TOT) 3-0 34 7-13 .538 0-0 4-7 .571 2 3 5 2 5-0 1 1 1 18 6.0
Warrick (CHI) 1-0 16 3-6 .500 0-0 4-6 .667 1 1 2 0 1-0 0 1 1 10 10.0
Murray (TOT) 3-0 67 6-16 .375 0-3 .000 2-2 1.000 0 4 4 6 6-0 0 1 1 14 4.7
Murray (CHI) 1-0 26 4-9 .444 0-2 .000 2-2 1.000 0 4 4 3 0-0 0 0 0 10 10.0
Johnson 2-0 20 3-7 .429 1-1 1.000 0-0 3 1 4 0 9-1 1 0 2 7 3.5
Hunter 1-0 27 1-6 .167 0-3 .000 0-0 0 3 3 1 2-0 1 1 0 2 2.0
Law (TOT) 1-0 5 1-2 .500 0-0 0-0 0 1 1 1 0-0 0 1 0 2 2.0
Richard 1-0 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0.0
BULLS 3 720 107-250 .428 9-43 .209 48-68 .706 35 92 127 62 53-2 16 37 18 271 90.3
CHICAGO BULLS
ALL-TIME RAPTORS vs. BULLS: 27-29 (Home 15-14, Road 12-15)

Season Date Score Site Season Date Score Site


2009-10 April 11 L 104-88 Toronto 2001-02 April 5 W 98-96 Chicago
(2-1) December 5 W 110-78 Chicago (4-0) April 3 W 117-104 Toronto
November 11 W 99-89 Toronto January 9 W 85-73 Chicago
December 20 W 96-91 Toronto
2008-09 April 15 W 109-98 Chicago
(3-1) March 29 W 134-129 OT Toronto 2000-01 April 8 W 100-88 Toronto
January 23 W 114-94 Chicago (4-0) January 27 W 90-80 Chicago
January 14 L 109-98 Toronto November 26 W 101-89 Toronto
November 11 W 98-75 Chicago
2007-08 April 16 L 107-97 Chicago
(2-1) November 25 W 93-78 Toronto 1999-2000 April 16 W 85-84 Toronto
November 10 W 101-71 Chicago (4-0) April 8 W 98-79 Chicago
February 29 W 87-80 Toronto
2006-07 April 8 W 103-89 Toronto January 29 W 106-89 Chicago
(2-2) February 13 W 112-111 Chicago
December 29 L 107-97 Toronto 1998-99 March 28 W 91-78 Toronto
December 8 L 93-90 Chicago (2-1) March 23 W 113-90 Chicago
February 28 L 90-88 (OT) Toronto
2005-06 April 19 L 127-106 Chicago
(0-4) January 25 L 104-88 Toronto 1997-98 March 22 L 102-100 Toronto
January 9 L 113-104 Chicago (0-4) February 19 L 123-86 Toronto
December 14 L 105-94 Toronto February 10 L 93-86 Chicago
December 13 L 97-70 Chicago
2004-05 April 9 L 110-97 Chicago
(0-3) March 23 L 121-115 Toronto 1996-97 April 14 L 117-100 Chicago
February 16 L 121-115 Toronto (1-3) March 27 L 96-83 Toronto
January 25 L 110-98 Chicago
2003-04 April 11 L 114-108 (OT) Toronto December 8 W 97-89 Toronto
(0-4) March 19 L 96-91 Toronto
February 17 L 75-73 Chicago 1995-96 March 24 W 109-108 Toronto
January 25 L 96-89 Chicago (1-3) January 18 L 92-89 Toronto
December 22 L 113-104 Chicago
2002-03 February 26 L 103-95 Chicago November 7 L 117-108 Chicago
(2-2) December 18 L 96-83 Chicago
December 6 W 103-89 Toronto
November 4 W 109-105 (OT) Toronto

2010-11 SCHEDULE
Date Site Time (ET)
Wednesday, December 15 Toronto 7:00 p.m.
Tuesday, January 4 Chicago 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, February 23 Toronto 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, April 2 Chicago 8:00 p.m.
NEW YORK KNICKS
TEAM DIRECTORY
President ..............................................................................Donnie Walsh
Head Coach...........................................................................Mike DAntoni
Assistant Coaches............................................Herb Williams, Phil Weber,
......................................Dan DAntoni, Kenny Akinson, Greg Brittenham
Athletic Trainer........................................................................Roger Hinds
PR staff.......Jonathan Supranowitz, Nick Brown, Alyson Furch, Gregg Schwartz
Madison Square Garden Television.............................................................Mike Breen, Walt Frazier
Radio...........................................................Gus Johnson, John Andariese,
Two Pennsylvania Plazza
.........................Alfredo Bejar (Spanish), Juan Antonio Caines (Spanish),
(212) 465-6471 MIKE DANTONI
..................................................................Clemson Smith-Muniz (Spanish)
www.nyknicks.com Head Coach
Arena.................................Madison Square Garden (19,763), opened 1968

BACKGROUND SERIES FACTS VS. KNICKS


History.......................................................................Founded in 1946 Current Streak........................................................................Won 4
Colours..........................................................Orange, Blue and White Current Home Streak.............................................................Won 2
NBA Titles.......................................................................2, (1970, 73) Current Road Streak..............................................................Won 3
Conference Titles.............................................................................8 Last Home Win.............................................April 14, 2010 (131-113)
Division Titles..............................................................................7 Last Home Loss..............................................April 5, 2009 (112-103)
2009-10 Record.........................................29-53 (.354), 3rd in Atlantic Last Road Win.........................................January 28, 2010 (106-104)
2010 NBA Playoffs.......................................................Did Not Qualify Last Road Loss......................................February 20, 2009 (127-97)
Largest Margin of Victory...................................26, January 15, 2006
Largest Margin of Defeat.........................................46, April 15, 1996

2009-10 RAPTORS vs. KNICKS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (4-0) TORONTO RAPTORS VS. NEW YORK
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Bosh 2-2 73 17-34 .500 0-1 .000 11-14 .786 3 16 19 1 5-0 1 8 1 45 22.5
DeRozan 3-2 92 18-27 .667 0-0 17-22 .773 1 12 13 6 10-0 2 2 1 53 17.7
Calderon 4-1 100 28-45 .622 5-8 .625 3-3 1.000 0 9 9 21 4-0 3 4 0 64 16.0
Bargnani 4-4 140 23-52 .442 8-16 .500 5-9 .556 1 22 23 9 11-0 2 6 7 59 14.8
Turkoglu 4-4 112 16-33 .485 8-19 .421 16-23 .696 3 27 30 14 11-0 5 6 2 56 14.0
Weems 4-2 104 24-37 .649 0-0 2-2 1.000 5 15 20 8 6-0 5 5 1 50 12.5
Johnson 4-2 112 21-34 .618 0-1 .000 4-6 .667 10 16 26 4 13-1 2 6 5 46 11.5
Jack 4-3 109 16-32 .500 2-10 .200 7-9 .778 3 11 14 10 7-0 4 8 0 41 10.3
Belinelli 2-0 36 5-11 .455 3-5 .600 1-2 .500 0 3 3 3 3-0 0 2 0 14 7.0
Wright 3-0 70 8-17 .471 4-9 .444 0-0 2 7 9 1 4-0 1 3 1 20 6.7
Nesterovic 3-0 7 1-2 .500 0-0 1-2 .500 1 0 1 2 2-0 0 2 0 3 1.0
Evans 1-0 5 0-1 .000 0-0 0-1 .000 0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0.0
RAPTORS 4 960 177-325 .545 30-69 .435 67-93 .720 29 138 167 79 76-1 25 52 18 451 112.8
KNICKS 4 960 154-343 .449 36-101 .356 73-89 .820 44 118 162 85 75-0 24 56 10 417 104.3

2009-10 KNICKS vs. RAPTORS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (0-4) NEW YORK KNICKS VS. TORONTO
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Lee 4-4 160 41-75 .547 0-0 14-17 .824 18 43 61 17 12-0 4 13 3 96 24.0
Harrington 3-1 103 20-50 .400 8-23 .348 13-14 .929 2 16 18 7 12-0 1 4 1 61 20.3
Gallinari 4-4 156 24-59 .407 14-31 .452 17-21 .810 2 14 16 5 10-0 7 5 2 79 19.8
Walker (TOT) 2-2 61 12-23 .522 6-10 .600 6-7 .857 3 8 11 2 6-0 0 1 1 36 18.0
Walker (NY) 2-2 61 12-23 .522 6-10 .600 6-7 .857 3 8 11 2 6-0 0 1 1 36 18.0
Douglas 1-0 35 5-12 .417 2-5 .400 2-2 1.000 1 1 2 5 2-0 1 2 0 14 14.0
Chandler 3-2 101 18-36 .500 0-3 .000 5-5 1.000 3 6 9 4 8-0 1 7 2 41 13.7
McGrady (TOT) 1-1 33 5-11 .455 0-3 .000 3-6 .500 0 6 6 4 4-0 0 6 0 13 13.0
McGrady (NY) 1-1 33 5-11 .455 0-3 .000 3-6 .500 0 6 6 4 4-0 0 6 0 13 13.0
Barron 1-1 40 4-10 .400 0-0 3-4 .750 4 3 7 1 3-0 1 1 0 11 11.0
Robinson 2-0 44 7-21 .333 2-9 .222 3-4 .750 0 2 2 7 1-0 2 2 0 19 9.5
Rodriguez (TOT) 2-0 38 7-12 .583 0-1 .000 2-2 1.000 3 3 6 8 3-0 0 6 0 16 8.0
Rodriguez (NY) 2-0 38 7-12 .583 0-1 .000 2-2 1.000 3 3 6 8 3-0 0 6 0 16 8.0
House (TOT) 4-0 77 9-28 .321 6-21 .286 3-3 1.000 1 4 5 7 6-0 0 0 1 27 6.8
House (NY) 1-0 18 0-4 .000 0-3 .000 1-1 1.000 0 1 1 1 1-0 0 0 0 1 1.0
Duhon 3-3 95 7-18 .389 3-10 .300 1-2 .500 0 6 6 20 2-0 3 5 0 18 6.0
Jeffries 2-2 50 3-6 .500 1-2 .500 2-2 1.000 4 6 10 2 7-0 3 1 0 9 4.5
Giddens (TOT) 4-1 38 3-6 .500 0-1 .000 3-4 .750 2 4 6 3 4-0 2 2 1 9 2.3
Giddens (NY) 1-0 15 1-2 .500 0-1 .000 1-2 .500 2 2 4 2 2-0 1 0 0 3 3.0
Bender 1-0 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 1-0 0 1 0 0 0.0
Hill 1-0 7 0-4 .000 0-0 0-0 2 1 3 0 1-0 0 0 1 0 0.0
KNICKS 4 960 154-343 .449 36-101 .356 73-89 .820 44 118 162 85 75-0 24 56 10 417 104.3
RAPTORS 4 960 177-325 .545 30-69 .435 67-93 .720 29 138 167 79 76-1 25 52 18 451 112.8
NEW YORK KNICKS
ALL-TIME RAPTORS vs. KNICKS: 29-28 (Home 18-10, Road 11-18)

Season Date Score Site Season Date Score Site


2009-10 April 14 W 131-113 Toronto 2002-03 March 30 W 95-86 Toronto
(4-0) March 5 W 102-96 Toronto (1-3) March 24 L 100-90 New York
January 28 W106-104 New York January 1 L 95-75 New York
January 15 W 112-104 New York November 27 L 87-81 Toronto

2008-09 April 5 L 112-103 Toronto 2001-02 February 13 L 89-82 New York


(2-2) April 4 W 102-95 New York (0-3) January 23 L 96-92 Toronto
February 22 W 112-100 Toronto December 25 L 102-94 New York
February 20 L 127-97 New York
2007-08 March 28 W 103-95 Toronto 2000-01 March 15 L 88-72 New York
(3-1) February 24 W 115-92 Toronto (3-1) March 4 W 98-88 Toronto
February 22 L 103-99 New York December 14 W 70-68 Toronto
January 11 W 99-90 New York November 25 W 79-75 New York

2006-07 April 15 W 107-105 Toronto 1999-2000 April 14 W 86-71 Toronto


(3-1) March 18 L 92-74 New York (3-1) February 23 W 99-88 New York
March 14 W 104-94 Toronto February 15 W 91-70 Toronto
December 2 W 103-100 New York December 22 L 91-90 New York

2005-06 March 21 W 114-109 New York 1998-99 April 17 W 93-90 New York
(3-1) February 15 L 98-96 New York (2-1) March 21 W 85-81 (OT) Toronto
February 3 W 104-90 Toronto February 16 L 95-85 New York
January 15 W 129-103 Toronto
1997-98 April 16 L 108-79 New York
2004-05 April 12 W 105-93 New York (1-3) January 17 L 93-82 Toronto
(3-1) January 19 W 99-81 Toronto December 27 W 97-94 New York
November 27 L 108-102 New York November 12 L 93-70 Toronto
November 24 W 114-91 Toronto
1996-97 March 5 L 100-94 Toronto
2003-04 March 26 L 108-101 New York (0-3) November 14 L 99-96 New York
(1-3) March 5 L 109-103 Toronto November 1 L 107-99 Toronto
January 19 L 90-79 New York
December 19 W 105-99 Toronto 1995-96 April 15 L 125-79 New York
(0-4) April 6 L 139-106 Toronto
March 6 L 89-82 Toronto
December 23 L 103-91 New York

2010-11 SCHEDULE
Date Site Time (ET)
Wednesday, October 27 Toronto 7:00 p.m.
Sunday, December 5 Toronto 1:00 p.m.
Wednesday, December 8 New York 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, April 5 New York 7:30 p.m.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS
TEAM DIRECTORY
President....................................................................................Rod Thorn
General Manager....................................................................Ed Stefanski
Head Coach............................................................................Doug Collins
Associate Head Coach..........................................................Michael Curry
Assistant Coaches........................Brian James, Quin Snyder, Aaron McKie
Athletic Trainer....................................................................Kevin Johnson
3601 South Broad Street Strength and Conditioning....................................................Jesse Wright
PR staff..........................Michael Preston, Sean McCloskey, Harvey Pollack
(215) 339-7666
Television...........................................................Marc Zumoff, Ed Pinckney
www.sixers.com DOUG COLLINS
Radio....................................................................................Tom McGinnis
Arena.........................................Wells Fargo Center (20,328), opened 1996 Head Coach

BACKGROUND SERIES FACTS VS. KNICKS


History..................................................Syracuse Nationals, 1949-63; Current Streak........................................................................Won 1
.........................................................Philadelphia 76ers, 1963-present Current Home Streak.............................................................Lost 1
Colours............................................Red, White, Blue, Gold and Silver Current Road Streak..............................................................Won 1
NBA Titles.................................................................3 (1955, 67, 83) Last Home Win......................................February 10, 2010 (104-93)
Conference Titles.............................................................................9 Last Home Loss...........................................March 7, 2010 (114-101)
Division Titles.................................................................................12 Last Road Win..........................................April 3, 2010 (128-123 OT)
2009-10 Record.........................................27-55 (.329), 3rd in Atlantic Last Road Loss..........................................March 11, 2009 (115-106)
2010 NBA Playoffs.......................................................Did Not Qualify Largest Margin of Victory..........................................22, April 2, 1997
Largest Margin of Defeat.........................................29, April 19, 1998

2009-10 RAPTORS vs. SIXERS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (3-1) TORONTO RAPTORS VS. PHILADELPHIA
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Bosh 4-4 156 32-58 .552 0-0 28-35 .800 13 32 45 17 8-0 2 14 0 92 23.0
Bargnani 4-4 160 27-58 .466 7-18 .389 12-14 .857 6 17 23 6 7-0 2 8 8 73 18.3
Jack 4-3 117 19-39 .487 5-10 .500 6-11 .545 0 7 7 26 10-0 6 6 1 49 12.3
Weems 4-3 100 22-35 .629 1-1 1.000 1-1 1.000 1 13 14 4 9-0 2 5 1 46 11.5
Calderon 4-1 100 16-34 .471 5-14 .357 5-5 1.000 0 5 5 24 14-0 4 5 1 42 10.5
Turkoglu 2-1 67 7-16 .438 3-10 .300 3-4 .750 1 5 6 5 4-0 3 5 1 20 10.0
DeRozan 4-3 79 13-26 .500 0-0 9-13 .692 6 9 15 2 3-0 4 3 0 35 8.8
Wright 4-1 94 11-27 .407 3-10 .300 3-6 .500 4 7 11 5 10-0 3 5 2 28 7.0
Belinelli 3-0 43 6-14 .429 2-5 .400 5-6 .833 0 3 3 7 5-0 2 4 0 19 6.3
Johnson 4-0 44 9-11 .818 0-0 5-5 1.000 4 12 16 0 3-0 3 5 3 23 5.8
Evans 3-0 24 6-9 .667 0-0 2-5 .400 3 7 10 1 0-0 2 2 1 14 4.7
RAPTORS 4 985 168-327 .514 26-68 .382 79-105 .752 38 117 155 97 73-0 33 67 18 441 110.3
76ERS 4 985 163-326 .500 26-73 .356 84-98 .857 37 115 152 96 88-2 45 66 21 436 109.0

2009-10 SIXERS vs. RAPTORS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (1-3) PHILADELPHIA 76ERS VS. TORONTO
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Iverson (TOT) 1-1 34 7-13 .538 1-2 .500 7-7 1.000 0 2 2 4 3-0 1 0 0 22 22.0
Iverson (PHI) 1-1 34 7-13 .538 1-2 .500 7-7 1.000 0 2 2 4 3-0 1 0 0 22 22.0
Young 3-2 116 28-54 .519 3-9 .333 6-8 .750 9 11 20 3 7-0 7 6 0 65 21.7
Iguodala 4-4 180 22-49 .449 6-17 .353 24-30 .800 5 28 33 35 9-0 12 12 5 74 18.5
Williams 4-2 125 27-45 .600 5-13 .385 14-14 1.000 1 12 13 14 10-0 1 10 0 73 18.3
Holiday 4-3 114 22-32 .688 6-9 .667 5-5 1.000 2 10 12 19 6-0 6 9 3 55 13.8
Brand 3-3 81 15-32 .469 0-0 5-6 .833 5 10 15 3 11-0 2 8 1 35 11.7
Dalembert 4-3 107 13-22 .591 0-0 5-6 .833 7 24 31 4 12-1 4 5 7 31 7.8
Green 4-1 92 10-33 .303 1-11 .091 10-11 .909 1 6 7 8 5-0 3 4 1 31 7.8
Smith 3-0 43 8-15 .533 1-2 .500 1-2 .500 2 6 8 1 11-1 3 4 3 18 6.0
Speights 4-0 31 7-14 .500 0-0 5-7 .714 2 5 7 1 7-0 2 2 0 19 4.8
Carney 2-0 10 2-4 .500 2-2 1.000 0-0 1 0 1 0 3-0 1 1 0 6 3.0
Ivey 1-0 15 1-3 .333 0-2 .000 0-0 1 0 1 1 1-0 0 0 0 2 2.0
Kapono 3-1 38 1-10 .100 1-6 .167 2-2 1.000 1 1 2 3 3-0 3 1 1 5 1.7
Elson (TOT) 1-0 9 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 1 1 1-0 0 0 0 0 0.0
Meeks (TOT) 1-0 16 0-2 .000 0-1 .000 0-0 0 2 2 2 2-0 0 0 0 0 0.0
76ERS 4 985 163-326 .500 26-73 .356 84-98 .857 37 115 152 96 88-2 45 66 21 436 109.0
RAPTORS 4 985 168-327 .514 26-68 .382 79-105 .752 38 117 155 97 73-0 33 67 18 441 110.3
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS
ALL-TIME RAPTORS vs. SIXERS: 29-28 (Home 15-13, Road 14-15)

Season Date Score Site Season Date Score Site


2009-10 April 3 W 128-123 OT Philadelphia 2002-03 March 23 L 112-95 Toronto
(3-1) March 7 L 114-101 Toronto (0-3) November 24 L 94-84 Toronto
February 10 W 104-93 Toronto November 22 L 90-80 Philadelphia
January 8 W108-106 Philadelphia
2001-02 March 31 W 72-70 Philadelphia
2008-09 April 12 W 111-104 Toronto (3-1) March 3 L 96-84 Toronto
(2-2) March 11 L 115-106 Philadelphia February 4 W 100-93 Philadelphia
November 12 L 106-96 Toronto November 25 W 107-88 Toronto
October 29 W 95-84 Philadelphia
2000-01 April 3 W 100-86 Toronto
2007-08 January 19 L 99-95 Philadelphia (3-1) January 30 W 96-89 Toronto
(3-1) January 9 W 109-96 Toronto January 21 W 110-106 (OT) Philadelphia
November 9 W 105-103 Philadelphia November 1 L 104-98 Philadelphia
October 31 W 106-97 Toronto
1999-2000 March 22 L 106-93 Philadelphia
2006-07 April 18 L 122-119 Toronto (0-3) December 15 L 93-91 Philadelphia
(3-1) April 6 W 94-85 Philadelphia November 14 L 93-90 Toronto
January15 W 104-86 Philadelphia
November 8 W 106-104 Toronto 1998-99 May 1 L 103-96 Philadelphia
(1-2) April 14 L 96-78 Philadelphia
2005-06 March 14 W 111-97 Philadelphia April 4 W 97-82 Toronto
(1-3) December 18 L 107-80 Toronto
November 16 L 121-115 Toronto 1997-98 April 19 L 107-78 Toronto
November 15 L 104-92 Philadelphia (2-2) April 5 L 116-104 Philadelphia
January 26 W 91-87 Toronto
2004-05 March 25 L 103-101 Philadelphia December 10 W 104-97 Philadelphia
(1-3) March 13 W 128-110 Toronto
February 11 L 106-91 Toronto 1996-97 April 2 W 112-90 Philadelphia
January 14 L 106-96 Philadelphia (3-1) March 18 W 117-105 Toronto
January 29 L 101-99 Philadelphia
2003-04 February 3 W 93-80 Philadelphia November 13 W 110-98 Toronto
(3-1) January 28 W 94-84 Toronto
December 2 W 95-88 Philadelphia 1995-96 April 21 L 109-105 Toronto
November 19 L 81-75 Toronto (1-3) March 27 L 103-94 Philadelphia
March 12 L 118-110 Philadelphia
December 1 W 105-102 Toronto

2010-11 SCHEDULE
Date Site Time (ET)
Wednesday, November 17 Philadelphia 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, November 24 Toronto 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, January 26 Toronto 7:00 p.m.
Friday, April 8 Philadelphia 7:00 p.m.
PHOENIX SUNS
TEAM DIRECTORY
President of Basketball Operations..........................................Lon Babby
Head Coach.............................................................................Alvin Gentry
Assistant Coaches...........................................Bill Cartwright, Dan Majerle,
.......................................................................Igor Kokoskov, Noel Gillespie
Athletic Trainer......................................................................Aaron Nelson
Strength and Conditioning........................................................Mike Elliott
US Airways Center PR staff..................................................Julie Fie, DC Headley, Vince Kozar
Television..........Tom Leander, Gary Bender,Eddie Johnson, Scott Williams
201 East Jefferson Street
Radio....................................................................Al McCoy, Tim Kempton
Phoenix, AZ 85004 ALVIN GENTRY
......................................Ivan Valenzuela (Spanish), Arturo Ochoa (Spanish)
(602) 379-7900 Head Coach
Arena..........................................US Airways Center (18,422), opened 1992
www.suns.com

BACKGROUND SERIES FACTS VS. SUNS


History.......................................................................Founded in 1968 Current Streak........................................................................Lost 12
Colours.......................................................Purple, Orange and Black Current Home Streak.............................................................Lost 6
NBA Titles.........................................................................................0 Current Road Streak..............................................................Lost 6
Conference Titles.............................................................................2 Last Home Win............................................January 4, 2004 (83-73)
Division Titles...................................................................................6 Last Home Loss...................................November 29, 2009 (113-94)
2009-10 Record.........................................54-28 (.659), 2nd in Pacific Last Road Win.......................................February 10, 2004 (101-94)
2010 NBA Playoffs.......................................Defeated Portland 4-2; Last Road Loss....................................November 15, 2009 (101-100)
............................Defeated San Antonio 4-0; Lost to L.A. Lakers 4-2 Largest Margin of Victory...................................24, February 1, 1997
Largest Margin of Defeat..................................20, February 27, 2009

2009-10 RAPTORS vs. SUNS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (0-2) TORONTO RAPTORS VS. PHOENIX
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Bosh 2-2 74 23-45 .511 0-1 .000 9-15 .600 12 15 27 2 4-0 0 6 2 55 27.5
Bargnani 2-2 72 14-34 .412 2-8 .250 11-11 1.000 4 7 11 2 8-0 1 1 2 41 20.5
Turkoglu 2-2 76 12-34 .353 4-14 .286 2-2 1.000 2 12 14 6 8-0 2 5 1 30 15.0
DeRozan 2-2 43 7-15 .467 0-2 .000 6-6 1.000 1 2 3 2 6-0 2 1 0 20 10.0
Jack 2-0 41 6-12 .500 0-5 .000 0-1 .000 0 2 2 3 1-0 1 4 0 12 6.0
Belinelli 2-0 46 4-14 .286 3-9 .333 0-0 0 4 4 1 3-0 1 3 1 11 5.5
Calderon 2-2 64 4-14 .286 1-3 .333 1-1 1.000 1 4 5 14 3-0 4 0 0 10 5.0
Johnson 2-0 45 4-6 .667 0-0 1-2 .500 6 7 13 1 5-0 1 2 3 9 4.5
Weems 1-0 8 2-2 1.000 0-0 0-0 0 2 2 1 1-0 0 0 0 4 4.0
Mensah-Bonsu (TOT) 1-0 1 0-0 0-0 2-2 1.000 0 0 0 0 1-0 0 0 0 2 2.0
Mensah-Bonsu (TOR) 1-0 1 0-0 0-0 2-2 1.000 0 0 0 0 1-0 0 0 0 2 2.0
Wright 1-0 10 0-4 .000 0-2 .000 0-0 0 2 2 1 1-0 1 0 0 0 0.0
RAPTORS 2 480 76-180 .422 10-44 .227 32-40 .800 26 57 83 33 41-0 13 23 9 194 97.0
SUNS 2 480 78-162 .481 21-54 .389 37-44 .841 23 71 94 43 39-0 7 32 6 214 107.0

2009-10 SUNS vs. RAPTORS


2009-2010 SEASON SERIES (2-0) PHOENIX SUNS VS. TORONTO
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Stoudemire 2-2 72 18-25 .720 0-0 12-14 .857 8 7 15 3 8-0 2 6 2 48 24.0
Nash 2-2 71 18-36 .500 3-10 .300 4-4 1.000 1 6 7 25 2-0 1 5 0 43 21.5
Frye 2-2 68 11-19 .579 9-13 .692 4-4 1.000 3 12 15 2 7-0 0 2 1 35 17.5
Richardson 2-2 76 11-24 .458 4-9 .444 4-4 1.000 3 16 19 1 2-0 1 4 1 30 15.0
Barbosa 2-0 31 9-19 .474 3-9 .333 2-3 .667 1 7 8 1 4-0 0 3 0 23 11.5
Hill 2-2 67 5-17 .294 1-4 .250 5-6 .833 1 11 12 6 3-0 2 2 0 16 8.0
Dudley 2-0 43 2-8 .250 1-5 .200 2-2 1.000 3 5 8 2 4-0 1 2 2 7 3.5
Dragic 2-0 19 2-8 .250 0-4 .000 2-3 .667 0 1 1 2 3-0 0 2 0 6 3.0
Amundson 2-0 20 1-3 .333 0-0 2-4 .500 3 5 8 1 4-0 0 1 0 4 2.0
Clark 2-0 6 1-3 .333 0-0 0-0 0 1 1 0 0-0 0 0 0 2 1.0
Lopez 1-0 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 2-0 0 4 0 0 0.0
SUNS 2 480 78-162 .481 21-54 .389 37-44 .841 23 71 94 43 39-0 7 32 6 214 107.0
RAPTORS 2 480 76-180 .422 10-44 .227 32-40 .800 26 57 83 33 41-0 13 23 9 194 97.0
PHOENIX SUNS
ALL-TIME RAPTORS vs. SUNS: 7-21 (Home 4-10, Road 3-11)

Season Date Score Site Season Date Score Site


2009-10 November 29 L 113-94 Toronto 2002-03 March 17 L 95-91 (OT) Phoenix
(0-2) November 15 L 101-100 Phoenix (1-1) February 21 W 92-89 Toronto

2008-09 February 27 L 133-113 Phoenix 2001-02 December 9 L 91-90 Toronto


(0-2) January 18 L 117-113 Toronto (1-1) November 18 W 87-81 Phoenix

2007-08 December 22 L 122-103 Phoenix 2000-01 December 30 L 109-103 Phoenix


(0-2) December 5 L 136-123 Toronto (0-2) December 10 L 95-87 Toronto

2006-07 January 3 L 100-98 Toronto 1999-2000 February 27 W 103-102 Toronto


(0-2) December 19 L 115-98 Phoenix (1-1) November 23 L 94-93 Phoenix

2005-06 March 31 L 140-126 Toronto 1997-98 February 3 L 110-105 Toronto


(0-2) November 22 L 90-82 Phoenix (0-2) December 5 L 110-91 Phoenix

2004-05 January 30 L 123-105 Toronto 1996-97 March 11 W 105-101 Phoenix


(0-2) December 26 L 106-94 Phoenix (2-0) February 1 W 110-86 Toronto

2003-04 February 10 W 101-94 Phoenix 1995-96 February 23 L 110-105 Phoenix


(2-0) January 4 W 83-73 Toronto (0-2) November 10 L 112-108 Toronto

2010-11 SCHEDULE
Date Site Time (ET)
Friday, February 25 Toronto 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 23 Phoenix 9:00 p.m.
PRESEASON HISTORY VS. 2010 OPPONENTS
BOSTON (4-6) RESULTS LOCATION ATTENDANCE
October 18, 2009 Boston 101, Toronto 82 Toronto 13,607
October 14, 2009 Boston 107, Toronto 90 Hartford, Connecticut 10,117
October 6, 2007 Boston 89, Toronto 85 Rome, Italy 11,118
October 11, 2006 Toronto 118, Boston 112 (OT) Toronto 13,124
October 25, 2006 Toronto 106, Boston 102 Boston 11,032
October 14, 2005 Boston 107, Toronto 100 Manchester, New Hampshire 8,868
October 21, 2005 Toronto 93, Boston 83 Toronto 13,298
October 20, 2002 Toronto 84, Boston 73 Toronto 16,117
January 26, 1999 Boston 106, Toronto 88 Toronto 25,001
January 29, 1999 Boston 120, Toronto 99 Boston 18,624

CHICAGO (2-3) RESULTS LOCATION ATTENDANCE


October 27, 2006 Chicago 108, Toronto 97 Chicago 19,709
October 23, 2004 Toronto 91, Chicago 89 Chicago 14,723
October 21, 2003 Chicago 94, Toronto 91 Toronto 14,652
October 11, 2002 Chicago 87, Toronto 79 Chicago 15,248
October 16, 2001 Toronto 107, Chicago 89 Toronto 15,792

NEW YORK (3-0) RESULTS LOCATION ATTENDANCE


October 8, 2008 Toronto 113, New York 111 Toronto 15,274
October 19, 1997 Toronto 98, New York 91 Hartford, Connecticut 10,562
October 13, 1996 Toronto 78, New York 73 Ottawa, Ontario 9,662

PHILADELPHIA (2-8) RESULTS LOCATION ATTENDANCE


October 7, 2009 Philadelphia 84, Toronto 79 Toronto 11,974
October 6, 2009 Philadelphia 107, Toronto 98 London, Ontario 7,213
October 12, 2008 Philadelphia 85, Toronto 79 Toronto 14,427
October 15, 2004 Philadelphia 99, Toronto 97 Toronto 13,370
October 17, 2004 Philadelphia 108, Toronto 103 London, Ontario 7,619
October 13, 2002 Philadelphia 105, Toronto 101 (OT) Toronto 16,408
October 16, 2000 Philadelphia 107, Toronto 98 Chapel Hill, North Carolina 5,588
October 15, 1997 Toronto 124, Philadelphia 118 Toronto 15,962
October 14, 1995 Toronto 120, Philadelphia 107 Halifax, Nova Scotia 9,367
October 16, 1995 Philadelphia 121, Toronto 93 Saint John, New Brunswick 6,297

RAPTORS PRESEASON RESULTS IN CANADA


DATE RESULTS LOCATION ATTENDANCE
October 6, 2009 Philadelphia 107, Toronto 98 London, Ontario 7,213
October 21, 2008 Denver 105, Toronto 94 Edmonton, Alberta 17,534
October 24, 2005 Portland 105, Toronto 98 Winnipeg, Manitoba 17,458
October 17, 2004 Philadelphia 108, Toronto 103 London, Ontario 7,619
October 23, 2003 vs. Cleveland - Game Cancelled St. Johns, Newfoundland
October 12, 2000 Toronto 97, Vancouver 92 Ottawa, Ontario 14,783
October 18, 1999 Toronto 110, Vancouver 84 Edmonton, Alberta 12,852
October 24, 1997 Denver 114, Toronto 100 Hamilton, Ontario 10,962
October 20, 1997 Toronto 107, Vancouver 98 Halifax, Nova Scotia 8,190
October 27, 1996 Vancouver 80, Toronto 77 Calgary, Alberta 15,104
October 13, 1996 Toronto 78, New York 73 Ottawa, Ontario 9,662
October 11, 1996 Atlanta 100, Toronto 82 Halifax, Nova Scotia 7,589
2009-10 RESULTS
DATE OPPONENT SCORE
Wed. Oct. 28
Fri. Oct. 30
Sun. Nov. 1
Cleveland
@ Memphis
Orlando
W 101-91
L 115-107
L 125-116
TORONTO RAPTORS z
Wed. Nov. 4
Fri. Nov. 6
Detroit
@ New Orleans
W 110-99
W 107-90
2009-10 GAME NOTES
Sat. Nov. 7 @ Dallas L 129-101
Mon. Nov. 9 @ San Antonio L 131-124
Wed. Nov. 11 Chicago W 99-89
Fri. Nov. 13 @ L.A. Clippers W 104-89
Sun. Nov. 15 @ Phoenix L 101-100 Record Home Road Overtime
Tue. Nov. 17 @ Denver L 130-112 OVERALL: 40-42 25-16 15-26 2-2
Wed. Nov. 18 @ Utah L 104-91
Fri. Nov. 20 Miami W 120-113
EASTERN: 29-23 17-9 12-14 2-1
Sun. Nov. 22 Orlando L 104-96 WESTERN: 11-19 8-7 3-12 0-1
Tue. Nov. 24 Indiana W 123-112
Wed. Nov. 25 @ Charlotte L 116-81
Fri. Nov. 27 @ Boston L 116-103
Sun. Nov. 29 Phoenix L 113-94 40-42 (.488) Regular Season
Tue. Dec. 1 Washington L 106-102
Wed. Dec. 2 @ Atlanta L 146-115 Second in the Atlantic Division
Fri. Dec. 4 @ Washington W 109-107 OT
Sat. Dec. 5 @ Chicago W 110-78 Ninth in the Eastern Conference
Tue. Dec. 8 Minnesota W 94-88
Wed. Dec. 9 @ Milwaukee L 117-95
T-17th in the NBA
Fri. Dec. 11 Atlanta L 111-89
Sun. Dec. 13 Houston W 101-88
Tue. Dec. 15 @ Miami L 115-95 SEASON SUMMARY...
Wed. Dec. 16 @ Orlando L 118-99
Fri. Dec. 18 New Jersey W 118-95 The Toronto Raptors finished with a 40-42 record. The Raptors were 25-16 at home
Sun. Dec. 20 New Orleans W 98-92
Wed. Dec. 23 @ Detroit W 94-64 and 15-26 on the road. Toronto set franchise records by scoring 8,534 total points
Sun. Dec. 27 Detroit W 102-95 and averaging 104.1 points per game (fifth in the NBA). The Raptors also estab-
Wed. Dec. 30 Charlotte W 107-103
Sat. Jan. 2 @ Boston L 103-96 lished a new franchise mark with a .482 field goal percentage (fifth in the NBA).
Sun. Jan. 3 San Antonio W 91-86 Torontos NBA record consecutive game streak with at least one three-point field
Wed. Jan. 6 @ Orlando W 108-103
Fri. Jan. 8 @ Philadelphia W 108-106 goal made continued and is now at 942. Toronto set a franchise-high for points in
Sun. Jan. 10 Boston L 114-107 regulation time April 14 by defeating the New York Knicks 131-113 behind a fran-
Mon. Jan. 11 @ Indiana L 105-101
Fri. Jan. 15 @ New York W 112-104 chise-record .650 (52-of-80) shooting percentage from the field. For the second
Sun. Jan. 17 Dallas W 110-88 consecutive season, Chris Bosh was one of three players in the NBA to average 20
Tue. Jan. 19 @ Cleveland L 108-100
Wed. Jan. 20 @ Milwaukee L 113-107 points and 10 rebounds or assists (David Lee, Zack Randolph) in scoring a career-
Fri. Jan. 22 Milwaukee W 101-96 high 24.1 points (first on the team, ninth in the NBA) and averaging 10.8 rebounds
Sun. Jan. 24 L.A. Lakers W 106-105
Wed. Jan. 27 Miami W 111-103 (sixth in the NBA). Bosh also topped his personal and franchise record for double-
Thu. Jan. 28 @ New York W 106-104 doubles with 49 (previously 43). DeMar DeRozan appeared in 77 games and made
Sun. Jan. 31 Indiana W 117-102
Tue. Feb. 2 @ Indiana L 130-115 65 starts (third-most in team history for a rookie), averaging 8.6 points and 2.9
Wed. Feb. 3 New Jersey W 108-99 rebounds on .498 shooting from the field (fifth among rookies). Bosh missed the
Sun. Feb. 7 Sacramento W 115-104
Wed. Feb. 10 Philadelphia W 104-93 final five games of the season after sustaining a displaced nasal fracture April 6 at
Wed. Feb. 17 Memphis L 109-102 OT Cleveland and six games with a sprained left ankle (February. 19 March 1). Bosh
Fri. Feb. 19 @ New Jersey W 106-89
Sat. Feb. 20 Washington W 109-104 received his sixth and seventh NBA Player of the Week awards for the weeks of
Wed. Feb. 24 Portland L 101-87 January 25-31 and March 29-April 4. DeRozan finished second in the Sprite Slam
Fri. Feb. 26 Cleveland L 126-118 OT
Sun. Feb. 28 @ Oklahoma City L 119-99
Dunk contest after earning the chance to participate by defeating the Clippers Eric
Mon. Mar. 1 @ Houston L 116-92 Gordon in the inaugural NBA Dunk-In, held during halftime of the T-Mobile Rookie
Fri. Mar. 5 New York W 102-96
Sun. Mar. 7 Philadelphia L 114-101
Challenge. Bosh was named to the Eastern Conference All-Star team for the fifth
Tue. Mar. 9 @ L.A. Lakers L 109-107 time in his career and finished with 23 points and 10 rebounds. The Raptors had a
Wed. Mar. 10 @ Sacramento L 113-90
Sat. Mar. 13 @ Golden State L 124-112
season-best five-game win streak from January 3-11 en route to a 10-5 record for
Sun. Mar. 14 @ Portland L 109-98 the month. Bosh became the franchises all-time leading scorer in netting his 9,428th
Wed. Mar. 17 Atlanta W 106-105
Fri. Mar. 19 Oklahoma City L 115-89
point January 3 vs. San Antonio. From December 1 to February 15, Toronto had a
Sat. Mar. 20 @ New Jersey W 100-90 22-12 record, tying Utah for the third-best record in the NBA during that period and
Mon. Mar. 22 @ Minnesota W 106-100 trailing only the L.A. Lakers (28-10) and Cleveland (31-6). Toronto acquired forward
Wed. Mar. 24 Utah L 113-87
Fri. Mar. 26 Denver L 97-96 Hedo Turkoglu in a sign and trade with Orlando, plus forward Devean George and
Sun. Mar. 28 @ Miami L 97-94 guard Antoine Wright from Dallas as part of a four- team trade July 9. In the offseason,
Mon. Mar. 29 @ Charlotte W 103-101
Wed. Mar. 31 L.A. Clippers W 114-92 the Raptors signed guard Jarrett Jack to a multi-year contract and centre Rasho
Sat. Apr. 3 @ Philadelphia W 128-123 OT Nesterovic to a one-year contract. They also acquired guard Marco Belinelli from
Sun. Apr. 4 Golden State L 113-112
Tue. Apr. 6 @ Cleveland L 113-101 Golden State in exchange for forward Devean George and cash considerations and
Wed. Apr. 7 Boston L 115-104 acquired forward Amir Johnson and forward Sonny Weems from the Milwaukee
Fri. Apr. 9 @ Atlanta L 107-101
Sun. Apr. 11 Chicago L 104-88 Bucks in exchange for forward Carlos Delfino and guard Roko Ukic.
Mon. Apr. 12 @ Detroit W 111-97
Wed. Apr. 14 New York W 131-113
2009-10 KEY DATES
OCTOBER 14: Forward Reggie Evans left in the second quarter of a preseason game against Boston with a midfoot sprain in his left foot.
OCTOBER 28: Toronto opened its 15th season with a 101-91 victory over Cleveland in front of 20,152 at Air Canada Centre.
OCTOBER 29: Exercised a fourth-year team option on forward Marco Belinelli.

NOVEMBER 12: Released guard Quincy Douby.


NOVEMBER 17: Claimed forward Pops Mensah-Bonsu off waivers from Houston.
NOVEMBER 13: Raptors overcome a 22-point deficit against the Los Angeles Clippers for a 104-89 victory - the largest comeback win on
the road in team history.

DECEMBER 5: Guard Jose Calderon left during the fourth quarter at Chicago and would miss 10 of the next 11 games with a sore left hip.
DECEMBER 23: Defeated the Pistons 94-64 for the teams first victory at the Palace of Auburn Hills since 2003, ending an 11-game
losing streak at Detroit. Also set a team record for fewest points allowed during a road game (64) and lowest opponent field goal
percentage (.279) during a road game.
DECEMBER 27: Claimed the season series vs. Detroit for the first time in franchise history with a 102-95 win at Air Canada Centre.
DECEMBER 30: Defeated Charlotte 107-103 to set a team record with nine wins during the month of December. Extended win streak to a
season-high five games.

JANUARY 3: Forward Chris Bosh passed Vince Carter as the teams all-time career scoring leader with a 16-foot jumper at the 1:39 mark
of the third quarter vs. San Antonio. Carters previous record was 9,420 points.
JANUARY 6: Recorded the fastest return to .500 in team history with a 108-103 victory at Orlando. Toronto was six games under .500 on
December 15.
JANUARY 8: Forward Chris Bosh hit a game-winning jumper with 8.4 seconds remaining at Philadelphia for a 108-106 victory.
JANUARY 11: Indiana rallied from a 23-point deficit to defeat Toronto and post the largest comeback by an opponent in team history.
JANUARY 20: Forward Chris Bosh scored a career-high 44 points at Milwaukee.
JANUARY 24: Toronto defeated the defending NBA Champion Los Angeles Lakers 106-105 at Air Canada Centre.
JANUARY 31: The Raptors defeat Indiana 117-102 for a season-high five-game winning streak. Forward Hedo Turkoglu sustains a non-
displaced fracture of the orbital bone under his right eye after taking an elbow from Mike Dunleavy during the first quarter.

FEBRAURY 1: Forward Chris Bosh named Eastern Conference Player of the Week.
FEBRUARY 2: Centre Andrea Bargnani scored a career-high 34 points at Indiana.
FEBRUARY 10: Forward Reggie Evans makes his season debut after missing 51 games with a left midfoot sprain.
FEBRUARY 12: Rookie DeMar DeRozan defeated L.A. Clippers guard Eric Gordon in the inaugural NBA Dunk-In at All-Star Weekend.
FEBRUARY 13: Forward DeMar DeRozan advanced to the final round of the Sprite Slam Dunk contest, but lost to New Yorks Nate
Robinson.
FEBRUARY 14: Forward Chris Bosh scored 23 points and grabbed a team-high 10 rebounds for the Eastern Conference at the 2010 NBA
All-Star game in Dallas. Bosh earned his fifth All-Star selection, tying Vince Carter for the most in team history.
FEBRUARY 17: Forward Chris Bosh sprained his left ankle in overtime vs. Memphis. He finished the game but would miss the next six
contests (Feb. 19-Mar. 1).
FEBRUARY 20: Toronto played its first Saturday night home game in more than nine years, defeating the Washington Wizards 109-104.

MARCH 5: Forward Chris Bosh missed the game vs. New York due to a stomach virus.
MARCH 17: Forward Chris Bosh became the first player in team history to reach the 10,000 point mark.
MARCH 22: Forward Chris Bosh recorded his 44th double-double of the season, breaking his own team single-season record.

APRIL 4: Signed free-agent forward Joey Dorsey for the remainder of the season.
APRIL 5: Forward Chris Bosh named Eastern Conference Player of the Week. Tied Vince Carter for the most honours in team history with
seven.
APRIL 6: Forward Chris Bosh sustained a displaced nasal fracture during the first quarter at Cleveland following an elbow to the face from
Antawn Jamison.
APRIL 7: Forward Chris Bosh underwent successful surgery in Cleveland to repair a displaced nasal fracture. Forward Hedo Turkoglu left
in the first quarter vs. Boston with a non-displaced fracture on an old nasal fracture in the face. Forward Sonny Weems scored a career-
high 21 points against the Celtics.
APRIL 9: Forward Antoine Wright left in the third quarter vs. Atlanta with a sprained left ankle.
APRIL 12: Forward Amir Johnson scored a career-high 26 points during the Raptors 111-97 victory at Detroit. Guard Jarrett Jack recorded
a career-high 12 assists.
APRIL 14: Toronto scored a franchise-high 131 points, shot a franchise-best .650 (52-for-80) from the field and closed the season with a
victory over the New York Knicks. Forward DeMar DeRozan scored a career-high 24 points.
2009-10 STATISTICS AND RANKINGS
TORONTO RAPTORS (40-42) 2009-2010 REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS
PLAYER G-GS MIN FG-FGA PCT 3FG-FGA PCT FT-FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AST PF-DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG
Bosh 70-70 2526 600-1158 .518 8-22 .364 470-590 .797 205 554 759 166 170-1 43 169 68 1678 24.0
Bargnani 80-80 2799 537-1143 .470 121-325 .372 181-234 .774 105 388 493 93 215-3 25 120 111 1376 17.2
Jack 82-43 2243 323-671 .481 82-199 .412 203-241 .842 30 192 222 413 151-0 60 163 6 931 11.4
Turkoglu 74-69 2272 276-674 .409 108-289 .374 175-226 .774 42 301 343 304 220-3 55 125 32 835 11.3
Calderon 68-39 1817 274-668 .482 68-171 .398 83-104 .798 23 119 142 404 135-1 47 99 7 699 10.3
DeRozan 77-65 1664 255-512 .498 4-16 .250 148-194 .763 66 157 223 53 176-0 43 62 18 662 8.6
Weems 69-19 1368 236-458 .515 2-15 .133 44-64 .688 42 150 192 101 126-1 39 65 25 518 7.5
Belinelli 66-1 1121 154-379 .406 60-158 .380 101-121 .835 14 81 95 89 80-1 42 60 5 469 7.1
Wright 67-10 1392 162-399 .406 58-173 .335 53-77 .688 38 152 190 71 134-0 30 58 11 435 6.5
Johnson 82-5 1453 208-334 .623 0-4 .000 95-149 .638 154 241 395 48 255-1 44 63 66 511 6.2
Banks 22-0 244 39-73 .534 7-24 .292 24-29 .828 3 20 23 26 30-0 12 20 2 109 5.0
Nesterovic 42-8 413 81-149 .544 0-0 --- 1-5 .200 37 52 89 25 54-0 10 16 17 163 3.9
Evans 28-1 311 34-69 .493 0-0 --- 27-60 .450 30 75 105 8 44-0 14 22 4 95 3.4
Mensah-Bonsu (TOT) 20-0 120 13-33 .394 0-0 --- 13-24 .542 16 19 35 3 20-0 4 10 9 39 2.0
Mensah-Bonsu(TOR) 16-0 107 12-29 .414 0-0 --- 10-18 .556 15 16 31 2 17-0 3 10 8 34 2.1
O'Bryant 11-0 51 8-15 .533 0-1 .000 3-6 .500 2 9 11 1 12-0 2 5 4 19 1.7
RAPTORS 82 19780 3199-6631 .482 518-1397 .371 1618-2118 .764 806 2507 3313 1804 1819-11 469 1100 384 8534 104.1
OPPONENTS 82 19780 3194-6824 .468 609-1665 .366 1683-2146 .784 933 2453 3386 1889 1730-12 580 1040 360 8680 105.9

---------- --------SINGLE-GAME HIGHS------ ----------- AVERAGE PER GAME ---------- CAREER HIGHS (C=SET, T=TIED THIS SEASON)
PLAYER MIN REB AST ST TO BL PTS MIN REB AST STL TO BLK PTS FG FGA FT FTA REB AST PTS
Bosh 46 18 7 5 6 4 44 36.1 10.8 2.4 0.61 2.4 0.97 24.0 16T 31 22 24 22 9 44C
Bargnani 45 17 5 2 5 5 34 35.0 6.2 1.2 0.31 1.5 1.39 17.2 14C 25 9 12 17C 7 34C
Jack 40 8 12 4 5 1 27 27.4 2.7 5.0 0.73 2.0 0.07 11.4 13 22 13 16 9 12C 33
Turkoglu 43 19 11 3 7 3 26 30.7 4.6 4.1 0.74 1.7 0.43 11.3 13 23 14 16 19C 13 39
Calderon 37 6 12 3 6 1 24 26.7 2.1 5.9 0.69 1.5 0.10 10.3 12 21 9 9 9 19 27
DeRozan 38 9 3 2 4 2 24 21.6 2.9 0.7 0.56 0.8 0.23 8.6 9C 12C 11C 14C 9C 3C 24C
Weems 40 11 5 3 4 2 21 19.8 2.8 1.5 0.57 0.9 0.36 7.5 9C 22C 5C 6T 11C 5C 21C
Belinelli 33 5 4 3 4 1 21 17.0 1.4 1.3 0.64 0.9 0.08 7.1 11 21 8C 10C 7 6 27
Wright 38 8 4 3 4 2 19 20.8 2.8 1.1 0.45 0.9 0.16 6.5 10 18 6 8 11 6 24
Johnson 40 13 4 2 4 4 26 17.7 4.8 0.6 0.54 0.8 0.80 6.2 10T 14 6T 8C 14 4C 26C
Banks 24 6 4 4 4 1 15 11.1 1.0 1.2 0.55 0.9 0.09 5.0 12 19 12 14 7 10 28
Nesterovic 26 7 4 2 2 2 16 9.8 2.1 0.6 0.24 0.4 0.40 3.9 12 23 6 9 15 8 24
Evans 25 9 2 3 2 1 13 11.1 3.8 0.3 0.50 0.8 0.14 3.4 8 13 8 14 21 4 22
Mensah-Bonsu (TOT) 13 6 1 1 2 2 7 6.0 1.8 0.2 0.20 0.5 0.45 2.0 5 11 11 13 12 1T 21
Mensah-Bonsu (TOR) 13 6 1 1 2 2 7 6.7 1.9 0.1 0.19 0.6 0.50 2.1
O'Bryant 9 3 1 1 2 4 4 4.6 1.0 0.1 0.18 0.5 0.36 1.7 8 11 5 6 7 4 16
RAPTORS 265 58 37 12 25 10 131 241.2 40.4 22.0 5.72 13.4 4.68 104.1 52C 113 41 49 65 39 134
OPPONENTS 265 53 38 15 23 16 146 241.2 41.3 23.0 7.07 12.7 4.39 105.9 61 109 46 60 68 44 152

2009-10 AVERAGES 2009-10 RANKINGS

TOR OPP TOR OPP


PPG 104.1 105.9 PPG 5 27
FG% .482 .468 FG% 5 19
3FG% .371 .366 3FG% 6 26
FT% .764 .784 FT% 13 30
OFF 9.8 11.4 OFF 26 23
DEF 30.6 29.9 DEF 15 11
REB 40.4 41.3 REB T-23 14
AST 22.0 23.0 AST 10 24
STL 5.7 7.1 STL 30 16
TO 13.4 12.7 TO T-7 29
BLK 4.7 4.4 BLK 21 8
2009-10 TORONTO RAPTORS STATISTICS
Overall Eastern Western Atlantic Central Southeast Northwest Southwest Pacific OT
Record 40-42 29-23 11-19 11-5 10-8 8-10 2-8 5-5 4-6 2-2
Home 25-16 17-9 8-7 5-3 7-2 5-4 1-4 4-1 3-2 0-2
Away 15-26 12-14 3-12 6-2 3-6 3-6 1-4 1-4 1-4 2-0

Current Streaks Home Attendance...


Overall Won 2 Home totals 733,784
Home Won 1 Home average 17,897
Road Won 1 Home sellouts 7

Longest Streaks Road Attendance...


Overall Won 5 (2X), Lost 5 (3X) Road total 675,133
Home Won 8, Lost 3 (2X) Road average 16,075
Road Won 2 (4X), Lost 6 (2X) Road sellouts 14

Record By Day... Record By Month...


Monday 2-3 Friday 10-7 October/November 7-11 February 5-5
Tuesday 3-7 Saturday 4-3 December 9-6 March 6-10
Wednesday 12-11 Sunday 8-11 January 10-5 April 3-5
Thursday 1-0

Record When Offence Scores... Record When Defence Allows...


100 or more points 35-23 100 or more points 18-40
Less than 100 points 5-19 Less than 100 points 22-2

Record When Offence Shoots... Record When Defence Allows


50% or better from the field 23-7 50% or better from the field 2-22
Between 45-49% from the field 11-14 Between 45-49% from the field 15-13
Between 40-44% from the field 5-16 Between 40-44% from the field 14-7
Under 40% from the field 1-5 Under 40% from the field 9-0

Record When Toronto has... Record When Toronto has...


a better (or same) FG% than opponents 35-9 a lower FG% than opponent 5-33
more (or same) rebounds than opponents 25-10 fewer rebounds than opponent 15-32
more (or same) assists than opponents 30-10 fewer assists than opponent 10-32
fewer (or same) turnovers than opponents 22-17 more turnovers than opponent 18-25

Record When The Raptors...

After first quarter After first half After third quarter


Lead 27-12 28-9 29-8
Trailed 11-28 12-30 9-33
Tied 2-2 0-3 2-1

OT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Won 2 2 4 0 1 5 4 2 2 1 3 4 0 1 1 2
Lost 2 3 1 1 2 0 2 4 4 1 0 2 2 3 1 1

16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30+
Won 0 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
Lost 1 0 1 2 2 0 2 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 2

Biggest comeback by Toronto: 22 - Nov. 13 at L.A. Clippers


Biggest comeback by opponent: 23 - Jan. 11 at Indiana
LEADERS - INJURY REPORT
Game Leaders Points 10+ Games Double-
(Includes ties) PTS REB AST Bench PTS 10-19 20-29 30+ REB AST Doubles

Marcus Banks 1 5 2

Andrea Bargnani 15 10 48 25 2 10 10

Marco Belinelli 22 21 1

Chris Bosh 55 53 5 15 38 15 49 49

Jose Calderon 2 40 11 33 4 6 3

DeMar DeRozan 3 3 3 31 2

Quincy Douby

Reggie Evans 4 1 3

Jarrett Jack 6 2 35 17 39 5 4 2

Amir Johnson 2 6 10 19 2 5 2

Pops Mensah-Bonsu

Rasho Nesterovic 2 1 5

Patrick OBryant

Hedo Turkoglu 2 4 14 1 38 7 2 1 2

Sonny Weems 5 2 10 22 2 1 1

Antoine Wright 2 11 18

INJURY REPORT

Player No. of Games Dates Active/Inactive Injury


Reggie Evans 51 Oct. 28-Feb. 7 Inactive Left midfoot sprain

Jose Calderon 12 Dec. 8-9, Dec 13-Jan. 3 Inactive Sore left hip
1 Feb. 3 Inactive Sprained right ankle
1 Mar. 1 Inacitve Right elbow laceration

Antoine Wright 4 Nov. 15, Nov. 18-22 Inactive Sore left ankle
2 Mar. 17-19 Inactive Sore right ankle
3 Apr. 11-14 Inactive Sprained left ankle

Sonny Weems 2 Oct. 28-Oct. 30 Inactive Sore left foot


1 Jan. 19 Inactive Pulled rib muscle

Hedo Turkoglu 1 Nov. 17 Inactive Sore left hip


1 Jan. 3 Inactive Upper respiratory infection
2 Feb. 2-3 Active Fractured orbital bone, right eye
1 Mar. 7 Inactive Sore left ankle
1 Mar. 26 Inactive Stomach flu

Marco Belinelli 1 Nov. 22 Inactive Sore left groin


1 Jan. 17 Inactive Flu like symptoms
1 Feb. 7 Inactive Sore left ankle
3 Mar. 20-24 Inactive Sore lower back

Andrea Bargnani 1 Dec. 9 Inactive Sore right ankle


1 Jan. 22 Inactive Sore lower back
Marcus Banks 2 Jan. 10-11 Inactive Upper respiratory infection

DeMar DeRozan 5 Jan. 27-Feb. 3 Inactive Sprained right ankle

Chris Bosh 6 Feb. 19-Mar. 1 Inactive Sprained left ankle


1 Mar. 5 Inactive Stomach virus
5 Apr. 7-14 Inactive Displaced nasal fracture
INACTIVE REPORT - STARTING LINEUPS

INACTIVE REPORT
Player No. of Games Dates
Reggie Evans 51 Oct. 28-Feb. 7
Patrick OBryant 44 Nov. 24-Dec. 8, Dec. 11-Jan. 2, Jan. 6-8, Jan. 15, Jan. 20, Feb. 10-19, Feb. 26, Mar. 5-Apr. 6
Marcus Banks 36 Nov. 1, Nov. 6, Nov. 9-13, Nov. 17-20, Nov. 24-Dec. 5, Dec. 11, Jan. 10-11, Jan. 24, Feb. 17,
Feb. 20-24, Feb. 28, Mar. 9-14; Mar. 28-Apr. 9
Jose Calderon 14 Dec. 8, Dec. 9, Dec. 13-Jan. 3, Feb. 3, Mar. 1
Chris Bosh 12 Feb. 19-Mar. 5, Apr. 7-14
Quincy Douby 8 Oct. 28-Nov. 11
Antoine Wright 9 Nov. 15, Nov. 18-22, Mar. 17-19, Apr. 12-14
Joey Dorsey 7 Apr. 4-14
Marco Belinelli 6 Nov. 22, Jan. 17, Feb. 7, Mar. 20-24
Sonny Weems 5 Oct. 28-30, Nov. 4, Nov. 7, Jan. 19
Hedo Turkoglu 5 Nov. 17, Jan. 3, Feb. 7, Mar. 7, Mar. 26
DeMar DeRozan 4 Jan. 27-Feb. 2
Andrea Bargnani 2 Dec. 9, Jan. 22

2009-10 STARTING LINEUPS

Forward Forward Centre Guard Guard Record Win%


Bosh Turkoglu Bargnani DeRozan Calderon 10-13 .435
Bosh Wright Bargnani DeRozan Calderon 0-1 .000
Bosh Turkoglu Bargnani DeRozan Jack 13-13 .500
Bosh Turkoglu Nesterovic DeRozan Jack 1-1 .500
Bosh Wright Bargnani DeRozan Jack 1-0 1.000
Bosh Turkoglu Bargnani Weems Jack 3-0 1.000
Bosh Weems Bargnani Belinelli Jack 0-1 .000
Bosh Weems Bargnani Wright Jack 1-0 1.000
Bosh Weems Bargnani DeRozan Jack 1-1 .500
Bargnani Turkoglu Nesterovic DeRozan Jack 2-4 .333
Johnson Turkoglu Bargnani DeRozan Jack 3-1 .750
Bosh Wright Bargnani Weems Calderon 3-4 .429
Evans Turkoglu Bargnani Weems Calderon 0-1 .000
Johnson Turkoglu Bargnani Weems Calderon 2-2 .500

2009-10 TORONTO RECORD VS. OPPONENTS

Atlanta Hawks 1-3 Miami Heat 2-2


Boston Celtics 0-4 Milwaukee Bucks 1-2
Charlotte Bobcats 2-1 Minnesota Timberwolves 2-0
Chicago Bulls 2-1 New Jersey Nets 4-0
Cleveland Cavaliers 1-3 New Orleans Hornets 2-0
Dallas Mavericks 1-1 New York Knicks 4-0
Denver Nuggets 0-2 Oklahoma City 0-2
Detroit Pistons 4-0 Orlando Magic 1-3
Golden State Warriors 0-2 Philadelphia 76ers 3-1
Houston Rockets 1-1 Phoenix Suns 0-2
Indiana Pacers 2-2 Portland Trail Blazers 0-2
Los Angeles Clippers 2-0 Sacramento Kings 1-1
Los Angeles Lakers 1-1 San Antonio Spurs 1-1
Memphis Grizzlies 0-2 Utah Jazz 0-2
Washington Wizards 2-1
2009-10 TRANSACTIONS
MAY 11: Promoted Jay Triano to head coach.

JUNE 5: Named Alex English and Marc Iavaroni as assistant coaches.


JUNE 9: Acquired forward Reggie Evans from Philadelphia in exchange for guard/forward Jason Kapono.
JUNE 16: Extended a qualifying offer to restricted free agent guard/forward Carlos Delfino.
JUNE 25: Selected forward DeMar DeRozan ninth overall in the NBA Draft.
JUNE29: Extended a qualifying offer to restricted free agent forward Pops Mensah-Bonsu.

JULY 1: Named Eric Hughes, Alvin Williams and Francesco Cuzzolin as assistant coaches.
JULY 8: Signed forward Andrea Bargnani to a multi-year extension.
JULY 9: Acquired forward Hedo Turkoglu in a sign and trade with Orlando, plus forward Devean George and guard Antoine Wright from Dallas
as part of a four-team trade.
JULY 9: Signed first-round draft pick DeMar DeRozan to a rookie scale contract.
JULY 13: Signed restricted free-agent guard Jarrett Jack to an offer sheet.
JULY 21: Signed guard Jarrett Jack to a multi-year contract.
JULY 30: Signed centre Rasho Nesterovic to a one-year contract.
JULY 30: Acquired guard Marco Belinelli from Golden State in exchange for forward Devean George and cash considerations.

AUGUST 18: Acquired forward Amir Johnson and guard Sonny Weems from the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for forward Carlos Delfino and
guard Roko Ukic.

OCTOBER 28: Placed forward Reggie Evans (left midfoot sprain), guard Sonny Weems (sore left foot) and Quincy Douby on the inactive list.
OCTOBER 29: Exercised a fourth-year team option on guard Marco Belinelli.

NOVEMBER 1: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated guard Sonny Weems.
NOVEMBER 4: Placed guard Sonny Weems on the inactive list. Activated guard Marcus Banks.
NOVEMBER 6: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated guard Sonny Weems.
NOVEMBER 7: Placed guard Sonny Weems on the inactive list. Activated guard Marcus Banks.
NOVEMBER 9: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated guard Sonny Weems.
NOVEMBER 12: Released guard Quincy Douby.
NOVEMBER 15: Placed guard-forward Antoine Wright on the inactive list (sore left anke). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
NOVEMBER 17: Claimed forward Pops Mensah-Bonsu off waivers from Houston.
NOVEMBER 17: Placed forward Hedo Turkoglu (sore left hip) and guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated guard-forward Antoine
Wright and forward Pops Mensah-Bonsu.
NOVEMBER 18: Placed guard-forward Antoine Wright on the inactive list (sore left anke). Activated forward Hedo Turkoglu.
NOVEMBER 22: Placed guard Marco Belinelli on the inactive list (sore left groin). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
NOVEMBER 24: Placed guard Marcus Banks and centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Marco Belinelli and guard-
forward Antoine Wright on the active roster and

DECEMBER 8: Placed guard Jose Calderon on the inactive list (sore left hip). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
DECEMBER 9: Placed centre-forward Andrea Bargnani on the inactive list (sore right ankle). Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
DECEMBER 11: Place guard Marcus Banks and centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Jose Calderon and centre
Andrea Bargnani.
DECEMBER 13: Placed guard Jose Calderon on the inactive list (sore left hip). Activated guard Marcus Banks.

JANUARY 3: Placed forward Hedo Turkoglu (upper respiratory) on the inactive list. Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
JANUARY 5: Waived forward Pops Mensah-Bonsu.
JANUARY 6: Placed centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Jose Calderon and forward Hedo Turkoglu.
JANUARY 10: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list (upper respiratory infection). Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
JANUARY 15: Placed centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Marcus Banks.
JANUARY 17: Placed guard Marco Belinelli on the inactive list (flu-like symptoms). Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
JANUARY 19: Placed guard Sonny Weems on the inactive list (pulled rib muscle). Activated guard Marco Belinelli.
JANUARY 20: Placed centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Sonny Weems.
JANUARY 22: Placed centre Andrea Bargnani on the inactive list (sore lower back). Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
JANUARY 24: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated centre Andrea Bargnani.
JANUARY 27: Placed forward DeMar DeRozan (sprained right ankle) on the inactive list. Activated guard Marcus Banks.

FEBRUARY 3: Placed guard Jose Calderon on the inactive list (sprained right ankle). Activated forward DeMar DeRozan.
FEBRUARY 7: Placed guard Marco Belinelli on the inactive list (sore left ankle). Activated guard Jose Calderon.
FEBRAURY 10: Placed forward Hedo Turkoglu (personal reasons) and centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated forward Reggie
Evans and guard Marco Belinelli.
FEBRUARY 17: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated forward Hedo Turkoglu.
FEBRUARY 19: Placed forward Chris Bosh on the inactive list (sprained left ankle). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
FEBRUARY 20: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
FEBRUARY 26: Placed centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Marcus Banks.
FEBRUARY 28: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated centre Patrick OBryant.

MARCH 1: Placed guard Jose Calderon on the inactive list (right elbow laceration). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
MARCH 5: Placed centre Patrick OBryant on the inactive list. Activated guard Jose Calderon.
MARCH 7: Placed forward Hedo Turkoglu on the inactive list (sore left ankle). Activated forward Chris Bosh.
MARCH 9: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated forward Hedo Turkoglu.
MARCH 17: Placed guard-forward Antoine Wright on the inactive list (sore right ankle). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
MARCH 20: Placed guard Marco Belinelli on the inactive list (sore lower back). Activated forward Antoine Wright.
MARCH 26: Placed forward Hedo Turkoglu on the inactive list (stomach flu). Activated guard Marco Belinelli.
MARCH 28: Placed guard Marcus Banks on the inactive list. Activated forward Hedo Turkoglu.

APRIL 4: Signed forward Joey Dorsey for the remainder of the season.
APRIL 4: Placed forward Joey Dorsey on the inactive list.
APRIL 7: Placed forward Chris Bosh on the inactive list (maxilla and nasal fracture). Activated centre Patrick OBryant.
APRIL 11: Placed guard-forward Antoine Wright on the inactive list (sprained left ankle). Activated guard Marcus Banks.
LAST TIME

50+ points
Toronto: 51, Vince Carter; February 27, 2000 vs. Phoenix.
Opponent: 81, Kobe Bryant; January 22, 2006 at L.A. Lakers.

40+ points
Toronto: 44, Chris Bosh, January 20, 2010 at Milwaukee.
Opponent: 42, Dwyane Wade; March 6, 2009 vs. Miami.

Back-to-back 40+ points


Toronto: 42, Vince Carter; December 9, 2001 vs. Phoenix and 42, December 7, 2001 vs. Denver (OT).
Opponent: None.

20+ rebounds
Toronto: 22, Chris Bosh; November 14, 2006 at Golden State.
Opponent: 20, Troy Murphy; December 10, 2008 vs. Indiana.

20-point, 20-rebound games


Toronto: Chris Bosh; 23 points, 22 rebounds, November 14, 2006 at Golden State.
Opponent: Troy Murphy; 20 points, 20 rebounds, December 10, 2008 vs. Indiana.

15+ assists
Toronto: 19, Jose Calderon, March 29, 2009 vs. Chicago.
Opponent: 16, Deron Williams, March 24, 2010 vs. Utah.

Triple-doubles
Toronto: Alvin Williams, March 23, 2001 vs. Atlanta (11 points, 10 rebounds, 14 assists).
Opponent: Tyreke Evans, March 10, 2010 at Sacramento (19 points, 10 rebounds, 10 assists).

Two 30+ scorers


Toronto: Chris Bosh (35), Andrea Bargnani (34); February 2, 2010 at Indiana.
Opponent: Stephen Curry (35), Monta Ellis (31); March 13, 2010 at Golden State.

Four-Point Plays
Toronto: Jose Calderon, February 10, 2010 vs. Philadelphia.
Opponent: Ben Gordon, April 12, 2010 at Detroit.

Three 20+ scorers


Toronto: Chris Bosh (35), Andrea Bargnani (34), Marco Belinelli (21); February 2, 2010 at Indiana.
Opponent: LaMarcus Aldridge (22), Nicolas Batum (22), Brandon Roy (20); March 14, 2010 at Portland.

Four 20+ scorers


Toronto: Jose Calderon (24), Chris Bosh (23), Anthony Parker (23), Andrea Bargnani (20); January 23, 2008 at Boston.
Opponent: Jameer Nelson (30), JJ Redick (27), Dwight Howard (24), Ryan Anderson (20); November 1, 2009 vs. Orlando.

Three Double Figure Rebounders


Toronto: Andrea Bargnani (15), Chris Bosh (12), Amir Johnson (10); March 26, 2010 vs. Denver.
Opponent: Ben Wallace (15), Rasheed Wallace (13), Antonio McDyess (11); March 18, 2006 at Detroit.

Three Players with Double-Doubles


Toronto: Andrea Bargnani (18 pts, 10 reb), T.J. Ford (21 pts, 14 ast), Jorge Garbajosa (18 pts, 11 reb); Dec. 17, 2006 vs. Golden State.
Opponent: Jared Jeffries (21 pts, 10 reb), David Lee (15 pts, 12 reb), Quentin Richardson (20 pts, 10 reb); March 28, 2008 vs.
New York.

Four Players with Double-Doubles


Toronto: Shawn Marion (16 pts, 15 reb), Chris Bosh (11 pts, 12 reb), Andrea Bargnani (28 pts, 10 reb), Jose Calderon (13 pts, 11 ast);
February 22, 2009 vs. New York.
Opponent: Raymond Felton (10 pts, 12 ast), Brevin Knight (19 pts, 10 ast), Jumaine Jones (17 pts, 11 reb), Gerald Wallace (11 pts, 14
reb.); April 9, 2006 vs. Charlotte.
2009-10 RAPTORS HIGHS & LOWS
Category No. Opponent Date
Points, Game 131 vs. New York April 14, 2010
Points, Half 74 vs. Indiana (1st) November 24, 2009
Points, Quarter 44 vs. Detroit (2nd) November 4, 2009
Points, Overtime 13 at Washington December 4, 2009
Margin of Victory +32 at Chicago December 5, 2009
Largest Lead +40 vs. New Jersey December 18, 2009
Field Goals 52 vs. New York April 14, 2010
Field Goals Attempted 93 vs. Cleveland (OT) February 26, 2010
92 3X - last vs. Golden State April 4, 2010
Field Goal Pct. .650 vs. New York (52-of-80) April 14, 2010
3-Point FGM 14 at New Orleans November 6, 2009
HIGHS

3-Point FGA 29 at New Orleans November 6, 2009


3-Point FG Pct. .667 vs. New Jersey (6-of-9) December 18, 2009
FTM 40 vs. Minnesota December 8, 2009
FTA 48 vs. Minnesota December 8, 2009
FT Pct. 1.000 vs. Boston (12-of-12) April 7, 2010
Rebounds 58 vs. Denver March 26, 2010
Offensive Rebounds 19 at Denver November 17, 2009
Defensive Rebounds 43 vs. Denver March 26, 2010
Rebound Difference +21 at Chicago (53-to-32) December 5, 2009
Assists 37 at Detroit April 12, 2010
Assist Difference +17 at Detroit (37-to-20) April 12, 2010
Steals 12 vs. Charlotte December 30, 2009
Blocks 10 at Indiana January 11, 2010
Personal Fouls 35 at San Antonio November 9, 2009
Turnovers 25 at Boston November 27, 2009
Turnover Difference +12 vs. Charlotte (11-to-23) December 30, 2009

Category No. Opponent Date


Points, Game 81 at Charlotte November 25, 2009
Points, Half 35 at Charlotte (2nd) November 25, 2009
Points, Quarter 14 2X - last vs. Detroit (3rd) December 27, 2009
Points, Overtime 5 vs. Memphis February 17, 2010
Margin of Defeat -35 at Charlotte November 25, 2009
Largest Deficit -37 at Charlotte November 25, 2009
Field Goals 26 vs. Minnesota December 8, 2009
Field Goals Attempted 63 vs. Detroit December 27, 2009
Field Goal Pct. .325 vs. Minnesota (26-of-80) December 8, 2009
3-Point FGM 1 2X - last vs. San Antonio January 3, 2010
3-Point FGA 8 vs. San Antonio January 3, 2010
3-Point FG Pct. .050 vs. Phoenix (1-of-20) November 29, 2009
LOWS

FTM 6 vs. New York March 5, 2010


FTA 11 vs. New York March 5, 2010
FT Pct. .545 vs. New York (6-of-11) March 5, 2010
Rebounds 28 at Boston January 2, 2010
Offensive Rebounds 2 at Orlando January 6, 2010
Defensive Rebounds 19 vs. Charlotte December 30, 2009
Rebound Difference -22 at Atlanta (29-to-51) December 2, 2009
Assists 14 3X - last vs. Utah March 24, 2010
Assist Difference -18 at Boston (15-to-33) November 27, 2009
Steals 1 2X - last at Detroit April 12, 2010
Blocks 0 3X - last at Cleveland April 6, 2010
Personal Fouls 12 at Cleveland April 6, 2010
Turnovers 5 2X - last vs. Atlanta March 17, 2010
Turnover Difference -12 vs. Denver (19-to-7) March 26, 2010
2009-10 OPPONENT HIGHS & LOWS
Category No. Opponent Date
Points, Game 146 at Atlanta December 2, 2009
Points, Half 75 at Atlanta (1st) December 2, 2009
Points, Quarter 45 at Atlanta (2nd) April 9, 2010
Points, Overtime 15 vs. Cleveland February 26, 2010
Margin of Victory +35 at Charlotte November 25, 2009
Largest Lead +37 at Charlotte November 25, 2009
Field Goals 53 at Dallas November 7, 2009
Field Goals Attempted 98 vs. L.A. Lakers January 24, 2010
Field Goal Pct. .624 at Dallas (53-of-85) November 7, 2009
3-Point FGM 17 vs. Orlando November 1, 2009
3-Point FGA 33 vs. New York April 14, 2010
HIGHS

3-Point FG Pct. .750 vs. Philadelphia (9-of-12) March 7, 2010


FTM 36 2X - last at L.A. Lakers March 9, 2010
FTA 44 2X - last at L.A. Lakers March 9, 2010
FT Pct. 1.000 vs. L.A. Lakers (9-of-9) January 24, 2010
Rebounds 53 2X - last vs. Oklahoma City March 19, 2010
Offensive Rebounds 23 at Detroit December 23, 2009
Defensive Rebounds 40 2X - last vs. Chicago April 11, 2010
Rebound Difference +22 at Atlanta (51-to-29) December 2, 2009
Assists 38 at Cleveland April 6, 2010
Assist Difference +18 at Boston (33-to-15) November 27, 2009
Steals 15 at Boston November 27, 2009
Blocks 16 at Charlotte November 25, 2009
Personal Fouls 33 vs. Detroit December 27, 2009
Turnovers 23 2X - last vs. Charlotte December 30, 2009
Turnover Difference +12 vs. Denver (7-to-19) March 26, 2010

Category No. Opponent Date


Points, Game 64 at Detroit December 23, 2009
Points, Half 27 at Detroit (2nd) December 23, 2009
Points, Quarter 11 vs. Chicago (4th) November 11, 2009
Points, Overtime 11 at Washington December 4, 2009

Margin of Defeat -32 at Chicago December 5, 2009


Largest Deficit -40 vs. New Jersey December 18, 2009
Field Goals 24 at Detroit December 23, 2009
Field Goals Attempted 69 at Charlotte March 29, 2010
Field Goal Pct. .279 at Detroit (24-of-86) December 23, 2009
3-Point FGM 1 at Detroit December 23, 2009
3-Point FGA 8 vs. Chicago November 11, 2009
LOWS

3-Point FG Pct. .111 at Detroit (1-of-9) December 23, 2009


FTM 7 vs. L.A. Clippers March 31, 2010
FTA 9 vs. L.A. Lakers January 24, 2010
FT Pct. .467 vs. L.A. Clippers (7-of-15) March 31, 2010
Rebounds 26 at Boston November 27, 2009
Offensive Rebounds 3 2X - last at Cleveland April 6, 2010
Defensive Rebounds 18 vs. Washington February 20, 2010
Rebound Difference -21 at Chicago (32-to-53) December 5, 2009
Assists 10 at Detroit December 23, 2009
Assist Difference -17 at Detroit (20-to-37) April 12, 2010
Steals 2 2X - last vs. Atlanta March 17, 2010
Blocks 0 vs. Orlando November 22, 2009
Personal Fouls 13 2X - last at Cleveland April 6, 2010
Turnovers 6 at San Antonio November 9, 2009
Turnover Difference -12 vs. Charlotte (23-to-11) December 30, 2009
2009-10 INDIVIDUAL HIGHS
Category No. Name Opponent Date
Points, Game 44 Chris Bosh at Milwaukee January 20, 2010
Points, Half 25 Andrea Bargnani at Indiana (2nd) February 2, 2009
25 Chris Bosh at Memphis (1st) October 30, 2009
Points, Quarter 19 Andrea Bargnani at Indiana (3rd) February 2, 2010
Field Goals 16 Chris Bosh at New Jersey March 20, 2010
Field Goals Attempted 27 Chris Bosh at New Jersey March 20, 2010
3-Point FGM 7 Jose Calderon at Golden State March 13, 2010
3-Point FGA 9 Hedo Turkoglu at Washington (OT) December 4, 2009
9 Hedo Turkoglu at Phoenix November 15, 2009
FTM 20 Chris Bosh vs. Golden State April 4, 2010
RAPTORS

FTA 23 Chris Bosh vs. Golden State April 4, 2010


Rebounds 19 Hedo Turkoglu vs. Chicago April 11, 2010
Offensive Rebounds 9 Chris Bosh at Washington (OT) December 4, 2009
8 Chris Bosh at Denver November 17, 2009
Defensive Rebounds 16 Hedo Turkoglu vs. Chicago April 11, 2010
Assists 12 Jarrett Jack at Detroit April 12, 2010
12 Jose Calderon at Golden State March 13, 2010
Steals 5 Chris Bosh vs. Golden State April 4, 2010
Blocked Shots 5 Andrea Bargnani vs. San Antonio January 3, 2010
Turnovers 7 Hedo Turkoglu at Boston November 27, 2009

Category No. Name Opponent Date


Points, Game 36 LeBron James vs. Cleveland (OT) February 26, 2010
36 Danny Granger vs. Indiana November 24, 2009
35 Stephen Curry at Golden State March 13, 2010
Points, Half 26 Stephen Curry at Golden State (2nd) March 13, 2010
Points, Quarter 18 Luke Ridnour vs. Milwaukee (4th) January 22, 2010
Field Goals 14 Jamal Crawford vs. Atlanta March 17, 2010
Field Goals Attempted 27 Danny Granger vs. Indiana November 24, 2009
OPPONENTS

3-Point FGM 7 Danny Granger vs. Indiana November 24, 2009


3-Point FGA 13 Danny Granger vs. Indiana November 24, 2009
FTM 17 Kevin Durant vs. Oklahoma City March 19, 2010
FTA 18 Kevin Durant vs. Oklahoma City March 19, 2010
Rebounds 19 Joakim Noah vs. Chicago April 11, 2010
Offensive Rebounds 9 Brook Lopez at New Jersey March 20, 2010
Defensive Rebounds 16 Troy Murphy at Indiana January 11, 2010
Assists 18 Chris Paul at New Orleans November 6, 2009
Steals 6 Matt Barnes vs. Orlando November 1, 2009
Blocked Shots 8 Dwight Howard at Orlando December 16, 2009
Turnovers 9 Dwight Howard at Orlando January 6, 2010
2009-10 GAME-BY-GAME
Date Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total High Scoring High Rebounds High Assists Opponent Scoring Atten.
Oct 28 CLEVELAND W101- 91 1-0 0-0 1-0 Bargnani-28 Bosh-16 Calderon-11 James-23 20,152
Oct 30 @Memphis L107-115 1-0 0-1 1-1 Bosh-37 Bosh-12 Jack-5 Randolph-30 10,563
Nov 1 ORLANDO L116-125 1-1 0-1 1-2 Bosh-35 Bosh-16 Calderon-6 Nelson-30 18,147
Nov 4 DETROIT W110- 99 2-1 0-1 2-2 Bosh-25 Bargnani-12 Jack-6 Gordon-30 17,915
---------- Turkoglu-6
Nov 6 @New Orleans W107- 90 2-1 1-1 3-2 Bosh-27 Bargnani-9 Calderon-8 Paul-21 15,010
Nov 7 @Dallas L101-129 2-1 1-2 3-3 Bosh-26 Bosh-12 Calderon-7 Nowitzki-29 19,977
Nov 9 @San Antonio L124-131 2-1 1-3 3-4 Bosh-32 Bosh-10 Calderon-9 Ginobili-36 17,714
Nov 11 CHICAGO W 99- 89 3-1 1-3 4-4 Bosh-28 Bosh-11 Calderon-6 Deng-18 16,310
---------- Gibson-18
Nov 13 @L.A. Clipper W104- 89 3-1 2-3 5-4 Bosh-21 Bosh-14 Calderon-9 Kaman-25 15,615
Nov 15 @Phoenix L100-101 3-1 2-4 5-5 Bosh-25 Bosh-10 Calderon-7 Stoudemire-30 16,605
Nov 17 @Denver L112-130 3-1 2-5 5-6 DeRozan-17 Bosh-14 Calderon-7 Anthony-32 16,446
Nov 18 @Utah L 91-104 3-1 2-6 5-7 Bosh-32 Bosh-17 Jack-5 Boozer-22 17,879
Nov 20 MIAMI W120-113 4-1 2-6 6-7 Bosh-29 Bosh-12 Calderon-10 Chalmers-30 19,800
---------- Wade-30
Nov 22 ORLANDO L 96-104 4-2 2-6 6-8 Bosh-22 Bargnani-9 Jack-11 Carter-24 17,233
Nov 24 INDIANA W123-112 5-2 2-6 7-8 Calderon-21 Bosh-12 Calderon-7 Granger-36 17,136
---------- Turkoglu-7
Nov 25 @Charlotte L 81-116 5-2 2-7 7-9 Bosh-18 Bosh-14 Calderon-8 Wallace-31 13,689
Nov 27 @Boston L103-116 5-2 2-8 7-10 Bosh-20 Bosh-13 Jack-5 R. Allen-20 18,624
---------- Turkoglu-20
Nov 29 PHOENIX L 94-113 5-3 2-8 7-11 Bosh-30 Bosh-17 Calderon-7 Richardson-22 17,721
Dec 1 WASHINGTON L102-106 5-4 2-8 7-12 Bosh-22 Bosh-14 Turkoglu-6 Jamison-30 15,776
Dec 2 @Atlanta L115-146 5-4 2-9 7-13 DeRozan-21 Johnson-7 Jack-8 Horford-24 12,272
Dec 4 @Washington W109-107(OT) 5-4 3-9 8-13 Bosh-31 Bosh-16 Calderon-9 Arenas-34 20,173
Dec 5 @Chicago W110- 78 5-4 4-9 9-13 Bosh-25 Bosh-12 Jack-9 Pargo-13 20,481
---------- Salmons-13
Dec 8 MINNESOTA W 94- 88 6-4 4-9 10-13 Bosh-21 Bosh-15 Jack-8 Love-18 15,167
Dec 9 @Milwaukee L 95-117 6-4 4-10 10-14 Bosh-26 Bosh-10 Jack-7 Jennings-22 12,637
Dec 11 ATLANTA L 89-111 6-5 4-10 10-15 Bargnani-17 Bosh-10 Turkoglu-8 Johnson-20 17,032
Dec 13 HOUSTON W101- 88 7-5 4-10 11-15 Bosh-27 Jack-8 Jack-8 Landry-25 17,111
Dec 15 @Miami L 95-115 7-5 4-11 11-16 Bosh-28 DeRozan-7 Bosh-4 Beasley-28 15,106
---------- Bargnani-7 Turkoglu-4
Dec 16 @Orlando L 99-118 7-5 4-12 11-17 Bosh-20 Bosh-6 Jack-5 Lewis-21 17,461
Dec 18 NEW JERSEY W118- 95 8-5 4-12 12-17 Johnson-18 Bosh-8 Jack-9 Douglas-Roberts-16 15,901
Dec 20 NEW ORLEANS W 98- 92 9-5 4-12 13-17 Bosh-25 Johnson-12 Jack-7 West-21 15,790
---------- Turkoglu-7
Dec 23 @Detroit W 94- 64 9-5 5-12 14-17 Bargnani-21 Bosh-9 Turkoglu-11 Bynum-12 19,396
Dec 27 DETROIT W102- 95 10-5 5-12 15-17 Bosh-25 Bosh-16 Turkoglu-6 Gordon-15 19,800
---------- Hamilton-15
Dec 30 CHARLOTTE W107-103 11-5 5-12 16-17 Bosh-33 Bosh-13 Jack-6 Jackson-30 18,979
Jan 2 @Boston L 96-103 11-5 5-13 16-18 Bosh-25 Bosh-9 Jack-7 R. Allen-23 18,624
---------- Turkoglu-7
Jan 3 SAN ANTONIO W 91- 86 12-5 5-13 17-18 Bosh-22 Bosh-15 Jack-8 Parker-23 18,323
Jan 6 @Orlando W108-103 12-5 6-13 18-18 Bosh-18 Bosh-12 Calderon-8 Lewis-24 17,461
---------- Bargnani-18
Jan 8 @Philadelphia W108-106 12-5 7-13 19-18 Bosh-29 Bosh-9 Bosh-6 Williams-23 15,264
Jan 10 BOSTON L107-114 12-6 7-13 19-19 Bosh-31 Bosh-13 Turkoglu-9 Wallace-29 19,800
Jan 11 @Indiana L101-105 12-6 7-14 19-20 Bosh-27 Bargnani-17 Calderon-6 Granger-23 11,039
Jan 15 @New York W112-104 12-6 8-14 20-20 Bargnani-24 Bargnani-12 Calderon-6 Harrington-31 19,763
Jan 17 DALLAS W110- 88 13-6 8-14 21-20 Bosh-23 Bosh-13 Calderon-7 Nowitzki-19 19,004
---------- Jack-7
Jan 19 @Cleveland L100-108 13-6 8-15 21-21 Bosh-21 Bosh-10 Calderon-6 James-28 20,562
Jan 20 @Milwaukee L107-113 13-6 8-16 21-22 Bosh-44 Bosh-12 Calderon-5 Bogut-27 12,724
2009-10 GAME-BY-GAME
Date Opponent Team/Opp Home Road Total High Scoring High Rebounds High Assists Opponent Scoring Atten.
Jan 22 MILWAUKEE W101- 96 14-6 8-16 22-22 Jack-27 Wright-8 Turkoglu-5 Ridnour-27 17,819
Jan 24 L.A. LAKERS W106-105 15-6 8-16 23-22 Bargnani-22 Bosh-13 Turkoglu-5 Bryant-27 20,111
---------- Calderon-5
Jan 27 MIAMI W111-103 16-6 8-16 24-22 Bargnani-27 Bosh-18 Calderon-7 Wade-35 18,265
Jan 28 @New York W106-104 16-6 9-16 25-22 Bosh-27 Bosh-15 Calderon-7 Lee-29 18,828
Jan 31 INDIANA W117-102 17-6 9-16 26-22 Bosh-26 Bosh-15 Calderon-7 Head-15 16,715
---------- Bosh-7
Feb 2 @Indiana L115-130 17-6 9-17 26-23 Bosh-35 Bosh-15 Calderon-8 Granger-23 11,191
Feb 3 NEW JERSEY W108- 99 18-6 9-17 27-23 Bosh-20 Weems-11 Jack-9 Harris-15 15,222
---------- Bargnani-20 Yi-15
Feb 7 SACRAMENTO W115-104 19-6 9-17 28-23 Bosh-36 Bosh-11 Jack-9 Martin-24 18,007
Feb 10 PHILADELPHIA W104- 93 20-6 9-17 29-23 Bosh-23 Bosh-12 Jack-8 Williams-26 16,651
Feb 17 MEMPHIS L102-109(OT) 20-7 9-17 29-24 Bosh-32 Bosh-10 Calderon-9 Gay-29 16,829
---------- Bargnani-10
Feb 19 @New Jersey W106- 89 20-7 10-17 30-24 Jack-18 Nesterovic-7 Jack-10 Lopez-22 11,994
Feb 20 WASHINGTON W109-104 21-7 10-17 31-24 Jack-23 Evans-7 Jack-8 Blatche-24 19,149
Feb 24 PORTLAND L 87-101 21-8 10-17 31-25 Turkoglu-24 Evans-8 Jack-8 Roy-20 16,161
---------- Johnson-8
Feb 26 CLEVELAND L118-126(OT) 21-9 10-17 31-26 Jack-24 DeRozan-5 Calderon-8 James-36 20,107
---------- Bargnani-24 Evans-5
Feb 28 @Oklahoma City L 99-119 21-9 10-18 31-27 Bargnani-14 Johnson-11 Calderon-7 Durant-29 18,203
---------- Weems-14
Mar 1 @Houston L 92-116 21-9 10-19 31-28 Banks-15 Nesterovic-7 Jack-6 Brooks-28 13,943
---------- Martin-28
Mar 5 NEW YORK W102- 96 22-9 10-19 32-28 Weems-20 Weems-9 Calderon-6 Lee-23 18,889
---------- Turkoglu-9
Mar 7 PHILADELPHIA L101-114 22-10 10-19 32-29 Jack-20 Bosh-12 Jack-9 Young-32 18,736
Mar 9 @L.A. Lakers L107-109 22-10 10-20 32-30 Bosh-22 Bargnani-8 Jack-7 Bryant-32 18,997
Mar 10 @Sacramento L 90-113 22-10 10-21 32-31 Bargnani-20 Turkoglu-7 Bosh-3 Udrih-24 13,412
---------- Jack-3
---------- Turkoglu-3
Mar 13 @Golden State L112-124 22-10 10-22 32-32 Calderon-24 Bosh-11 Calderon-12 Curry-35 17,655
---------- Bosh-24
Mar 14 @Portland L 98-109 22-10 10-23 32-33 Bosh-28 Bosh-7 Calderon-7 Batum-22 20,639
---------- Aldridge-22
Mar 17 ATLANTA W106-105 23-10 10-23 33-33 Bargnani-22 Bargnani-11 Calderon-6 Crawford-33 18,441
Mar 19 OKLAHOMA CITY L 89-115 23-11 10-23 33-34 Bosh-22 Bosh-10 Jack-7 Durant-31 19,351
Mar 20 @New Jersey W100- 90 23-11 11-23 34-34 Bosh-36 Bosh-8 Calderon-8 Harris-22 11,048
---------- Jack-8
Mar 22 @Minnesota W106-100 23-11 12-23 35-34 Bosh-21 Bosh-10 Jack-8 Jefferson-22 14,554
Mar 24 UTAH L 87-113 23-12 12-23 35-35 Bosh-20 Evans-9 Calderon-3 Boozer-18 16,178
---------- Bosh-3 Williams-18
Mar 26 DENVER L 96- 97 23-13 12-23 35-36 Bosh-18 Bargnani-15 Calderon-6 Anthony-25 19,800
Mar 28 @Miami L 94- 97 23-13 12-24 35-37 Bosh-19 Bosh-6 Calderon-7 Wade-32 19,600
Mar 29 @Charlotte W103-101 23-13 13-24 36-37 Bosh-22 Bosh-11 Calderon-7 Felton-18 14,534
---------- Jackson-18
Mar 31 L.A. CLIPPERS W114- 92 24-13 13-24 37-37
Bosh-34 Bosh-11 Jack-10 Kaman-22 16,106
Apr 3 @Philadelphia W128-123(OT) 24-13 14-24 38-37
Bosh-28 Bosh-12 Calderon-10 Iguodala-33 13,430
Apr 4 GOLDEN STATE L112-113 24-14 14-24 38-38
Bosh-42 Bosh-13 Jack-4 Maggette-31 17,509
Apr 6 @Cleveland L101-113 24-14 14-25 38-39
Jack-23 Johnson-10 Jack-6 Jamison-20 20,562
Apr 7 BOSTON L104-115 24-15 14-25 38-40
Weems-21 Wright-7 Calderon-9 Rondo-21 18,793
Apr 9 @Atlanta L101-107 24-15 14-26 38-41
Johnson-18 Johnson-13 Calderon-10 Crawford-25 19,382
---------- Weems-18
Apr 11 CHICAGO L 88-104 24-16 14-26 38-42 Bargnani-18 Turkoglu-19 Turkoglu-9 Rose-26 19,515
---------- Weems-18
Apr 12 @Detroit W111- 97 24-16 15-26 39-42 Bargnani-33 Turkoglu-8 Jack-12 Gordon-24 22,076
Apr 14 NEW YORK W131-113 25-16 15-26 40-42 DeRozan-24 DeRozan-9 Jack-6 Walker-28 18,333
---------- Bargnani-24
2009-10 SEASON HIGHS

Through games of April 14 TORONTO RAPTORS 2009-2010 HIGH GAMES

PLAYER MIN FGM FTM OFF DEF TOT AST STL TO BS PTS
MARCUS 24 6 4 (2) 1 (3) 6C 6 4 4 4 1 (2) 15
BANKS MAR. 1 DEC. 18 MAR. 1 FEB. 2 DEC. 18 DEC. 18 MAR. 1 MAR. 1 MAR. 1 JAN. 2 MAR. 1
---------- at Hou. vs N.J. at Hou. at Ind. vs N.J. vs N.J. at Hou. at Hou. at Hou. at Bos. at Hou.

ANDREA 45 (2) 14C 7 (2) 5T 13C 17C 5 2 (3) 5T 5 34C


BARGNANI APR. 3 FEB. 2 JAN. 24 APR. 4 JAN. 11 JAN. 11 APR. 14 MAR. 22 MAR. 28 JAN. 3 FEB. 2
---------- at Phil. at Ind. vs LA-L vs G.S. at Ind. at Ind. vs N.Y. at Minn. at Miami vs S.A. at Ind.

MARCO 33 8 8C 2 (2) 5 5 (4) 4 (2) 3T 4 1T(5) 21


BELINELLI FEB. 2 DEC. 2 NOV. 24 JAN. 11 FEB. 2 FEB. 2 JAN. 27 DEC. 30 DEC. 11 FEB. 2 FEB. 2
---------- at Ind. at Atl. vs Ind. at Ind. at Ind. at Ind. vs Miami vs Cha. vs Atl. at Ind. at Ind.

CHRIS 46 16T 20 9 15 18 7 (2) 5 6 (7) 4 (2) 44C


BOSH APR. 3 MAR. 20 APR. 4 DEC. 4 DEC. 27 JAN. 27 APR. 3 APR. 4 MAR. 22 NOV. 24 JAN. 20
---------- at Phil. at N.J. vs G.S. at Wash. vs Det. vs Miami at Phil. vs G.S. at Minn. vs Ind. at Milw.

JOSE 37 (2) 9 (2) 5 2 (4) 5 (2) 6 (2) 12 3 (2) 6 1 (7) 24


CALDERON DEC. 1 JAN. 15 JAN. 20 APR. 4 FEB. 17 FEB. 17 MAR. 13 MAR. 20 NOV. 25 MAR. 19 MAR. 13
---------- vs Wash. at N.Y. at Milw. vs G.S. vs Mem. vs Mem. at G.S. at N.J. at Cha. vs OKC. at G.S.

DEMAR 38C 9C 11C 4C 9C 9C(2) 3C 2C(6) 4C 2C 24C


DEROZAN APR. 14 APR. 14 JAN. 15 FEB. 28 APR. 14 APR. 14 FEB. 26 FEB. 19 NOV. 20 NOV. 11 APR. 14
---------- vs N.Y. vs N.Y. at N.Y. at OKC. vs N.Y. vs N.Y. vs Clev. at N.J. vs Miami vs Chi. vs N.Y.

REGGIE 25 4 (2) 5 4 7 9 2 3 2 (4) 1 (4) 13


EVANS FEB. 26 MAR. 7 FEB. 26 FEB. 20 APR. 6 MAR. 24 FEB. 19 MAR. 24 MAR. 24 MAR. 24 FEB. 26
Tor. vs Clev. vs Phil. vs Clev. vs Wash. at Clev. vs Utah at N.J. vs Utah vs Utah vs Utah vs Clev.

JARRETT 40 9 11 (2) 2 (4) 7 (2) 8 (2) 12C 4T 5 1 (6) 27


JACK FEB. 3 MAR. 7 JAN. 22 MAR. 26 MAR. 20 MAR. 20 APR. 12 MAR. 7 DEC. 15 MAR. 29 JAN. 22
---------- vs N.J. vs Phil. vs Milw. vs Den. at N.J. at N.J. at Det. vs Phil. at Miami at Cha. vs Milw.

AMIR 40C 10T 6T(2) 5 (4) 9C 13 4C(2) 2 (9) 4C 4 (2) 26C


JOHNSON APR. 14 APR. 12 APR. 12 MAR. 14 APR. 9 APR. 9 APR. 12 APR. 7 MAR. 9 FEB. 24 APR. 12
---------- vs N.Y. at Det. at Det. at Port. at Atl. at Atl. at Det. vs Bos. at LA-L vs Port. at Det.

POPS 13 3 3 3 (2) 4 (2) 6 1T(3) 1 (4) 2 (3) 2T(2) 7


MENSAH-BONSU NOV. 25 DEC. 2 NOV. 17 DEC. 13 DEC. 16 NOV. 25 DEC. 15 JAN. 2 DEC. 18 DEC. 13 DEC. 2
Hou.-Tor. at Cha. at Atl. at Den. vs Hou. at Orl. at Cha. at Miami at Bos. vs N.J. vs Hou. at Atl.

POPS 13 3 3 3 (2) 4 (2) 6 1T(2) 1 (3) 2 (3) 2T(2) 7


MENSAH-BONSU NOV. 25 DEC. 2 NOV. 17 DEC. 13 DEC. 16 NOV. 25 DEC. 15 JAN. 2 DEC. 18 DEC. 13 DEC. 2
Tor. at Cha. at Atl. at Den. vs Hou. at Orl. at Cha. at Miami at Bos. vs N.J. vs Hou. at Atl.

RASHO 26 8 1 5 6 (2) 7 (4) 4 2 2 2 (3) 16


NESTEROVIC FEB. 19 FEB. 19 JAN. 28 OCT. 30 MAR. 1 MAR. 1 FEB. 19 DEC. 2 MAR. 19 JAN. 11 FEB. 19
---------- at N.J. at N.J. at N.Y. at Mem. at Hou. at Hou. at N.J. at Atl. vs OKC. at Ind. at N.J.

PATRICK 9 2 (2) 1 (3) 1 (2) 3 3 1 1 (2) 2 4C 4 (2)


O'BRYANT MAR. 1 NOV. 17 FEB. 28 NOV. 17 MAR. 1 MAR. 1 JAN. 22 FEB. 28 MAR. 1 MAR. 1 NOV. 17
---------- at Hou. at Den. at OKC. at Den. at Hou. at Hou. vs Milw. at OKC. at Hou. at Hou. at Den.

HEDO 43 (2) 9 12 3 (3) 16C 19C 11 3 (3) 7 3T(2) 26


TURKOGLU FEB. 26 DEC. 13 DEC. 8 APR. 11 APR. 11 APR. 11 DEC. 23 APR. 11 NOV. 27 NOV. 24 JAN. 28
---------- vs Clev. vs Hou. vs Minn. vs Chi. vs Chi. vs Chi. at Det. vs Chi. at Bos. vs Ind. at N.Y.
2009-10 SEASON HIGHS

Through games of April 14 TORONTO RAPTORS 2009-2010 HIGH GAMES

PLAYER MIN FGM FTM OFF DEF TOT AST STL TO BS PTS
SONNY 40C(2) 9C(4) 5C(2) 4C 7C(3) 11C 5C(2) 3C(2) 4C(2) 2C(2) 21C
WEEMS APR. 12 APR. 14 APR. 7 FEB. 3 MAR. 5 FEB. 3 APR. 6 APR. 14 FEB. 3 MAR. 24 APR. 7
---------- at Det. vs N.Y. vs Bos. vs N.J. vs N.Y. vs N.J. at Clev. vs N.Y. vs N.J. vs Utah vs Bos.

ANTOINE 38 (2) 7 (2) 4 (2) 3 6 (5) 8 4 (5) 3 4 2 19


WRIGHT MAR. 28 MAR. 29 FEB. 2 JAN. 22 APR. 7 JAN. 22 MAR. 26 APR. 9 APR. 3 MAR. 20 FEB. 20
---------- at Miami at Cha. at Ind. vs Milw. vs Bos. vs Milw. vs Den. at Atl. at Phil. at N.J. vs Wash.

RAPTORS 265 (4) 52 40 19 43 58 37 12 25 10 131


High Games APR. 3 APR. 14 DEC. 8 NOV. 17 MAR. 26 MAR. 26 APR. 12 DEC. 30 NOV. 27 JAN. 11 APR. 14
---------- at Phil. vs N.Y. vs Minn. at Den. vs Den. vs Den. at Det. vs Cha. at Bos. at Ind. vs N.Y.

RAPTORS 240 (78) 26 6 2 19 28 14 (3) 1 (2) 5 (2) 0 (3) 81


Low Games APR. 14 DEC. 8 MAR. 5 JAN. 6 DEC. 30 JAN. 2 MAR. 24 APR. 12 MAR. 17 APR. 6 NOV. 25
---------- vs N.Y. vs Minn. vs N.Y. at Orl. vs Cha. at Bos. vs Utah at Det. vs Atl. at Clev. at Cha.

OPPONENTS 265 (4) 53 36 (2) 23 40 (2) 53 (2) 38 15 23 (2) 16 146


High Games APR. 3 NOV. 7 MAR. 9 DEC. 23 APR. 11 MAR. 19 APR. 6 NOV. 27 DEC. 30 NOV. 25 DEC. 2
---------- at Phil. at Dall. at LA-L at Det. vs Chi. vs OKC. at Clev. at Bos. vs Cha. at Cha. at Atl.

OPPONENTS 240 (78) 24 7 3 (2) 18 26 10 2 (2) 6 0 64


Low Games APR. 14 DEC. 23 MAR. 31 APR. 6 FEB. 20 NOV. 27 DEC. 23 MAR. 17 NOV. 9 NOV. 22 DEC. 23
---------- vs N.Y. at Det. vs LA-C at Clev. vs Wash. at Bos. at Det. vs Atl. at S.A. vs Orl. at Det.
2009-10 NBA STANDINGS
NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE

ATLANTIC DIVISION SOUTHWEST DIVISION


W L PCT GB HOME ROAD LAST-10 STREAK W L PCT GB HOME ROAD LAST-10 STREAK
Boston 50 32 .610 - 24-17 26-15 3-7 Lost 2 Dallas 55 27 .671 - 28-13 27-14 8-2 Won 5
Toronto 40 42 .488 10 25-16 15-26 5-5 Won 2 San Antonio 50 32 .610 5 29-12 21-20 6-4 Lost 1
New York 29 53 .354 21 18-23 11-30 3-7 Lost 1 Houston 42 40 .512 13 23-18 19-22 6-4 Lost 1
Philadelphia 27 55 .329 23 12-29 15-26 2-8 Lost 2 Memphis 40 42 .488 15 23-18 17-24 2-8 Lost 3
New Jersey 12 70 .146 38 8-33 4-37 3-7 Lost 3 New Orleans 37 45 .451 18 24-17 13-28 3-7 Won 2

CENTRAL DIVISION NORTHWEST DIVISION


W L PCT GB HOME ROAD LAST-10 STREAK W L PCT GB HOME ROAD LAST-10 STREAK
Cleveland 61 21 .744 - 35-6 26-15 4-6 Lost 4 Denver 53 29 .646 - 34-7 19-22 6-4 Lost 1
Milwaukee 46 36 .561 15 28-13 18-23 6-4 Won 1 Utah 53 29 .646 - 32-9 21-20 6-4 Lost 1
Chicago 41 41 .500 20 24-17 17-24 7-3 Won 3 Portland 50 32 .610 3 26-15 24-17 7-3 Lost 1
Indiana 32 50 .390 29 23-18 9-32 6-4 Lost 2 Oklahoma City 50 32 .610 3 27-14 23-18 6-4 Won 1
Detroit 27 55 .329 34 17-24 10-31 4-6 Won 1 Minnesota 15 67 .183 38 10-31 5-36 1-9 Lost 7

SOUTHEAST DIVISION PACIFIC DIVISION


W L PCT GB HOME ROAD LAST-10 STREAK W L PCT GB HOME ROAD LAST-10 STREAK
Orlando 59 23 .720 - 34-7 25-16 9-1 Won 6 L.A. Lakers 57 25 .695 - 34-7 23-18 4-6 Lost 1
Atlanta 53 29 .646 6 34-7 19-22 7-3 Won 4 Phoenix 54 28 .659 3 32-9 22-19 8-2 Won 3
Miami 47 35 .573 12 24-17 23-18 9-1 Won 3 L.A. Clippers 29 53 .354 28 21-20 8-33 2-8 Won 1
Charlotte 44 38 .537 15 31-10 13-28 6-4 Lost 1 Golden State 26 56 .317 31 18-23 8-33 6-4 Won 1
Washington 26 56 .317 33 15-26 11-30 5-5 Won 1 Sacramento 25 57 .305 32 18-23 7-34 1-9 Lost 3

2009-10 CONFERNCE STANDINGS

EASTERN W L PCT GB CONF DIV HOME ROAD L 10 STREAK


Cleveland 61 21 .744 0.0 38-14 12-4 35-6 26-15 4-6 L4
Orlando 59 23 .720 2.0 39-13 10-6 34-7 25-16 9-1 W6
Atlanta 53 29 .646 8.0 32-20 8-8 34-7 19-22 7-3 W4
Boston 50 32 .610 11.0 33-19 13-3 24-17 26-15 3-7 L2
Miami 47 35 .573 14.0 32-20 9-7 24-17 23-18 9-1 W3
Milwaukee 46 36 .561 15.0 31-21 10-6 28-13 18-23 6-4 W1
Charlotte 44 38 .537 17.0 27-25 10-6 31-10 13-28 6-4 L1
Chicago 41 41 .500 20.0 28-24 10-6 24-17 17-24 7-3 W3
Toronto 40 42 .488 21.0 29-23 11-5 25-16 15-26 5-5 W2
Indiana 32 50 .390 29.0 23-29 6-10 23-18 9-32 6-4 L2
New York 29 53 .354 32.0 20-32 6-10 18-23 11-30 3-7 L1
Detroit 27 55 .329 34.0 18-34 2-14 17-24 10-31 4-6 W1
Philadelphia 27 55 .329 34.0 14-38 7-9 12-29 15-26 2-8 L2
Washington 26 56 .317 35.0 18-34 3-13 15-26 11-30 5-5 W1
New Jersey 12 70 .146 49.0 8-44 3-13 8-33 4-37 3-7 L3

WESTERN W L PCT GB CONF DIV HOME ROAD L 10 STREAK


L.A. Lakers 57 25 .695 0.0 35-17 13-3 34-7 23-18 4-6 L1
Dallas 55 27 .671 2.0 33-19 10-6 28-13 27-14 8-2 W5
Phoenix 54 28 .659 3.0 35-17 12-4 32-9 22-19 8-2 W3
Denver 53 29 .646 4.0 34-18 12-4 34-7 19-22 6-4 L1
Utah 53 29 .646 4.0 31-21 8-8 32-9 21-20 6-4 L1
Portland 50 32 .610 7.0 33-19 8-8 26-15 24-17 7-3 L1
San Antonio 50 32 .610 7.0 31-21 9-7 29-12 21-20 6-4 L1
Oklahoma City 50 32 .610 7.0 28-24 9-7 27-14 23-18 6-4 W1
Houston 42 40 .512 15.0 28-24 9-7 23-18 19-22 6-4 L1
Memphis 40 42 .488 17.0 22-30 5-11 23-18 17-24 2-8 L3
New Orleans 37 45 .451 20.0 26-26 7-9 24-17 13-28 3-7 W2
L.A. Clippers 29 53 .354 28.0 15-37 5-11 21-20 8-33 2-8 W1
Golden State 26 56 .317 31.0 15-37 5-11 18-23 8-33 6-4 W1
Sacramento 25 57 .305 32.0 16-36 5-11 18-23 7-34 1-9 L3
Minnesota 15 67 .183 42.0 8-44 3-13 10-31 5-36 1-9 L7
NBA LEADERS
SCORING AVERAGE G FG FT PTS AVG REBOUNDS PER GAME G OFF DEF TOT AVG ASSISTS PER GAME G AST AVG
Durant, OKC. 82 794 756 2472 30.1 Howard, Orl. 82 284 798 1082 13.2 Nash, Pho. 81 892 11.0
James, Cle. 76 768 593 2258 29.7 Camby, LA-C-Por. 74 249 622 871 11.8 Paul, N.O. 45 480 10.7
Anthony, Den. 69 688 508 1943 28.2 Randolph, Mem. 81 330 620 950 11.7 Williams, Utah 76 798 10.5
Bryant, LA-L 73 716 439 1970 27.0 Lee, N.Y. 81 228 721 949 11.7 Rondo, Bos. 81 794 9.8
Wade, Mia. 77 719 534 2045 26.6 Boozer, Utah 78 181 693 874 11.2 Kidd, Dal. 80 724 9.1
Ellis, G.S. 64 631 292 1631 25.5 Bosh, Tor. (6) 70 205 554 759 10.8 James, Cle. 76 651 8.6
Nowitzki, Dal. 81 720 536 2027 25.0 Murphy, Ind. 72 129 608 737 10.2 B. Davis, LA-C 75 598 8.0
Granger, Ind. 62 488 363 1497 24.1 Duncan, S.A. 78 221 567 788 10.1 Westbrook, OKC. 82 652 8.0
Bosh, Tor. (9) 70 600 470 1678 24.0 Wallace, Cha. 76 150 612 762 10.0 Harris, N.J. 64 423 6.6
Stoudemire, Pho. 82 704 487 1896 23.1 Horford, Atl. 81 236 563 799 9.9 Wade, Mia. 77 501 6.5
Johnson, Atl. 76 635 220 1619 21.3 Odom, LA-L 82 184 618 802 9.8 Rose, Chi. 78 469 6.0
Rose, Chi. 78 672 259 1619 20.8 Dalembert, Phi. 82 239 545 784 9.6 Calderon, Tor. (12) 68 404 5.9
Randolph, Mem. 81 652 362 1681 20.8 Haywood, Was.-Dal. 77 278 437 715 9.3 Curry, G.S. 80 472 5.9
Jackson, G.S.-Cha. 81 600 338 1667 20.6 Kaman, LA-C 76 184 520 704 9.3 Iguodala, Phi. 82 472 5.8
Lee, N.Y. 81 686 268 1640 20.2 Jefferson, Min. 76 180 523 703 9.3 Evans, Sac. 72 414 5.8
Evans, Sac. 72 533 348 1450 20.1 Okafor, N.O. 82 251 491 742 9.0 Jennings, Mil. 82 470 5.7
Maggette, G.S. 70 457 460 1387 19.8 Stoudemire, Pho. 82 230 502 732 8.9 Collison, N.O. 76 432 5.7
Gay, Mem. 80 600 301 1567 19.6 Jos. Smith, Atl. 81 223 482 705 8.7 Billups, Den. 73 409 5.6
Brooks, Hou. 82 575 245 1604 19.6 Lopez, N.J. 82 270 439 709 8.6 Felton, Cha. 80 446 5.6
Billups, Den. 73 402 466 1427 19.5 Scola, Hou. 82 175 530 705 8.6 Miller, Por. 82 445 5.4
Boozer, Utah 78 617 285 1519 19.5 Thompson, Sac. 75 224 413 637 8.5 Conley, Mem. 80 425 5.3
West, N.O. 81 619 296 1541 19.0 Haslem, Mia. 78 167 462 629 8.1 Brooks, Hou. 82 434 5.3
Lopez, N.J. 82 563 416 1542 18.8 Aldridge, Por. 78 192 435 627 8.0 Watson, Ind. 79 399 5.1
Williams, Utah 76 494 335 1419 18.7 Gooden, Dal.-Was.-LAC 70 207 335 542 7.7 Jack, Tor. (24) 82 413 5.0
Kaman, LA-C 76 589 230 1408 18.5 Nowitzki, Dal. 81 80 540 620 7.7 Bryant, LA-L 73 365 5.0
Howard, Orl. 82 510 483 1503 18.3 Nene, Den. 82 166 461 627 7.6 Ginobili, S.A. 75 370 4.9
Pierce, Bos. 71 409 369 1296 18.3 Perkins, Bos. 78 155 440 595 7.6 Johnson, Atl. 76 369 4.9
Wallace, Cha. 76 456 422 1386 18.2 Varejao, Cle. 76 189 389 578 7.6 Stuckey, Det. 73 348 4.8
Crawford, Atl. 79 496 270 1425 18.0 Durant, OKC. 82 105 518 623 7.6 Blake, Por.-LA-C 80 380 4.8
Duncan, S.A. 78 561 271 1395 17.9 West, N.O. 81 164 441 605 7.5 Udrih, Sac. 79 372 4.7
Aldridge, Por. 78 579 230 1393 17.9 Gibson, Chi. 82 226 385 611 7.5 Hinrich, Chi. 74 330 4.5
Harrington, N.Y. 72 448 240 1276 17.7 Deng, Chi. 70 131 381 512 7.3 Flynn, Min. 81 356 4.4
Deng, Chi. 70 473 252 1230 17.6 James, Cle. 76 71 483 554 7.3 Jos. Smith, Atl. 81 342 4.2
Curry, G.S. 80 528 177 1399 17.5 Okur, Utah 73 132 383 515 7.1 Turkoglu, Tor. (34) 74 304 4.1
Mayo, Mem. 82 542 212 1432 17.5 O'Neal, Mia. 70 124 362 486 6.9 Diaw, Cha. 82 325 4.0
Bargnani, Tor. (36) 80 537 181 1376 17.2 Millsap, Utah 82 186 373 559 6.8 Ridnour, Mil. 82 324 4.0
Jefferson, Min. 76 560 181 1301 17.1 Iguodala, Phi. 82 82 447 529 6.5 Bibby, Atl. 80 310 3.9
Iguodala, Phi. 82 496 315 1401 17.1 Blair, S.A. 82 200 326 526 6.4 Holiday, Phi. 73 280 3.8
Landry, Hou.-Sac. 80 499 344 1343 16.8 Beasley, Mia. 78 123 375 498 6.4 Ariza, Hou. 72 276 3.8
Stuckey, Det. 73 449 299 1215 16.6 Ilyasova, Mil. 81 157 360 517 6.4 Terry, Dal. 77 292 3.8

FIELD GOAL PCT. FG FGA PCT 3-PT FIELD GOAL PCT. 3FG 3GA PCT FREE THROW PCT. FT FTA PCT
Howard, Orl. 510 834 .612 Korver, Utah 59 110 .536 Nash, Pho. 211 225 .938
Perkins, Bos. 314 522 .602 Miller, Was. 82 171 .480 Nowitzki, Dal. 536 586 .915
Nene, Den. 421 717 .587 Gibson, Cle. 71 149 .477 R. Allen, Bos. 231 253 .913
Gasol, Mem. 378 651 .581 Dudley, Pho. 120 262 .458 Billups, Den. 466 512 .910
Bynum, LA-L 392 688 .570 Morrow, G.S. 140 307 .456 Ridnour, Mil. 127 140 .907
Boozer, Utah 617 1098 .562 Frye, Pho. 172 392 .439 Durant, OKC. 756 840 .900
Stoudemire, Pho. 704 1264 .557 Curry, G.S. 166 380 .437 M. Williams, Cle. 177 198 .894
Horford, Atl. 467 847 .551 Afflalo, Den. 108 249 .434 Foye, Was. 129 145 .890
Lee, N.Y. 686 1258 .545 M. Williams, Cle. 159 371 .429 Curry, G.S. 177 200 .885
Millsap, Utah 385 716 .538 Nash, Pho. 124 291 .426 Martin, Sac.-Hou. 298 340 .876
Landry, Hou.-Sac. 499 931 .536 Kidd, Dal. 176 414 .425 Ginobili, S.A. 309 355 .870
Gasol, LA-L 452 844 .536 Pierce, Bos. 109 263 .414 Lee, N.J. 133 153 .869
Okafor, N.O. 348 656 .530 Parker, Cle. 108 261 .414 Terry, Dal. 232 268 .866
O'Neal, Mia. 394 745 .529 Jack, Tor. (14) 82 199 .412 West, N.O. 296 342 .865
Garnett, Bos. 402 772 .521 Rush, Ind. 124 302 .411 Gooden, Dal.-Was.-LA 186 216 .861
Bogut, Mil. 473 910 .520 Young, Was. 69 170 .406 Gordon, Det. 198 230 .861
Duncan, S.A. 561 1082 .518 Redick, Orl. 111 274 .405 Redick, Orl. 191 222 .860
Bosh, Tor. (18) 600 1158 .518 Hill, S.A. 75 188 .399 Crawford, Atl. 270 315 .857
Maggette, G.S. 457 886 .516 Brooks, Hou. 209 525 .398 Pierce, Bos. 369 433 .852
Scola, Hou. 560 1090 .514 Calderon, Tor. (20) 68 171 .398 Collison, N.O. 148 174 .851
Rondo, Bos. 459 904 .508 Lewis, Orl. 168 423 .397 Granger, Ind. 363 428 .848
Marion, Dal. 395 778 .508 Richardson, Mia. 142 358 .397 Paul, N.O. 161 190 .847
Nash, Pho. 499 985 .507 Ellington, Min. 64 162 .395 Douglas-Roberts, N.J 133 157 .847
West, N.O. 619 1226 .505 Blake, Por.-LA-C 116 294 .395 Hamilton, Det. 204 241 .846
Jos. Smith, Atl. 504 999 .505 Dragic, Pho. 74 188 .394 Jack, Tor. (25) 203 241 .842
James, Cle. 768 1528 .503 Augustin, Cha. 70 178 .393 Dunleavy, Ind. 133 158 .842
Lopez, N.J. 563 1129 .499 Richardson, Pho. 157 400 .393 Carter, Orl. 257 306 .840
Jefferson, Min. 560 1125 .498 Robinson, N.Y.-Bos. 87 223 .390 Butler, Was.-Dal. 264 315 .838
Aldridge, Por. 579 1169 .495 Holiday, Phi. 62 159 .390 Garnett, Bos. 185 221 .837
Hibbert, Ind. 387 782 .495 Bonner, S.A. 90 231 .390 Maggette, G.S. 460 551 .835
Gibson, Chi. 311 629 .494 Bibby, Atl. 126 324 .389 Stuckey, Det. 299 359 .833
Haslem, Mia. 312 632 .494 Douglas, N.Y. 68 175 .389 Bayless, Por. 201 242 .831
Udrih, Sac. 415 841 .493 Wright, Mia. 61 157 .389 Anthony, Den. 508 612 .830
Paul, N.O. 314 637 .493 Conley, Mem. 82 212 .387 Salmons, Chi.-Mil. 253 305 .830
Kaman, LA-C 589 1202 .490 Billups, Den. 157 407 .386 Matthews, Utah 160 193 .829
Rose, Chi. 672 1373 .489 Nocioni, Sac. 96 249 .386 Miller, Chi. 182 220 .827
Randolph, Mem. 652 1336 .488 Okur, Utah 82 213 .385 Lowry, Hou. 215 260 .827
Parker, S.A. 349 716 .487 Felton, Cha. 60 156 .385 Flynn, Min. 223 270 .826
Wallace, Cha. 456 943 .484 Murphy, Ind. 128 333 .384 Williams, Phi. 192 233 .824
Diaw, Cha. 373 773 .483 Mayo, Mem. 136 355 .383 Brooks, Hou. 245 298 .822
NBA LEADERS
STEALS PER GAME G STL AVG BLOCKS PER GAME G BLK AVG MINUTES PER GAME G MIN AVG
Rondo, Bos. 81 189 2.33 Howard, Orl. 82 228 2.78 Ellis, G.S. 64 2647 41.4
Ellis, G.S. 64 143 2.23 Bogut, Mil. 69 175 2.54 Wallace, Cha. 76 3119 41.0
Curry, G.S. 80 152 1.90 Jos. Smith, Atl. 81 173 2.14 Gay, Mem. 80 3175 39.7
Wade, Mia. 77 142 1.84 Haywood, Was.-Dal. 77 158 2.05 Durant, OKC. 82 3239 39.5
Kidd, Dal. 80 145 1.81 Camby, LA-C-Por. 74 146 1.97 James, Cle. 76 2966 39.0
Ariza, Hou. 72 126 1.75 Andersen, Den. 76 143 1.88 Iguodala, Phi. 82 3193 38.9
Iguodala, Phi. 82 141 1.72 Dalembert, Phi. 82 151 1.84 Bryant, LA-L 73 2835 38.8
B. Davis, LA-C 75 126 1.68 Gasol, LA-L 65 113 1.74 Jackson, G.S.-Cha. 81 3129 38.6
James, Cle. 76 125 1.64 Lopez, N.J. 82 139 1.70 Anthony, Den. 69 2634 38.2
Jackson, G.S.-Cha. 81 132 1.63 Perkins, Bos. 78 132 1.69 Johnson, Atl. 76 2886 38.0
Jos. Smith, Atl. 81 130 1.60 McGee, Was. 60 101 1.68 Mayo, Mem. 82 3113 38.0
Butler, Was.-Dal. 74 116 1.57 Hibbert, Ind. 81 131 1.62 Deng, Chi. 70 2651 37.9
Bryant, LA-L 73 113 1.55 Gasol, Mem. 69 109 1.58 Randolph, Mem. 81 3051 37.7
Wallace, Cha. 76 117 1.54 Noah, Chi. 64 100 1.56 Butler, Was.-Dal. 74 2784 37.6
Felton, Cha. 80 123 1.54 Okafor, N.O. 82 127 1.55 Nowitzki, Dal. 81 3039 37.5
Evans, Sac. 72 109 1.51 Duncan, S.A. 78 117 1.50 Aldridge, Por. 78 2922 37.5
Gay, Mem. 80 118 1.48 Bargnani, Tor. (17) 80 111 1.39 Lee, N.Y. 81 3019 37.3
Brewer, Min. 82 117 1.43 Anthony, Mia. 80 109 1.36 Roy, Por. 65 2419 37.2
Nene, Den. 82 115 1.40 O'Neal, Mia. 70 95 1.36 Evans, Sac. 72 2677 37.2
Stuckey, Det. 73 101 1.38 Ibaka, OKC. 73 97 1.33 Green, OKC. 82 3043 37.1
Artest, LA-L 77 106 1.38 Jefferson, Min. 76 98 1.29 Gasol, LA-L 65 2403 37.0
Ginobili, S.A. 75 103 1.37 Gibson, Chi. 82 104 1.27 Lopez, N.J. 82 3027 36.9
Durant, OKC. 82 112 1.37 Kaman, LA-C 76 94 1.24 Williams, Utah 76 2802 36.9
Conley, Mem. 80 109 1.36 Millsap, Utah 82 99 1.21 Rose, Chi. 78 2871 36.8
Smith, Den. 75 99 1.32 Hawes, Sac. 72 83 1.15 Granger, Ind. 62 2278 36.7
Westbrook, OKC. 82 108 1.32 Horford, Atl. 81 91 1.12 Rondo, Bos. 81 2963 36.6
Watson, Ind. 79 104 1.32 Okur, Utah 73 81 1.11 Ariza, Hou. 72 2629 36.5
Lee, N.J. 71 93 1.31 Wallace, Cha. 76 83 1.09 Jamison, Was.-Cle. 66 2406 36.5
Camby, LA-C-Por. 74 95 1.28 Wade, Mia. 77 82 1.06 West, N.O. 81 2949 36.4
Jennings, Mil. 82 105 1.28 Brand, Phi. 76 80 1.05 Wade, Mia. 77 2792 36.3
Green, OKC. 82 104 1.27 Durant, OKC. 82 84 1.02 Curry, G.S. 80 2896 36.2
Williams, Utah 76 96 1.26 Jeffries, N.Y.-Hou. 70 71 1.01 Bosh, Tor. (32) 70 2526 36.1
Chalmers, Mia. 73 91 1.25 James, Cle. 76 77 1.01 Kidd, Dal. 80 2881 36.0
Salmons, Chi.-Mil. 81 99 1.22 Stoudemire, Pho. 82 83 1.01 Gordon, LA-C 62 2229 36.0
Terry, Dal. 77 94 1.22 Nene, Den. 82 82 1.00 Gasol, Mem. 69 2469 35.8
Mayo, Mem. 82 98 1.20 Nowitzki, Dal. 81 79 0.98 Chandler, N.Y. 65 2320 35.7
Pierce, Bos. 71 84 1.18 Thompson, Sac. 75 73 0.97 Brooks, Hou. 82 2919 35.6
Sefolosha, OKC. 82 97 1.18 Bosh, Tor. (38) 70 68 0.97 Jos. Smith, Atl. 81 2871 35.4
Hinrich, Chi. 74 85 1.15 Amundson, Pho. 79 73 0.92 Diaw, Cha. 82 2906 35.4
Miller, Por. 82 93 1.13 Frye, Pho. 81 74 0.91 R. Allen, Bos. 80 2819 35.2

NBA ROOKIE LEADERS


SCORING AVERAGE G FG FT PTS AVG REBOUNDS G OFF DEF TOT AVG ASSISTS G AST AVG
Evans, Sac. 72 533 348 1450 20.1 Gibson, Chi. 82 226 385 611 7.5 Curry, G.S. 80 472 5.9
Curry, G.S. 80 528 177 1399 17.5 Blair, S.A. 82 200 326 526 6.4 Evans, Sac. 72 414 5.8
Jennings, Mil. 82 451 223 1270 15.5 Jerebko, Det. 80 194 284 478 6.0 Jennings, Mil. 82 470 5.7
Thornton, N.O. 73 398 144 1057 14.5 Ibaka, OKC. 73 138 259 397 5.4 Collison, N.O. 76 432 5.7
Flynn, Min. 81 397 223 1094 13.5 Evans, Sac. 72 66 314 380 5.3 Flynn, Min. 81 356 4.4
Collison, N.O. 76 376 148 946 12.4 Casspi, Sac. 77 75 274 349 4.5 Holiday, Phi. 73 280 3.8
Casspi, Sac. 77 300 117 792 10.3 T. Williams, N.J. 78 46 302 348 4.5 Maynor, Utah-OKC. 81 266 3.3
Harden, OKC. 76 233 194 753 9.9 Curry, G.S. 80 48 308 356 4.5 Lawson, Den. 65 203 3.1
Matthews, Utah 82 273 160 769 9.4 Brockman, Sac. 52 105 108 213 4.1 T. Williams, N.J. 78 223 2.9
Jerebko, Det. 80 290 125 741 9.3 Hill, N.Y.-Hou. 47 76 99 175 3.7 Douglas, N.Y. 56 112 2.0
Gibson, Chi. 82 311 113 735 9.0 Thabeet, Mem. 68 85 158 243 3.6 Price, Ind. 56 106 1.9
Budinger, Hou. 74 249 67 657 8.9 Jennings, Mil. 82 49 233 282 3.4 Harden, OKC. 76 137 1.8
DeRozan, Tor. (13) 77 255 148 662 8.6 Andersen, Hou. 63 54 154 208 3.3 Teague, Atl. 71 122 1.7
Douglas, N.Y. 56 179 55 481 8.6 Harden, OKC. 76 47 197 244 3.2 Thornton, N.O. 73 114 1.6
T. Williams, N.J. 78 261 103 656 8.4 Budinger, Hou. 74 38 182 220 3.0 Matthews, Utah 82 124 1.5
Lawson, Den. 65 201 106 542 8.3 DeRozan, Tor. (16) 77 66 157 223 2.9 Beaubois, Dal. 56 74 1.3
Holiday, Phi. 73 230 65 587 8.0 Thornton, N.O. 73 72 139 211 2.9 Casspi, Sac. 77 95 1.2

FIELD GOAL PCT. FG FGA PCT 3-PT FIELD GOAL PCT. 3FG 3GA PCT FREE THROW PCT. FT FTA PCT
Blair, S.A. 275 495 .556 Curry, G.S. 166 380 .437 Curry, G.S. 177 200 .885
Ibaka, OKC. 201 370 .543 Beaubois, Dal. 45 110 .409 Collison, N.O. 148 174 .851
Beaubois, Dal. 155 299 .518 Collison, N.O. 46 115 .400 Matthews, Utah 160 193 .829
Lawson, Den. 201 390 .515 Ellington, Min. 64 162 .395 Flynn, Min. 223 270 .826
DeRozan, Tor. (5) 255 512 .498 Holiday, Phi. 62 159 .390 Jennings, Mil. 223 273 .817
Gibson, Chi. 311 629 .494 Douglas, N.Y. 68 175 .389 Thornton, N.O. 144 177 .814
Matthews, Utah 273 565 .483 Matthews, Utah 63 165 .382 Harden, OKC. 194 240 .808
Jerebko, Det. 290 603 .481 Harden, OKC. 93 248 .375 Young, Mem. 136 175 .777

STEALS PER GAME G STL AVG BLOCKS PER GAME G BLK AVG MINUTES PER GAME G MIN AVG
Curry, G.S. 80 152 1.90 Ibaka, OKC. 73 97 1.33 Evans, Sac. 72 2677 37.2
Evans, Sac. 72 109 1.51 Thabeet, Mem. 68 89 1.31 Curry, G.S. 80 2896 36.2
Jennings, Mil. 82 105 1.28 Gibson, Chi. 82 104 1.27 Jennings, Mil. 82 2671 32.6
Holiday, Phi. 73 79 1.08 Johnson, Chi. 65 43 0.66 Flynn, Min. 81 2339 28.9
Harden, OKC. 76 80 1.05 Hunter, G.S. 60 35 0.58 Jerebko, Det. 80 2232 27.9
Collison, N.O. 76 78 1.03 Blair, S.A. 82 39 0.48 Collison, N.O. 76 2109 27.8
Flynn, Min. 81 82 1.01 Hill, N.Y.-Hou. 47 21 0.45 Gibson, Chi. 82 2204 26.9
2009-10 REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS
TEAMS STATISTICS (TOTALS)
REBOUNDS MISCELLANEOUS --SCORING--
TEAM G FGM FGA PCT. 3FG 3FGA PCT. FTM FTA PCT. OFF DEF. TOT. AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG.
Phoe. 82 3339 6788 .492 730 1770 .412 1631 2117 .770 910 2616 3526 1912 1713 10 479 1210 418 9039 110.2
G.S. 82 3329 7094 .469 633 1687 .375 1631 2085 .782 753 2397 3150 1839 1886 21 761 1204 340 8922 108.8
Den. 82 3124 6678 .468 544 1517 .359 1937 2508 .772 889 2505 3394 1719 1844 15 683 1136 417 8729 106.5
Utah 82 3227 6575 .491 439 1207 .364 1654 2233 .741 872 2588 3460 2187 1859 17 675 1246 400 8547 104.2
Tor. 82 3199 6631 .482 518 1397 .371 1618 2118 .764 806 2507 3313 1804 1819 11 469 1100 384 8534 104.1
Orl. 82 3005 6394 .470 841 2241 .375 1575 2176 .724 810 2736 3546 1615 1629 7 512 1155 456 8426 102.8
Mem. 82 3223 6875 .469 344 1020 .337 1614 2202 .733 1070 2496 3566 1543 1655 13 645 1248 399 8404 102.5
Hou. 82 3094 6923 .447 646 1838 .351 1561 2022 .772 971 2471 3442 1790 1712 7 583 1188 318 8395 102.4
Clev. 82 3101 6391 .485 602 1582 .381 1569 2180 .720 791 2692 3483 1835 1591 6 564 1137 425 8373 102.1
N.Y. 82 3127 6876 .455 743 2145 .346 1376 1759 .782 836 2477 3313 1772 1638 9 586 1148 305 8373 102.1
Dall. 82 3140 6760 .464 558 1498 .372 1526 1870 .816 834 2586 3420 1917 1563 9 624 1059 449 8364 102.0
LA-L 82 3144 6875 .457 532 1562 .341 1519 1985 .765 973 2662 3635 1730 1592 5 612 1096 400 8339 101.7
Atl. 82 3181 6801 .468 524 1455 .360 1452 1914 .759 969 2451 3420 1789 1632 6 592 980 413 8338 101.7
OKC 82 3063 6629 .462 418 1229 .340 1778 2210 .805 960 2607 3567 1639 1743 17 654 1227 481 8322 101.5
S.A. 82 3150 6659 .473 554 1547 .358 1458 1969 .740 887 2621 3508 1829 1669 11 516 1116 381 8312 101.4
Ind. 82 3020 6823 .443 659 1896 .348 1564 2019 .775 785 2618 3403 1730 1848 16 585 1232 439 8263 100.8
N.O. 82 3178 6842 .464 571 1572 .363 1293 1661 .778 852 2450 3302 1828 1606 6 625 1103 300 8220 100.2
Sac. 82 3144 6895 .456 482 1383 .349 1430 1969 .726 977 2518 3495 1679 1827 14 564 1226 366 8200 100.0
Bos. 82 3039 6294 .483 499 1433 .348 1559 2090 .746 716 2449 3165 1930 1816 10 701 1219 402 8136 99.2
Minn. 82 3106 6923 .449 403 1181 .341 1436 1926 .746 962 2556 3518 1626 1699 12 597 1333 306 8051 98.2
Port. 82 2974 6453 .461 491 1388 .354 1606 2033 .790 913 2383 3296 1674 1715 10 523 1012 350 8045 98.1
Phil. 82 3087 6706 .460 474 1381 .343 1366 1808 .756 941 2421 3362 1723 1677 10 667 1192 439 8014 97.7
Milw. 82 3050 6998 .436 645 1813 .356 1264 1675 .755 965 2560 3525 1740 1823 11 580 1085 385 8009 97.7
Chi. 82 3081 6825 .451 352 1066 .330 1479 1962 .754 937 2716 3653 1704 1648 20 531 1175 478 7993 97.5
Miami 82 2984 6518 .458 494 1426 .346 1452 1931 .752 875 2553 3428 1548 1710 7 605 1079 457 7914 96.5
Wash. 82 3008 6700 .449 432 1225 .353 1444 1895 .762 966 2458 3424 1557 1752 13 493 1219 421 7892 96.2
LA-C 82 3002 6601 .455 483 1457 .332 1362 1867 .730 927 2502 3429 1810 1581 6 532 1285 466 7849 95.7
Cha. 82 2858 6306 .453 460 1331 .346 1637 2180 .751 858 2490 3348 1658 1597 9 632 1290 446 7813 95.3
Det. 82 2940 6602 .445 374 1190 .314 1455 1998 .728 1053 2242 3295 1591 1822 12 596 1100 313 7709 94.0
N.J. 82 2813 6554 .429 377 1185 .318 1572 2015 .780 897 2358 3255 1540 1643 3 573 1182 393 7575 92.4

OPPONENTS STATISTICS (TOTALS)


REBOUNDS MISCELLANEOUS -- SCORING
TEAM FGM FGA PCT. 3FG 3FGA PCT. FTM FTA PCT. OFF DEF. TOT. AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS AVG. DIFF
Cha. 2925 6536 .448 573 1696 .338 1270 1710 .743 868 2382 3250 1666 1804 11 614 1256 502 7693 93.8 +1.5
Miami 2813 6408 .439 524 1531 .342 1577 2091 .754 856 2483 3339 1545 1639 9 517 1184 355 7727 94.2 +2.3
Port. 2950 6352 .464 480 1399 .343 1394 1870 .745 801 2322 3123 1583 1767 21 485 1104 333 7774 94.8 +3.3
Orl. 2955 6739 .438 522 1437 .363 1380 1830 .754 800 2481 3281 1550 1819 11 551 1050 288 7812 95.3 +7.5
Bos. 2880 6390 .451 470 1375 .342 1606 2152 .746 868 2418 3286 1585 1777 9 578 1283 386 7836 95.6 +3.7
Clev. 2935 6633 .442 524 1511 .347 1444 1907 .757 794 2366 3160 1661 1708 10 542 1045 325 7838 95.6 +6.5
Milw. 2870 6361 .451 438 1276 .343 1692 2211 .765 790 2723 3513 1581 1664 11 573 1254 421 7870 96.0 +1.7
S.A. 3025 6691 .452 412 1200 .343 1433 1896 .756 814 2427 3241 1576 1672 8 567 1032 417 7895 96.3 +5.1
LA-L 3050 6840 .446 520 1585 .328 1332 1776 .750 914 2546 3460 1792 1737 12 573 1159 363 7952 97.0 +4.7
Atl. 3048 6623 .460 480 1392 .345 1380 1852 .745 922 2471 3393 1719 1582 7 506 1135 359 7956 97.0 +4.7
OKC. 3007 6718 .448 481 1414 .340 1541 2018 .764 937 2397 3334 1618 1755 13 616 1238 384 8036 98.0 +3.5
Utah 2908 6471 .449 552 1559 .354 1741 2286 .762 837 2376 3213 1628 1818 13 632 1238 445 8109 98.9 +5.3
Chi. 3043 6885 .442 584 1680 .348 1457 1958 .744 916 2589 3505 1715 1643 7 578 1090 438 8127 99.1 -1.6
Det. 2965 6172 .480 568 1514 .375 1630 2124 .767 814 2420 3234 1898 1702 11 549 1174 401 8128 99.1 -5.1
Dall. 3107 6805 .457 525 1515 .347 1402 1849 .758 922 2592 3514 1659 1652 7 563 1195 337 8141 99.3 +2.7
Wash. 3083 6664 .463 528 1466 .360 1590 2088 .761 935 2530 3465 1772 1684 6 569 1115 415 8284 101.0 -4.8
N.J. 3172 6593 .481 468 1278 .366 1511 2021 .748 925 2683 3608 1960 1647 8 638 1149 421 8323 101.5 -9.1
Phil. 3105 6573 .472 606 1542 .393 1518 1983 .766 888 2470 3358 1810 1534 4 621 1189 332 8334 101.6 -3.9
LA-C 3193 6792 .470 529 1457 .363 1455 1910 .762 879 2490 3369 1926 1588 8 686 1059 363 8370 102.1 -6.4
Den. 3088 6766 .456 523 1498 .349 1695 2207 .768 955 2513 3468 1723 1943 9 578 1235 438 8394 102.4 +4.1
N.O. 3250 6730 .483 539 1517 .355 1383 1841 .751 870 2586 3456 1925 1597 10 574 1177 367 8422 102.7 -2.5
Hou. 3236 6810 .475 489 1344 .364 1464 1917 .764 875 2632 3507 1716 1840 21 597 1207 532 8425 102.7 -0.4
Ind. 3113 6875 .453 510 1405 .363 1774 2346 .756 969 2852 3821 1694 1709 11 654 1227 414 8510 103.8 -3.0
Mem. 3277 6849 .478 572 1618 .354 1402 1858 .755 907 2349 3256 1875 1840 19 635 1165 501 8528 104.0 -1.5
Sac. 3199 6828 .469 497 1391 .357 1663 2149 .774 909 2538 3447 1683 1650 12 586 1120 468 8558 104.4 -4.4
Phoe. 3235 7165 .452 561 1582 .355 1606 2114 .760 1081 2391 3472 1704 1789 11 646 1065 365 8637 105.3 +4.9
Tor. 3194 6824 .468 609 1665 .366 1683 2146 .784 933 2453 3386 1889 1730 12 580 1040 360 8680 105.9 -1.8
N.Y. 3352 6902 .486 553 1571 .352 1429 1896 .754 959 2724 3683 1723 1576 13 585 1182 368 8686 105.9 -3.8
Minn. 3343 6961 .480 618 1690 .366 1534 1981 .774 917 2640 3557 2103 1686 10 721 1173 442 8838 107.8 -9.6
G.S. 3409 7033 .485 567 1514 .375 1832 2390 .767 1100 2842 3942 1979 1757 9 645 1442 407 9217 112.4 -3.6
2009-10 REGULAR SEASON STATISTICS
TEAMS STATISTICS (AVERAGES)
REBOUNDS MISCELLANEOUS
TEAM G FGM FGA PCT. 3FG 3FGA PCT. FTM FTA PCT. OFF DEF. TOT. AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS
Atl. 82 38.79 82.94 .468 6.39 17.74 .360 17.71 23.34 .759 11.82 29.89 41.71 21.82 19.90 0.07 7.22 11.95 5.04 101.7
Bos. 82 37.06 76.76 .483 6.09 17.48 .348 19.01 25.49 .746 8.73 29.87 38.60 23.54 22.15 0.12 8.55 14.87 4.90 99.2
Cha. 82 34.85 76.90 .453 5.61 16.23 .346 19.96 26.59 .751 10.46 30.37 40.83 20.22 19.48 0.11 7.71 15.73 5.44 95.3
Chi. 82 37.57 83.23 .451 4.29 13.00 .330 18.04 23.93 .754 11.43 33.12 44.55 20.78 20.10 0.24 6.48 14.33 5.83 97.5
Clev. 82 37.82 77.94 .485 7.34 19.29 .381 19.13 26.59 .720 9.65 32.83 42.48 22.38 19.40 0.07 6.88 13.87 5.18 102.1
Dall. 82 38.29 82.44 .464 6.80 18.27 .372 18.61 22.80 .816 10.17 31.54 41.71 23.38 19.06 0.11 7.61 12.91 5.48 102.0
Den. 82 38.10 81.44 .468 6.63 18.50 .359 23.62 30.59 .772 10.84 30.55 41.39 20.96 22.49 0.18 8.33 13.85 5.09 106.5
Det. 82 35.85 80.51 .445 4.56 14.51 .314 17.74 24.37 .728 12.84 27.34 40.18 19.40 22.22 0.15 7.27 13.41 3.82 94.0
G.S. 82 40.60 86.51 .469 7.72 20.57 .375 19.89 25.43 .782 9.18 29.23 38.41 22.43 23.00 0.26 9.28 14.68 4.15 108.8
Hou. 82 37.73 84.43 .447 7.88 22.41 .351 19.04 24.66 .772 11.84 30.13 41.98 21.83 20.88 0.09 7.11 14.49 3.88 102.4
Ind. 82 36.83 83.21 .443 8.04 23.12 .348 19.07 24.62 .775 9.57 31.93 41.50 21.10 22.54 0.20 7.13 15.02 5.35 100.8
LA-C 82 36.61 80.50 .455 5.89 17.77 .332 16.61 22.77 .730 11.30 30.51 41.82 22.07 19.28 0.07 6.49 15.67 5.68 95.7
LA-L 82 38.34 83.84 .457 6.49 19.05 .341 18.52 24.21 .765 11.87 32.46 44.33 21.10 19.41 0.06 7.46 13.37 4.88 101.7
Mem. 82 39.30 83.84 .469 4.20 12.44 .337 19.68 26.85 .733 13.05 30.44 43.49 18.82 20.18 0.16 7.87 15.22 4.87 102.5
Miami 82 36.39 79.49 .458 6.02 17.39 .346 17.71 23.55 .752 10.67 31.13 41.80 18.88 20.85 0.09 7.38 13.16 5.57 96.5
Milw. 82 37.20 85.34 .436 7.87 22.11 .356 15.41 20.43 .755 11.77 31.22 42.99 21.22 22.23 0.13 7.07 13.23 4.70 97.7
Minn. 82 37.88 84.43 .449 4.91 14.40 .341 17.51 23.49 .746 11.73 31.17 42.90 19.83 20.72 0.15 7.28 16.26 3.73 98.2
N.J. 82 34.30 79.93 .429 4.60 14.45 .318 19.17 24.57 .780 10.94 28.76 39.70 18.78 20.04 0.04 6.99 14.41 4.79 92.4
N.O. 82 38.76 83.44 .464 6.96 19.17 .363 15.77 20.26 .778 10.39 29.88 40.27 22.29 19.59 0.07 7.62 13.45 3.66 100.2
N.Y. 82 38.13 83.85 .455 9.06 26.16 .346 16.78 21.45 .782 10.20 30.21 40.40 21.61 19.98 0.11 7.15 14.00 3.72 102.1
OKC. 82 37.35 80.84 .462 5.10 14.99 .340 21.68 26.95 .805 11.71 31.79 43.50 19.99 21.26 0.21 7.98 14.96 5.87 101.5
Orl. 82 36.65 77.98 .470 10.2627.33 .375 19.21 26.54 .724 9.88 33.37 43.24 19.70 19.87 0.09 6.24 14.09 5.56 102.8
Phil. 82 37.65 81.78 .460 5.78 16.84 .343 16.66 22.05 .756 11.48 29.52 41.00 21.01 20.45 0.12 8.13 14.54 5.35 97.7
Phoe. 82 40.72 82.78 .492 8.90 21.59 .412 19.89 25.82 .770 11.10 31.90 43.00 23.32 20.89 0.12 5.84 14.76 5.10 110.2
Port. 82 36.27 78.70 .461 5.99 16.93 .354 19.59 24.79 .790 11.13 29.06 40.20 20.41 20.91 0.12 6.38 12.34 4.27 98.1
Sac. 82 38.34 84.09 .456 5.88 16.87 .349 17.44 24.01 .726 11.91 30.71 42.62 20.48 22.28 0.17 6.88 14.95 4.46 100.0
S.A. 82 38.41 81.21 .473 6.76 18.87 .358 17.78 24.01 .740 10.82 31.96 42.78 22.30 20.35 0.13 6.29 13.61 4.65 101.4
Tor. 82 39.01 80.87 .482 6.32 17.04 .371 19.73 25.83 .764 9.83 30.57 40.40 22.00 22.18 0.13 5.72 13.41 4.68 104.1
Utah 82 39.35 80.18 .491 5.35 14.72 .364 20.17 27.23 .741 10.63 31.56 42.20 26.67 22.67 0.21 8.23 15.20 4.88 104.2
Wash. 82 36.68 81.71 .449 5.27 14.94 .353 17.61 23.11 .762 11.78 29.98 41.76 18.99 21.37 0.16 6.01 14.87 5.13 96.2

OPPONENTS STATISTICS (AVERAGES)


REBOUNDS MISCELLANEOUS
TEAM G FGM FGA PCT. 3FG 3FGA PCT. FTM FTA PCT. OFF DEF. TOT. AST PF DQ STL TO BLK PTS
Atl. 82 37.17 80.77 .460 5.85 16.98 .345 16.83 22.59 .745 11.24 30.13 41.38 20.96 19.29 0.09 6.17 13.84 4.38 97.0
Bos. 82 35.12 77.93 .451 5.73 16.77 .342 19.59 26.24 .746 10.59 29.49 40.07 19.33 21.67 0.11 7.05 15.65 4.71 95.6
Cha. 82 35.67 79.71 .448 6.99 20.68 .338 15.49 20.85 .743 10.59 29.05 39.63 20.32 22.00 0.13 7.49 15.32 6.12 93.8
Chi. 82 37.11 83.96 .442 7.12 20.49 .348 17.77 23.88 .744 11.17 31.57 42.74 20.91 20.04 0.09 7.05 13.29 5.34 99.1
Clev. 82 35.79 80.89 .442 6.39 18.43 .347 17.61 23.26 .757 9.68 28.85 38.54 20.26 20.83 0.12 6.61 12.74 3.96 95.6
Dall. 82 37.89 82.99 .457 6.40 18.48 .347 17.10 22.55 .758 11.24 31.61 42.85 20.23 20.15 0.09 6.87 14.57 4.11 99.3
Den. 82 37.66 82.51 .456 6.38 18.27 .349 20.67 26.91 .768 11.65 30.65 42.29 21.01 23.70 0.11 7.05 15.06 5.34 102.4
Det. 82 36.16 75.27 .480 6.93 18.46 .375 19.88 25.90 .767 9.93 29.51 39.44 23.15 20.76 0.13 6.70 14.32 4.89 99.1
G.S. 82 41.57 85.77 .485 6.91 18.46 .375 22.34 29.15 .767 13.41 34.66 48.07 24.13 21.43 0.11 7.87 17.59 4.96 112.4
Hou. 82 39.46 83.05 .475 5.96 16.39 .364 17.85 23.38 .764 10.67 32.10 42.77 20.93 22.44 0.26 7.28 14.72 6.49 102.7
Ind. 82 37.96 83.84 .453 6.22 17.13 .363 21.63 28.61 .756 11.82 34.78 46.60 20.66 20.84 0.13 7.98 14.96 5.05 103.8
LA-C 82 38.94 82.83 .470 6.45 17.77 .363 17.74 23.29 .762 10.72 30.37 41.09 23.49 19.37 0.10 8.37 12.91 4.43 102.1
LA-L 82 37.20 83.41 .446 6.34 19.33 .328 16.24 21.66 .750 11.15 31.05 42.20 21.85 21.18 0.15 6.99 14.13 4.43 97.0
Mem. 82 39.96 83.52 .478 6.98 19.73 .354 17.10 22.66 .755 11.06 28.65 39.71 22.87 22.44 0.23 7.74 14.21 6.11 104.0
Miami 82 34.30 78.15 .439 6.39 18.67 .342 19.23 25.50 .754 10.44 30.28 40.72 18.84 19.99 0.11 6.30 14.44 4.33 94.2
Milw. 82 35.00 77.57 .451 5.34 15.56 .343 20.63 26.96 .765 9.63 33.21 42.84 19.28 20.29 0.13 6.99 15.29 5.13 96.0
Minn. 82 40.77 84.89 .480 7.54 20.61 .366 18.71 24.16 .774 11.18 32.20 43.38 25.65 20.56 0.12 8.79 14.30 5.39 107.8
N.J. 82 38.68 80.40 .481 5.71 15.59 .366 18.43 24.65 .748 11.28 32.72 44.00 23.90 20.09 0.10 7.78 14.01 5.13 101.5
N.O. 82 39.63 82.07 .483 6.57 18.50 .355 16.87 22.45 .751 10.61 31.54 42.15 23.48 19.48 0.12 7.00 14.35 4.48 102.7
N.Y. 82 40.88 84.17 .486 6.74 19.16 .352 17.43 23.12 .754 11.70 33.22 44.91 21.01 19.22 0.16 7.13 14.41 4.49 105.9
OKC. 82 36.67 81.93 .448 5.87 17.24 .340 18.79 24.61 .764 11.43 29.23 40.66 19.73 21.40 0.16 7.51 15.10 4.68 98.0
Orl. 82 36.04 82.18 .438 6.37 17.52 .363 16.83 22.32 .754 9.76 30.26 40.01 18.90 22.18 0.13 6.72 12.80 3.51 95.3
Phil. 82 37.87 80.16 .472 7.39 18.80 .393 18.51 24.18 .766 10.83 30.12 40.95 22.07 18.71 0.05 7.57 14.50 4.05 101.6
Phoe. 82 39.45 87.38 .452 6.84 19.29 .355 19.59 25.78 .760 13.18 29.16 42.34 20.78 21.82 0.13 7.88 12.99 4.45 105.3
Port. 82 35.98 77.46 .464 5.85 17.06 .343 17.00 22.80 .745 9.77 28.32 38.09 19.30 21.55 0.26 5.91 13.46 4.06 94.8
Sac. 82 39.01 83.27 .469 6.06 16.96 .357 20.28 26.21 .774 11.09 30.95 42.04 20.52 20.12 0.15 7.15 13.66 5.71 104.4
S.A. 82 36.89 81.60 .452 5.02 14.63 .343 17.48 23.12 .756 9.93 29.60 39.52 19.22 20.39 0.10 6.91 12.59 5.09 96.3
Tor. 82 38.95 83.22 .468 7.43 20.30 .366 20.52 26.17 .784 11.38 29.91 41.29 23.04 21.10 0.15 7.07 12.68 4.39 105.9
Utah 82 35.46 78.91 .449 6.73 19.01 .354 21.23 27.88 .762 10.21 28.98 39.18 19.85 22.17 0.16 7.71 15.10 5.43 98.9
Wash. 82 37.60 81.27 .463 6.44 17.88 .360 19.39 25.46 .761 11.40 30.85 42.26 21.61 20.54 0.07 6.94 13.60 5.06 101.0
2009-10 NBA RANKINGS
TEAMS' STATISTICS, RANK WITHIN LEAGUE

---- ATL BOS CHA CHI CLE DAL DEN DET GS HOU IND LAC LAL MEM MIA MIL MIN NJ NO NY OKC ORL PHI PHO POR SAC SA TOR UTA WAS
Points/game 13 19 28 24 9t 11 3 29 2 8 16 27 12 7 25 23 20 30 17 9t 14 6 22 1 21 18 15 5 4 26
FG pct. 11 4 22 23 3 12 10 27 8 26 28 20 18 9 17 29 25 30 13 21 14 7 16 1 15 19 6 5 2 24
FT pct. 15 21 20 18 30 1 9 27 5 10 8 26 12 25 19 17 22 6 7 4 2 29 16 11 3 28 24 13 23 14
3-pt FG pct. 9 17 21 28 2 5 10 30 4 15 18 27 24 26 19 12 23 29 8 20 25 3 22 1 13 16 11 6 7 14
Off. Reb./gm 6 30 21 12 27 24 17 2 29 5 28 13 4 1 19 8 9 16 22 23 10 25 11 15 14 3 18 26 20 7
Def. Reb./gm 23 25 19 2 3 10 16 30 27 21 6 17 4 18 13 11 12 29 24 20 8 1 26 7 28 14 5 15 9 22
Rebounds/game 17t 29 22 1 11 17t 20 27 30 13 19 14 2 4 15 7 8 28 25 23t 3 5 21 6 26 10 9 23t 12 16
Assists/game 12 2 22 19 6 3 18 26 5 11 15t 9 15t 29 28 14 24 30 8 13 23 25 17 4 21 20 7 10 1 27
Steals/game 15 2 8 24 21t 10 3 14 1 18 17 23 11 7 12 19 13 20 9 16 6 27 5 29 25 21t 26 30 4 28
Turnovers/gm 1 21t 29 15 12 3 11 7t 19 17 25 28 6 27 4 5 30 16 9 13 24 14 18 20 2 23 10 7t 26 21t
Blocks/gm 14 15 7 2 10 6 13 27 25 26 8t 3 16t 18 4 20 28 19 30 29 1 5 8t 12 24 23 22 21 16t 11
Pers.Fouls/gm 8 22 5 11 3 1 27 24 30 17 28 2 4 12 16 25 15 10 6 9 20 7 14 18 19 26 13 23 29 21
DQ/game 3t 13t 10t 29 3t 10t 25 20t 30 7t 26 3t 2 22t 7t 17t 20t 1 3t 10t 27t 7t 13t 13t 13t 24 17t 17t 27t 22t

OPPONENTS' STATISTICS, RANK WITHIN LEAGUE

---- ATL BOS CHA CHI CLE DAL DEN DET GS HOU IND LAC LAL MEM MIA MIL MIN NJ NO NY OKC ORL PHI PHO POR SAC SA TOR UTA WAS
Points/game 10 5 1 13 6 15 20 14 30 22 23 19 9 24 2 7 29 17 21 28 11 4 18 26 3 25 8 27 12 16
FG pct. 16 9 6 3 4 15 14 26 29 23 13 21 5 24 2 10 25 27 28 30 7 1 22 11 18 20 12 19 8 17
FT pct. 3 5 1 2 15 16 27 26 25 22 14 20 7 12 11 23 29 6 8 9 21 10 24 17 4 28 13 30 19 18
3-pt FG pct. 9 4 2 12 11 10 13 29 28 24 21 22 1 15 5 7 25 27 18 14 3 23 30 17 6 19 8 26 16 20
Off. Reb./gm 20t 9t 9t 18 2 20t 26 5t 30 12 28 13 17 15 8 1 19 22 11 27 25 3 14 29 4 16 5t 23 7 24
Def. Reb./gm 13 8 5 22 3 23 17 9 29 24 30 16 20 2 15 27 25 26 21 28 7 14 12 6 1 19 10 11 4 18
Rebounds/game 15 9 6 22 2 25 20 4 30 23 29 13 18 7 11 24 26 27 17 28 10 8 12 21 1 16 5 14 3 19
Assists/game 17 6 11 15 10 9 18t 25 29 16 13 27 21 23 1 4 30 28 26 18t 7 2 22 14 5 12 3 24 8 20
Steals/game 2 13t 20 13t 4 7 13t 5 26 19 28 29 10t 24 3 10t 30 25 12 17 21 6 22 27 1 18 8 16 23 9
Turnovers/gm 20 2 3 24 28 10 7 15 1 9 8 26 18 17 12 4 16 19 14 13 5t 27 11 25 23 21 30 29 5t 22
Blocks/gm 7 15 29 23t 2 5 23t 16 17 30 18 9t 9t 28 6 21t 25 21t 12 13 14 1 3 11 4 27 20 8 26 19
Pers.Fouls/gm 28 8 6 24 15 21 1 16 10 2t 14 27 12 2t 25 20 17 23 26 29 11 4 30 7 9 22 19 13 5 18
DQ/game 26t 19t 10t 26t 16t 26t 19t 10t 19t 1t 10t 23t 7t 3 19t 10t 16t 23t 16t 4t 4t 10t 30 10t 1t 7t 23t 7t 4t 29

COMBINATION TEAM/OPPONENT STATISTICS, RANK WITHIN LEAGUE

Pts/game/diff. 7 9 15 18 2 12 8 27 22 16 21 28 6 17 13 14 30 29 20 23 10 1 24 5 11 25 4 19 3 26
Off. Reb. Pct. 5 28 17 16 22 26 19 2 30 12 29 11 7 1 20 18 15 21 23 27 3 25 9 10 4 6 14 24 13 8
Def. Reb. Pct. 24 13 10 8 2 15 26 19 30 12 22 11 9 20 6 3 16 28 14 27 17 1 21 29 7 18 4 23 5 25
Total Reb. Pct. 15 27 18 11 7 24 22 2 30 16 29 13 9 1 14 5 19 26 21 28 8 10 17 23 4 12 3 25 6 20
MISCELLANEOUS STATS & NBA RATIOS
DECIDED DECIDED
POINTS FIELD GOAL TURNOVERS REBOUND BELOW OVERTIME 3 PTS. 10 PTS.
PER GAME PERCENTAGE PER GAME PERCENTAGES 100 PTS. GAMES OR LESS OR MORE
TEAM OWN OPP. OWN OPP. OWN OPP. OFF. DEF. TOT. OWN OPP. W L W L W L
Atlanta 101.7 97.0 .468 .460 12.0* 13.8 .282 .727 .504 34 52 4 3 4 6 31 9
Boston 99.2 95.6 .483 .451 14.9 15.6 .228 .738 .483 46 50 3 1 8 6 23 10
Charlotte 95.3 93.8* .453 .448 15.7 15.3 .265 .742 .503 53 61 4 3 9 7 21 11
Chicago 97.5 99.1 .451 .442 14.3 13.3 .266 .748 .507 52 44 5 2 7 5 15 21
Cleveland 102.1 95.6 .485 .442 13.9 12.7 .251 .772 .511 32 57 2 2 7 8 32 5
Dallas 102.0 99.3 .464 .457 12.9 14.6 .243 .737 .490 40 42 5 3 9 2 21 14
Denver 106.5 102.4 .468 .456 13.9 15.1 .261 .724 .493 30 33 4 0 9 4 29 13
Detroit 94.0 99.1 .445 .480 13.4 14.3 .303 .734 .518 60 47 3 1 4 1 7 29
Golden State 108.8 112.4 .469 .485 14.7 17.6* .209 .685 .447 20 9 0 2 2 8 14 28
Houston 102.4 102.7 .447 .475 14.5 14.7 .269 .738 .504 31 37 4 3 5 5 17 15
Indiana 100.8 103.8 .443 .453 15.0 15.0 .216 .730 .473 40 29 0 1 3 5 20 28
L.A. Clippers 95.7 102.1 .455 .470 15.7 12.9 .271 .740 .506 56 36 1 0 5 3 12 35
L.A. Lakers 101.7 97.0 .457 .446 13.4 14.1 .276 .744 .510 37 51 4 1 11 7 27 13
Memphis 102.5 104.0 .469 .478 15.2 14.2 .313* .733 .523* 34 29 3 5 6 4 17 26
Miami 96.5 94.2 .458 .439 13.2 14.4 .261 .749 .505 50 53 4 2 7 3 27 18
Milwaukee 97.7 96.0 .436 .451 13.2 15.3 .262 .764 .513 53 48 4 6 7 12 19 17
Minnesota 98.2 107.8 .449 .480 16.3 14.3 .267 .736 .502 46 25 1 1 3 9 4 39
New Jersey 92.4 101.5 .429 .481 14.4 14.0 .251 .718 .484 64 38 1 1 1 7 5 44
New Orleans 100.2 102.7 .464 .483 13.5 14.4 .248 .738 .493 43 35 3 3 6 3 5 24
New York 102.1 105.9 .455 .486 14.0 14.4 .235 .721 .478 40 26 2 5 4 6 10 28
Oklahoma City 101.5 98.0 .462 .448 15.0 15.1 .286 .736 .511 39 44 1 4 7 11 25 9
Orlando 102.8 95.3 .470 .438* 14.1 12.8 .246 .774* .510 35 57 2 0 3 4 39 6
Philadelphia 97.7 101.6 .460 .472 14.5 14.5 .276 .732 .504 48 38 2 3 6 8 15 26
Phoenix 110.2* 105.3 .492* .452 14.8 13.0 .276 .708 .492 12 20 1 1 5 4 31 10
Portland 98.1 94.8 .461 .464 12.3 13.5 .282 .748 .515 45 58 1 5 6 3 24 13
Sacramento 100.0 104.4 .456 .469 15.0 13.7 .278 .735 .506 36 29 2 4 6 7 10 27
San Antonio 101.4 96.3 .473 .452 13.6 12.6 .268 .763 .515 39 55 1 3 6 4 34 9
Toronto 104.1 105.9 .482 .468 13.4 12.7 .247 .729 .488 24 24 2 2 6 5 19 24
Utah 104.2 98.9 .491 .449 15.2 15.1 .268 .756 .512 26 46 3 0 5 3 32 14
Washington 96.2 101.0 .449 .463 14.9 13.6 .276 .724 .500 51 43 0 5 5 12 11 31

COMPOSITE; 2460 games


100.4 .461 14.2 .263 .737 1216 1216 72 172 596
* - League Leader

NBA RATIOS
Assists Per Turnover Steals Per Turnover Assists Per Turnover Steals Per Turnover
Name AST TO RATIO Name STL TO RATIO Name AST TO RATIO Name STL TO RATIO
Atlanta 1789 980 1.83 Golden State 761 1204 0.63 Paul, N.O. 480 112 4.29 Brewer, Utah-Mem. 91 53 1.72
Dallas 1917 1059 1.81 Atlanta 592 980 0.60 Arroyo, Mia. 225 54 4.17 Watson, G.S. 103 69 1.49
Utah 2187 1246 1.76 Denver 683 1136 0.60 Calderon, Tor. (3) 404 99 4.08 Wallace, Det. 86 64 1.34
New Orleans 1828 1103 1.66 Dallas 624 1059 0.59 Kidd, Dal. 724 195 3.71 Lee, N.J. 93 76 1.22
Portland 1674 1012 1.65 Boston 701 1219 0.58 Bibby, Atl. 310 90 3.44 Fisher, LA-L 90 78 1.15
Toronto (6) 1804 1100 1.64 New Orleans 625 1103 0.57 Duhon, N.Y. 378 110 3.44 Sefolosha, OKC. 97 90 1.08
San Antonio 1829 1116 1.64 Miami 605 1079 0.56 Williams, Orl. 298 87 3.43 Kirilenko, Utah 83 79 1.05
Cleveland 1835 1137 1.61 Philadelphia 667 1192 0.56 Rondo, Bos. 794 246 3.23 Camby, LA-C-Por. 95 91 1.04
Milwaukee 1740 1085 1.60 L.A. Lakers 612 1096 0.56 Williams, Utah 798 252 3.17 Nene, Den. 115 125 0.92
Boston 1930 1219 1.58 Detroit 596 1100 0.54 Maynor,Utah-OKC. 266 85 3.13 Artest, LA-L 106 121 0.88
Phoenix 1912 1210 1.58 Utah 675 1246 0.54 Ridnour, Mil. 324 106 3.06 Terry, Dal. 94 109 0.86
L.A. Lakers 1730 1096 1.58 Milwaukee 580 1085 0.53 Nash, Pho. 892 295 3.02 Paul, N.O. 96 112 0.86
New York 1772 1148 1.54 Oklahoma City 654 1227 0.53 Blake, Por.-LA-C 380 128 2.97 Salmons, Chi.-Mil. 99 123 0.80
Golden State 1839 1204 1.53 Memphis 645 1248 0.52 Hinrich, Chi. 330 113 2.92 Ariza, Hou. 126 161 0.78
Denver 1719 1136 1.51 Portland 523 1012 0.52 B. Davis, LA-C 598 211 2.83 Green, OKC. 104 135 0.77
Houston 1790 1188 1.51 New York 586 1148 0.51 Udrih, Sac. 372 136 2.74 Rondo, Bos. 189 246 0.77
Chicago 1704 1175 1.45 Cleveland 564 1137 0.50 Terry, Dal. 292 109 2.68 Hinrich, Chi. 85 113 0.75
Detroit 1591 1100 1.45 Houston 583 1188 0.49 Felton, Cha. 446 168 2.65 Kidd, Dal. 145 195 0.74
Philadelphia 1723 1192 1.45 Charlotte 632 1290 0.49 Lowry, Hou. 305 116 2.63 Chalmers, Mia. 91 123 0.74
Miami 1548 1079 1.43 New Jersey 573 1182 0.48 Fisher, LA-L 201 78 2.58 Felton, Cha. 123 168 0.73
L.A. Clippers 1810 1285 1.41 Indiana 585 1232 0.47
Indiana 1730 1232 1.40 San Antonio 516 1116 0.46
Orlando 1615 1155 1.40 Sacramento 564 1226 0.46
Sacramento 1679 1226 1.37 Chicago 531 1175 0.45
Oklahoma City 1639 1227 1.34 Minnesota 597 1333 0.45
New Jersey 1540 1182 1.30 Orlando 512 1155 0.44
Charlotte 1658 1290 1.29 Toronto (27) 469 1100 0.43
Washington 1557 1219 1.28 L.A. Clippers 532 1285 0.41
Memphis 1543 1248 1.24 Washington 493 1219 0.40
Minnesota 1626 1333 1.22 Phoenix 479 1210 0.40
2009-10 SINGLE GAME HIGHS/LOWS
SINGLE-GAME HIGHS / PLAYERS
Minutes -- 59, Brooks, HOU vs. MIN, 1/13 (3 OT)
Minutes -- 48, (39 times, most recently) Curry, GS at POR, 4/14
Field Goals -- 22, Miller, POR at DAL, 1/30 (OT)
Field Goals -- 21, Jennings, MIL vs. GS, 11/14
FG Attempts -- 39, Ellis, GS vs. CHI, 1/18
3-Pt. Field Goals -- 10, Smith, DEN vs. ATL, 12/23
3-Pt. FG Attempts -- 17, Smith, DEN vs. ATL, 12/23
Free Throws -- 20, Bosh, TOR vs. GS, 4/4
FT Attempts -- 24, Howard, ORL vs. IND, 1/20
Off. Rebounds -- 14, Noah, CHI vs. LAL, 12/15
Def. Rebounds -- 23, Jefferson, MIN at HOU, 1/13 (3 OT)
Def. Rebounds -- 19, (5 times, most recently) Millsap, UTA at GS, 4/13
Rebounds -- 27, Duncan, SA vs. ATL, 1/27
Assists -- 20, (4 times, most recently) Bynum, DET vs. WAS, 3/12
Steals -- 8, (3 times, most recently) Rodriguez, NY vs. MIL, 2/22
Turnovers -- 12, Arenas, WAS at MIA, 11/10
Blocks -- 8, Howard, ORL vs. TOR, 12/16
Blocks -- 8, Randolph, GS at NO, 12/23
Points -- 55, Jennings, MIL vs. GS, 11/14

SINGLE-GAME HIGHS AND LOWS / TEAMS


Field Goals -- 62, San Antonio, vs. GS, 3/19
Fewest Field Goals -- 21, Charlotte, at MIA, 3/20
FG Attempts -- 111, Minnesota, at HOU, 1/13 (3 OT)
FG Attempts -- 104, Phoenix, at LAL, 11/12
FG Attempts -- 104, Oklahoma City, at GS, 4/11
Fewest FG Attempts -- 59, Charlotte, at MIL, 11/20
Field Goal Pct. -- .675, Utah, vs. HOU, 2/27
Lowest Field Goal Pct. -- .279, Detroit, vs. TOR, 12/23
3-Pt. Field Goals -- 17, (4 times, most recently) Indiana, vs. UTA, 3/26
3-Pt. FG Attempts -- 47, New York, at CHI, 12/17
3-Pt. FG Pct. -- .889, San Antonio, vs. SAC, 12/9
Free Throws -- 41, Denver, vs. UTA, 1/17
Free Throws -- 41, Dallas, at GS, 2/8
Fewest Free Throws -- 3, Atlanta, vs. ORL, 11/26
Fewest Free Throws -- 3, New Orleans, at LAC, 3/15
FT Attempts -- 49, Denver, at POR, 10/29
FT Attempts -- 49, Denver, vs. UTA, 1/17
Fewest FT Attempts -- 5, Indiana, vs. CLE, 1/29
Fewest FT Attempts -- 5, New Orleans, at LAC, 3/15
Free Throw Pct. -- 1.000, (10 times, most recently) Houston, at SAC, 4/12
Lowest Free Throw Pct. -- .364, San Antonio, vs. LAL, 1/12
Off. Rebounds -- 25, (3 times, most recently) Chicago, vs. OKC, 1/4
Fewest Off. Rebounds -- 1, (3 times, most recently) Boston, vs. IND, 3/12
Def. Rebounds -- 52, L.A. Lakers, vs. MIL, 1/10
Def. Rebounds -- 52, Cleveland, at IND, 1/29
Fewest Def. Rebounds -- 17, (5 times, most recently) Detroit, at ATL, 3/13
Rebounds -- 68, Sacramento, vs. GS, 1/26
Fewest Rebounds -- 23, Golden State, at NO, 3/8
Assists -- 39, Utah, vs. MEM, 1/6
Assists -- 39, San Antonio, vs. GS, 3/19
Fewest Assists -- 6, Oklahoma City, vs. POR, 11/1
Personal Fouls -- 35, Toronto, at SA, 11/9
Fewest Personal Fouls -- 8, New York, vs. WAS, 2/3
Fewest Personal Fouls -- 8, L.A. Clippers, at ORL, 3/9
Steals -- 22, Golden State, vs. MIN, 11/9
Turnovers -- 28, Minnesota, at GS, 11/9
Turnovers -- 28, San Antonio, vs. CHA, 12/11
Fewest Turnovers -- 3, Detroit, at ATL, 4/3
Blocks -- 16, Oklahoma City, at LAL, 11/22
Blocks -- 16, Charlotte, vs. TOR, 11/25
Points -- 152, Phoenix, vs. MIN, 3/16
Fewest Points -- 59, Charlotte, at BOS, 10/28
ATTENDANCE
HOME ATTENDANCE ROAD ATTENDANCE
TEAM G ATT AVG G ATT AVG
Atlanta Hawks 41 678,375 16,546 41 700,983 17,097
Boston Celtics 41 763,584 18,624 41 744,318 18,154
Charlotte Bobcats 41 648,790 15,824 41 685,158 16,711
Chicago Bulls 41 849,760 20,726 41 727,138 17,735
Cleveland Cavaliers 41 843,042 20,562 41 787,239 19,201
Dallas Mavericks 41 819,770 19,994 41 702,302 17,129
Denver Nuggets 41 737,812 17,995 41 715,286 17,446
Detroit Pistons 41 768,826 18,752 41 701,290 17,105
Golden State Warriors 41 739,120 18,027 41 674,196 16,444
Houston Rockets 41 677,658 16,528 41 681,285 16,617
Indiana Pacers 41 582,295 14,202 41 695,164 16,955
Los Angeles Clippers 41 670,063 16,343 41 665,261 16,226
Los Angeles Lakers 41 778,877 18,997 41 789,955 19,267
Memphis Grizzlies 41 552,914 13,486 41 684,350 16,691
Miami Heat 41 726,935 17,730 41 739,679 18,041
Milwaukee Bucks 41 619,453 15,109 41 689,746 16,823
Minnesota Timberwolves 41 619,170 15,102 41 660,630 16,113
New Jersey Nets 41 537,230 13,103 41 674,292 16,446
New Orleans Hornets 41 620,366 15,131 41 703,920 17,169
New York Knickerbockers 41 799,640 19,503 41 709,937 17,316
Oklahoma City Thunder 41 738,149 18,004 41 691,951 16,877
Orlando Magic 41 715,901 17,461 41 731,392 17,839
Philadelphia 76ers 41 583,219 14,225 41 692,450 16,889
Phoenix Suns 41 723,582 17,648 41 712,438 17,377
Portland Trail Blazers 41 840,411 20,498 41 678,389 16,546
Sacramento Kings 41 543,416 13,254 41 695,915 16,974
San Antonio Spurs 41 741,676 18,090 41 726,002 17,707
Toronto Raptors 41 733,784 17,897 (14) 41 675,133 16,467 (26)
Utah Jazz 41 794,512 19,378 41 700,928 17,096
Washington Wizards 41 664,398 16,205 41 676,001 16,488
TOTALS 1230 21,112,728 17,165 1230 21,112,728 17,165
PRESEASON HISTORY
2009 Preseason (2-6) 2004 Preseason (3-5)
Date Result Location Attendance Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 6 L 107-98 at Philadelphia* 7,213 Oct. 15 L 99-97 vs. Philadelphia 13,370
Oct. 7 L 84-79 vs. Philadelphia 11,974 Oct. 17 L 108-103 at Philadelphia* 7,619
Oct. 9 W 112-97 at Minnesota 8,822 Oct. 20 W 86-83 vs. Benetton (Italy) 10,668
Oct. 11 W 100-93 vs. Washington 11,936 Oct. 21 L 88-85 vs. Portland 11,285
Oct. 14 L 106-90 at Boston** 10,117 Oct. 23 W 91-89 at Chicago 14,723
Oct. 15 L 124-112 vs. Houston 12,061 Oct. 26 L 102-98 at Denver 10,964
Oct. 18 L 101-82 vs. Boston 13,607 Oct. 27 L 97-95 at Portland 16,735
Oct. 23 L 98-90 at Minnesota^ 5,566 Oct. 29 W 100-92 vs. Cleveland 13,730
* Game played at London, Ont.; ** Game played at Hartford, Conn.; * Game played at London, Ont.
^ Game played at Sioux Falls, S.D.
2003 Preseason (5-2)
2008 Preseason (4-4) Date Result Location Attendance
Date Result Location Attendance Oct. 8 W 76-71 vs. Washington 13,712
Oct. 7 W 104-84 at Cleveland 18,847 Oct. 10 W 100-76 vs. Panathinaikos 17,749
Oct. 8 W 113-111 vs. New York 15,274 Oct. 12 W 88-81 at Detroit* 8,124
Oct. 12 L 85-79 vs. Philadelphia 14,427 Oct. 15 W 90-76 at Minnesota** 4,945
Oct. 14 W 86-78 vs. CSKA Moscow 13,963 Oct. 17 W 86-81 vs. Denver 14, 604
Oct. 16 L 90-86 vs. Minnesota 14,253 Oct. 18 L 92-76 at New Jersey^ 8,170
Oct. 18 W 93-89 at L.A. Clippers N/A Oct. 21 L 94-91 vs. Chicago 14,652
Oct. 19 L 112-89 at L.A. Lakers 13,772 Oct. 23 Toronto vs. Cleveland - Cancelled^^
Oct. 21 L 105-94 vs. Denver* 17,534 * Game played at Grand Rapids, Mich.; ** Game played at Moline, Ill.;
* Game played at Edmonton, Alb. ^ Game played at Bridgeport, Conn.; ^^ Game hosted at St. Johns, Newfoundland.

2007 Preseason (6-2) 2002 Preseason (3-5)


Date Result Location Attendance Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 6 L 89-85 at Boston* 11,118 Oct. 8 L 80-70 vs. Detroit 15,535
Oct. 7 W 93-87 at Lottomatica* 11,118 Oct. 11 L 87-79 at Chicago 15,248
Oct. 11 L 104-103 at Real Madrid^ 7,400 Oct. 13 L 105-101 (OT) vs. Philadelphia 16,408
Oct. 17 W 105-99 vs. Zalgris Kaunas 13,394 Oct. 15 W 93-76 at Cleveland* 6,581
Oct. 19 W 92-82 vs. Chicago 14,047 Oct. 18 L 93-77 vs. New Jersey 16,674
Oct. 25 W 111-78 vs. Cleveland 15,830 Oct. 20 W 84-73 vs. Boston 16,117
Oct. 26 W 98-64 vs. Washington 13,741 Oct. 22 W 108-97 at Golden State** 8,500
* Game played at Rome, Italy; ^ Game played at Madrid, Spain. Oct. 24 L 89-82 at Utah 14,133
* Game played at Columbus, Ohio; **Game played at El-Paso, Tex.
2006 Preseason (7-1)
Date Opponent Location Attendance 2001 Preseason (5-2)
Oct. 9 W 93-88 at Washington 10,902 Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 11 W 118-112 vs. Boston 13,124 Oct. 5 L 125-92 at Minnesota* 10,102
Oct. 15 W 119-110 vs. New Jersey 13,331 Oct. 11 W 115-85 vs. Minnesota 9,346
Oct. 18 W 103-81 at Cleveland* 9,435 Oct. 16 W 107-89 vs. Chicago 15,792
Oct. 19 W 118-81 vs. Maccabi (Israel) 14,430 Oct. 17 L 106-96 at Indiana 13,724
Oct. 22 W 93-90 vs. Cleveland 14,538 Oct. 20 W 105-84 vs. Cleveland 15,637
Oct. 25 W 106-102 at Boston 11,032 Oct. 22 W 88-83 vs. Utah 15,143
Oct. 27 L 108-97 at Chicago 19,709 Oct. 25 W 113-96 vs. Washington 19,800
* Game played at Rochester, N.Y. * Game played at Billings, Mont.

2005 Preseason (3-5) 2000 Preseason (4-4)


Date Result Location Attendance Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 12 L 102-101 vs. Utah 12,285 Oct. 10 L 100-96 vs. Minnesota 12,744
Oct. 14 L 107-100 at Boston* 8,868 Oct. 12 W 97-92 vs. Vancouver* 14,783
Oct. 16 L 105-103 vs. Maccabi (Israel) 17,281 Oct. 14 W 113-108 (OT) at Cleveland 9,480
Oct. 19 W 107-105 (OT) vs. New Jersey 13,942 Oct. 16 L 107-98 at Philadelphia** 5,588
Oct. 21 W 93-83 vs. Boston 13,298 Oct. 18 L 99-94 vs. Dallas 13,299
Oct. 23 L 87-83 at Cleveland** 11,370 Oct. 21 L 91-66 vs. Charlotte 13,647
Oct. 24 L 105-98 vs. Portland^ 10,900 Oct. 23 W 91-80 vs. Indiana 12,893
Oct. 26 W 100-78 at Portland 17,458 Oct. 25 W 94-88 at Charlotte 12,173
* Game played at Manchester, N.H.; ** Game played at Columbus, Ohio; * Game played at Ottawa, Ont.; ** Game played at Chapel Hill, N.C.
^ Game played at Winnipeg, Man.
PRESEASON HISTORY
1999 Preseason (4-4)
Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 12 L 103-98 vs. Milwaukee 10,821
Oct. 15 L 112-102 vs. L.A. Clippers 12,367
Oct. 18 W 110-84 at Vancouver* 12,852
Oct. 20 W 100-95 at Denver** 5,485
Oct. 21 L 95-93 at Dallas 12,449
Oct. 23 W 98-86 at Milwaukee 13,365
Oct. 26 W 116-104 vs. Cleveland 12,586
Oct. 28 L 92-87 vs. Denver 12,683
* Game played at Edmonton, Alb.; ** Game played at Colorado Springs, Col.

1998 Preseason (0-2)


Date Result Location Attendance
Jan. 26 L 106-88 vs. Boston 25,001
Jan. 29 L 120-99 at Boston 18,624

1997 Preseason (4-4)


Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 11 L 104-100 at Indiana* 8,239
Oct. 13 W 116-11 vs. Seattle 14,228
Oct. 15 W 124-118 vs. Philadelphia 15,962
Oct. 16 L 103-102 vs. Atlanta 13,378
Oct. 19 W 98-91 at New York** 10,562
Oct. 20 W 107-98 vs. Vancouver^ 8,190
Oct. 24 L 114-100 vs. Denver^^ 10,962
Oct. 27 L 127-104 at New Jersey*** 5,217
*Game played at Fort Wayne, Ind.; ** Game played at Hartford, Conn.;
^Game played at Halifax, N.S.; ^^Game played at Hamilton, Ont.;
*** Game played at Springfield, Mass.

1996 Preseason (2-6)


Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 11 L 100-82 vs. Atlanta* 7,589
Oct. 13 W 78-73 vs. New York** 9,662
Oct. 15 L 103-101 vs. Atlanta 14,359
Oct. 18 L 119-89 at Miami^ 12,748
Oct. 19 L 93-90 vs. Miami 16,127
Oct. 22 L 121-115 vs. Golden State 14,753
Oct. 23 W 105-97 vs. Minnesota 14,303
Oct. 27 L 80-77 at Vancouver^^ 15,104
* Game played at Halifax, N.S.; ** Game played at Ottawa, Ont.;
^ Game played at Buffalo, N.Y.; ^^Game played at Calgary, Alb.

1995 Preseason (3-5)


Date Result Location Attendance
Oct. 14 W 120-107 vs. Philadelphia* 9,367
Oct. 16 L 121-93 vs. Philadelphia** 6,297
Oct. 18 L 99-95 vs. Atlanta 17,814
Oct. 19 L 106-105 (OT) vs. Atlanta^ 5,648
Oct. 21 W 98-77 at Vancouver^^ 11,203
Oct. 23 L 99-89 vs. Washington 16,821
Oct. 25 W 107-90 vs. New Jersey 16,618
Oct. 29 L 96-89 vs. Cleveland 17,532
* Game played at Halifax, N.S.; ** Game at Saint John, N.B.;
^ Game played at Saskatoon, Sask.; ^^ Game played at Winnipeg, Man.
YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORDS
Raptors Season Record

Season Home Road OT Attendance Average


1995-96 21-61 (.256) 15-26 6-35 2-4 950,330 23,179
1996-97 30-52 (.366) 18-23 12-29 1-3 748,927 18,267
1997-98 16-66 (.195) 9-32 7-34 5-2 675,225 16,469
1998-99 23-27 (.460) 14-11 9-16 1-2 439,190 17,568
1999-2000 45-37 (.549) 26-15 19-22 0-3 756,496 18,451
2000-01 47-35 (.573) 27-14 20-21 4-4 793,256 19,348
2001-02 42-40 (.512) 24-17 18-23 3-0 811,135 19,784
2002-03 24-58 (.293) 15-26 9-32 2-3 777,507 18,964
2003-04 33-49 (.402) 18-23 15-26 6-5 750,608 18,308
2004-05 33-49 (.402) 22-19 11-30 1-4 703,388 17,156
2005-06 27-55 (.329) 15-26 12-29 1-9 699,332 17,057
2006-07 47-35 (.573) 30-11 17-24 3-0 748,603 18,259
2007-08 41-41 (.500) 25-16 16-25 1-4 796,835 19,435
2008-09 33-49 (.402) 18-23 15-26 2-3 769,707 18,773
2009-10 40-42 (.488) 25-16 15-26 2-2 733,784 17,897
Overall 502-696 301-298 201-398 34-48 11,154,323 18,621
Win % .419 .502 .336 .415

Raptors Record by Month

Oct./Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr./May


1995-96 5-10 4-11 3-10 2-10 4-12 3-8
1996-97 4-10 6-9 5-9 5-9 6-10 4-5
1997-98 1-15 3-11 6-8 3-9 2-13 1-10
1998-99 --- --- --- 4-8 11-6 8-13
1999-2000 9-6 8-6 7-7 6-6 10-7 5-5
2000-01 8-7 7-8 9-7 7-5 9-5 7-3
2001-02 10-6 6-8 11-5 2-11 6-8 7-2
2002-03 5-10 3-13 4-11 5-4 6-11 1-9
2003-04 8-8 8-6 5-9 4-11 5-10 3-5
2004-05 7-9 3-12 8-6 6-5 5-10 4-7
2005-06 1-15 7-7 7-8 5-6 6-10 1-9
2006-07 5-10 8-8 10-5 9-3 8-6 7-3
2007-08 9-7 8-8 8-5 7-5 6-11 3-5
2008-09 8-8 4-12 7-9 4-8 5-8 5-4
2009-10 7-11 9-6 10-5 5-5 6-10 3-5
Overall 87-132 84-125 100-109 74-105 95-137 62-93
Win % .397 .402 .490 .413 .409 .400

Raptors Record by Division

Atlantic Central Midwest Pacific Northwest Southeast Southwest


1995-96 9-17 5-23 3-11 4-10
1996-97 10-16 6-22 8-6 6-8
1997-98 5-21 2-26 5-9 4-10
1998-99 10-12 9-14 3-1 1-0
1999-2000 13-13 16-12 6-8 10-4
2000-01 19-8 17-10 6-8 5-9
2001-02 12-14 17-11 7-7 6-8
2002-03 8-18 10-18 3-11 3-11
2003-04 11-15 11-17 5-9 6-8
2004-05 7-9 5-13 4-6 5-5 8-10 4-6
2005-06 6-10 4-14 1-9 4-6 10-8 2-8
2006-07 11-5 9-9 5-5 5-5 13-5 4-6
2007-08 10-6 9-9 1-4 4-6 10-8 6-4
2008-09 6-10 7-11 5-5 3-7 9-9 3-7
2009-10 11-5 10-8 4-6 2-8 8-10 5-5
Overall 148-179 137-217 46-70 66-107 23-37 58-50 24-36
Win % .453 .387 .397 .382 .383 .537 .400
YEAR-BY-YEAR RECORDS
Raptors Statistical Rankings
PTS FG% FT% 3P% REB AST STL TO BLK
1995-96 21 14 23 20 19 9 3t 29 6
1996-97 18 27 22 14 12 19t 6 25 3
1997-98 17 24 24 17 20 19 5 25 1
1998-99 18 25 6 14 6 16 11 21 2
1999-2000 17 25 10 11 11 6 11 3 3
2000-01 5 19 17 6 6 3 21 1 3
2001-02 25 23 23 17 17 17 8 13 12
2002-03 27 25 28 19 21 26 21 11 19
2003-04 29 28 19 8 28 27 20 8 14
2004-05 7 19 10 2 27 23 15 3 25
2005-06 4 15 2 7 29 21 26t 2 28
2006-07 11 11 5 9 27 10 19 2 25
2007-08 13 7 2 2 28 5 19 2 25
2008-09 16 13 1 12 21 5 27 10 16
2009-10 5 5 13 6 T-23 10 30 T-7 21

Opponents Statistical Rankings


PTS FG% FT% 3P% REB AST STL TO BLK
1995-96 27 23 19 15 15 24 28 12 23
1996-97 20 21 3 8 17 24 15t 6 22
1997-98 29 29 1 28 28 29 23 5 26
1998-99 17 15 14 29 7 22 25 15 19
1999-2000 13 17 25 7 14 10 1 15 19
2000-01 12 20 20 23 11 8 1 23 16
2001-02 4 11 17 8 10 5 15 8 9
2002-03 19 29 13 28 23 10 6 25 12
2003-04 6 6 12 2 29 2 5 19 3
2004-05 25 29 4 12 28 23 1 17t 6
2005-06 29 30 22 26 18 28 2 17 10
2006-07 16 21 18 17 24 17 1 15 5
2007-08 10 15 30 21 T-13 16 T-1 T-12 5
2008-09 20 21 26 16 22 27 5 21t 12
2009-10 27 19 30 26 14 24 16 29 8

Raptors Record by Conference

Eastern Western
1995-96 14-40 7-21
1996-97 16-38 14-14
1997-98 7-47 9-19
1998-99 19-26 4-1
1999-2000 29-25 16-12
2000-01 36-18 11-17
2001-02 29-25 13-15
2002-03 18-36 6-22
2003-04 22-32 11-17
2004-05 20-32 13-17
2005-06 20-32 7-23
2006-07 33-19 14-16
2007-08 29-23 12-18
2008-09 22-30 11-19
2009-10 29-23 11-19
Overall 343-446 159-250
Win % .434 .388
SEASON LEADERS
Scoring (min. 1000) Rebounds (min. 300) Blocks (min. 82)
1995-96 Damon Stoudamire 19.0 1995-96 Oliver Miller 7.4 1995-96 Oliver Miller 1.88
1996-97 Damon Stoudamire 20.2 1996-97 Popeye Jones 8.6 1996-97 Marcus Camby 2.06
1997-98 Doug Christie 16.5 1997-98 Marcus Camby 7.4 1997-98 Marcus Camby* 3.65
1998-99 Vince Carter 18.3 1998-99 Kevin Willis 8.3 1998-99 Vince Carter 1.54
1999-00 Vince Carter 25.7 1999-00 Antonio Davis 8.8 1999-00 Tracy McGrady 1.91
2000-01 Vince Carter 27.6 2000-01 Antonio Davis 10.1 2000-01 Antonio Davis 1.94
2001-02 Vince Carter 24.7 2001-02 Antonio Davis 9.6 2001-02 Keon Clark 1.51
2002-03 Morris Peterson 14.1 2002-03 Jerome Williams 9.2 2002-03 Antonio Davis 1.17
2003-04 Vince Carter 22.5 2003-04 Donyell Marshall 10.7 2003-04 Donyell Marshall 1.51
2004-05 Jalen Rose 18.5 2004-05 Chris Bosh 8.9 2004-05 Chris Bosh 1.40
2005-06 Chris Bosh 22.5 2005-06 Chris Bosh 9.2 2005-06 Chris Bosh 1.13
2006-07 Chris Bosh 22.6 2006-07 Chris Bosh 10.7 2006-07 Chris Bosh 1.30
2007-08 Chris Bosh 22.3 2007-08 Chris Bosh 8.7 2007-08 Jamario Moon 1.38
2008-09 Chris Bosh 22.7 2008-09 Chris Bosh 10.0 2008-09 Jermaine ONeal 2.00
2009-10 Chris Bosh 24.0 2009-10 Chris Bosh 10.8 2009-10 Andrea Bargnani 1.39
* Led NBA
Assists (min. 250) FG% (min. 200 FGM)
1995-96 Damon Stoudamire 9.3 1995-96 Zan Tabak .543
1996-97 Damon Stoudamire 8.8 1996-97 Carlos Rogers .525
1997-98 Damon Stoudamire 8.1 1997-98 John Wallace .478
1998-99 Doug Christie 3.7 1998-99 John Thomas .577
1999-00 Doug Christie 4.4 1999-00 Vince Carter .465
2000-01 Mark Jackson 9.2 2000-01 Vince Carter .460
2001-02 Alvin Williams 5.7 2001-02 Keon Clark .490
2002-03 Alvin Williams 5.3 2002-03 Jerome Williams .499
2003-04 Jalen Rose 5.5 2003-04 Donyell Marshall .467
2004-05 Rafer Alston 6.4 2004-05 Matt Bonner .533
2005-06 Mike James 5.8 2005-06 Chris Bosh .505
2006-07 T.J. Ford 7.9 2006-07 Rasho Nesterovic .546
2007-08 Jose Calderon 8.3 2007-08 Rasho Nesterovic .550
2008-09 Jose Calderon 8.9 2008-09 Jose Calderon .497
2009-10 Jose Calderon 5.9 2009-10 Amir Johnson .623

FT% (min. 125 FTM) 3FG% (min. 55 3FGM)


1995-96 Tracy Murray .831 1995-96 Tracy Murray .422
1996-97 Damon Stoudamire .823 1996-97 Walt Williams .400
1997-98 Damon Stoudamire .844 1997-98 Dee Brown .411
1998-99 Doug Christie .841 1998-99 Dee Brown .387
1999-00 Doug Christie .843 1999-00 Vince Carter .403
2000-01 Charles Oakley .836 2000-01 Dell Curry .428
2001-02 Antonio Davis .818 2001-02 Vince Carter .387
2002-03 Vince Carter .806 2002-03 Voshon Lenard .365
2003-04 Jalen Rose .822 2003-04 Donyell Marshall .402
2004-05 Jalen Rose .854 2004-05 Donyell Marshall .416
2005-06 Mike James .837 2005-06 Mike James .442
2006-07 Anthony Parker .835 2006-07 Anthony Parker .441
2007-08 Chris Bosh .844 2007-08 Jason Kapono .483
2008-09 Jose Calderon* .981 2008-09 Jason Kapono .428
2009-10 Jarrett Jack .842 2009-10 Jarrett Jack .412

Steals (min. 82) Minutes (min. 2000)


1995-96 Alvin Robertson 2.16 1995-96 Damon Stoudamire 40.9
1996-97 Doug Christie 2.48 1996-97 Damon Stoudamire 40.9
1997-98 Doug Christie 2.44 1997-98 Doug Christie 37.7
1998-99 Doug Christie 2.26 1998-99 Doug Christie 35.4
1999-00 Doug Christie 1.40 1999-00 Vince Carter 38.1
2000-01 Vince Carter 1.52 2000-01 Vince Carter 39.7
2001-02 Alvin Williams 1.65 2001-02 Vince Carter 39.8
2002-03 Jerome Williams 1.63 2002-03 Morris Peterson 36.0
2003-04 Vince Carter 1.21 2003-04 Vince Carter 38.2
2004-05 Rafer Alston 1.48 2004-05 Chris Bosh 37.2
2005-06 Morris Peterson 1.27 2005-06 Chris Bosh 39.3
2006-07 T.J. Ford 1.35 2006-07 Chris Bosh 38.5
2007-08 Jose Calderon 1.06 2007-08 Chris Bosh 36.2
2008-09 Anthony Parker 1.25 2008-09 Chris Bosh 38.0
2009-10 Hedo Turkoglu 0.74 2009-10 Chris Bosh 36.1
FRANCHISE HISTORY
1993 JUNE 24: B.J. Armstrong of the Chicago Bulls headlines a roster of
14 players selected by the Toronto Raptors in the 1995 NBA Expansion
APRIL 23: The National Basketball Association announces it has Draft.
received a formal application for expansion from Professional
Basketball Franchise (Canada), Inc. (PBF), comprised of John I. Bitove JUNE 28: Raptors pick 5-foot-10 point guard Damon Stoudamire of
of Bitove Investments, Inc., Allan Slaight of Standard Broadcasting the University of Arizona seventh in the 1995 NBA Draft first round,
Limited, Borden Osmak of The Bank of Nova Scotia, Phil Granovsky followed by Jimmy King of the University of Michigan in the second
of Atlantic Packaging, Ltd., and former Ontario Premier David round. Staged at SkyDome, this is the first time the draft was held
Peterson, who serves as the groups Chairperson. outside of the United States and drew a record crowd of 21,168.

JULY 29: Members of the NBAs expansion committee visit Toronto OCTOBER 6-12: Toronto Raptors hold their first-ever training camp
to meet with representatives of PBF. at Copps Coliseum in Hamilton.

SEPTEMBER 30: The NBA expansion committee announces its OCTOBER 14: The Raptors play their first preseason game at the
recommendation that PBF be awarded an expansion franchise for Halifax Metro Centre, defeating the Philadelphia 76ers, 120-107.
the 1995-96 season, to become the 28th team in the NBA and the Toronto will play all eight of its preseason contests in Canada, four in
first expansion franchise outside of the United States. Toronto as well as Saint John, NB, Saskatoon, and in Winnipeg, versus
the Vancouver Grizzlies in the first Naismith Cup.
1994
NOVEMBER: The team officially establishes the Raptors Foundation,
MAY 15: The Toronto Raptors Basketball Club Inc. officially begins a charitable organization dedicated to working with registered charities
the 18-month countdown to its first tip-off in November 1995 by for the betterment of youth.
unveiling its name, logo and colours (Raptor Red, purple, black and
Naismith Silver). NOVEMBER 2: Toronto Raptors announce their 12-man active roster
that will open their inaugural season. The opening day lineup includes
MAY 24: Isiah Thomas is introduced as Vice-President, Basketball Victor Alexander, Willie Anderson, Acie Earl, Jimmy King, Oliver Miller,
of Toronto Raptors. Tracy Murray, Ed Pinckney, Alvin Robertson, Carlos Rogers, John
Salley, Damon Stoudamire and Zan Tabak.
DECEMBER 21: Franchise receives 50 per cent deposits on 15,127
season tickets for 1995-96 season at SkyDome. NOVEMBER 3: The NBA makes its historic return to Canada as the
Toronto Raptors defeat the New Jersey Nets, 94-79, before a record
DECEMBER 21: Plans are unveiled for a 22,500-seat stadium at 40 crowd of 33,306 gathered at the SkyDome in Toronto.
Bay Street site in downtown Toronto; letter of intent signed with Canada
Post, owners of lakeshore-fronting property. 1996

DECEMBER 23: Raptors Foundation helps Toronto Star Santa Fund FEBRUARY 10: Damon Stoudamire receives the MVP award for the
reach $900,000 goal with $51,000 donation the first official community Schick Rookie Game at the All-Star Weekend in San Antonio.
contribution by NBA teams charitable fund-raising umbrella.
MARCH 24: The NBA season-high for attendance takes place at
NOVEMBER 4: The NBA Board of Governors officially grants Toronto SkyDome as 36,131 witness the Raptors defeat the first-place Chicago
an NBA expansion franchise under the ownership of PBF, with John Bulls, 109-108.
I. Bitove as team president.
APRIL 22: One day after the first season ends, with the Raptors
1995 posting a 21-61 record, Darrell Walker is named the new head coach
of the Raptors as Brendan Malone steps down from his position due
FEBRUARY 1: Toronto Raptors unveil official uniforms at BCE Place to philosophical differences with the team.
in Toronto, with international launch February 3 at the Super Show
in Atlanta. MAY 15: Damon Stoudamire receives the 1995-96 Schick Rookie of
the Year Award.
FEBRUARY 24: Toronto Raptors announce naming of new home as
Air Canada Centre. Billed as one of the most significant partnerships NOVEMBER 1: The Toronto Raptors begin their second NBA season
of a Canadian sporting enterprise, the arena will be completed in hosting the New York Knicks, 50 years to the day the Toronto Huskies
early 1999. hosted the Knicks in the first-ever game in NBA history. New York
won both times, prevailing 107-99 this year.
MAY 16: Raptors sign closing documents to make the team members
in full of the NBA. NOVEMBER 15: Slaight Investments, Inc. takes majority control of
the Toronto Raptors Basketball Club Inc. after buying out Bitove
MAY 26-28: Raptors hold first free-agent training camp at Seneca Investments, Inc.
College, Toronto.
NOVEMBER 22: The Raptors appoint Richard Peddie as new team
JUNE 2: Raptors name Brendan Malone, a veteran of 26 years in president and chief operating officer.
the coaching profession including nine years in the NBA, as the first
head coach. 1997

JUNE 16: Following a coin toss held at the NBA office in New York MARCH 12: Raptors officially break ground at Air Canada Centre site
with representatives of the Toronto Raptors and Vancouver Grizzlies at 40 Bay St.
on hand, Raptors will pick seventh in the 1995 NBA Draft and first in
the 1995 NBA Expansion Draft.
FRANCHISE HISTORY
APRIL 28: The first concrete is poured for Air Canada Centres JUNE 21: Lenny Wilkens, the winningest coach in NBA history, is
foundation. named the new head coach of the Raptors.

NOVEMBER 20: The team announces that Isiah Thomas, Executive 2001
Vice President, Basketball has resigned his position with the club
and will sell his nine percent ownership stake to majority owner Allan JANUARY 16: Raptors tie an NBA record with only three turnovers in
Slaight. Glen Grunwald is promoted to General Manager. a 114-99 loss to the Houston Rockets.

1998 JANUARY 19: Lenny Wilkens records his 1,200th NBA win with a
101-79 victory over the visiting Washington Wizards.
FEBRUARY 12: Maple Leaf Gardens, Ltd. announces its purchase
of the Toronto Raptors Basketball Club Inc. and the Air Canada Centre. JANUARY 27: For the second consecutive year, Vince Carter receives
the most fan votes for the NBA All-Star Game (1,717,687).
FEBRUARY 13: The Raptors announce a six-player deal with the
Portland Trail Blazers at the same time that head coach Darrell Walker FEBRUARY 10: Morris Peterson becomes the third Raptor to play in
steps down from his position to be replaced by Butch Carter on an the Schick NBA Rookie Challenge during All-Star Weekend in
interim basis. Washington D.C.

MARCH 10: The Board of Directors of Maple Leaf Gardens, Ltd. FEBRUARY 11: Vince Carter and Antonio Davis start for the Eastern
names Richard Peddie as President and CEO of the transition team Conference at the NBA All-Star Game in Washington, D.C.
that will oversee the construction of the Air Canada Centre and the
management of the Raptors and Maple Leafs. The post is made FEBRUARY 20: Mark Jackson records his 9,062nd career assist vs.
permanent on October 6. Golden State to surpass Isiah Thomas for fourth on the NBA all-time
assists chart.
MARCH 27: The NBA unanimously approves the sale of the Raptors
to Maple Leaf Gardens, Ltd. FEBRUARY 28: Charles Oakley becomes the Raptors all-time leading
rebounder pulling down 11 boards at Atlanta, surpassing Doug
APRIL 22: Maple Leaf Gardens, Ltd. announces the companys Christies mark of 1,448.
purchase of the Raptors and Air Canada Centre has been completed. MARCH 2: Vince Carter becomes the Raptors all-time leading scorer
surpassing Doug Christie (4,448).
JULY 1: Maple Leaf Gardens, Ltd. is renamed Maple Leaf Sports &
Entertainment Ltd., the parent company of the Raptors, the Toronto MARCH 4: Vince Carter is named NBA Player of the Week averaging
Maple Leafs of the NHL, Air Canada Centre and Maple Leaf Gardens. 31.8 points, 6.5 rebounds and 4.8 assists leading the Raptors to four
consecutive victories.
1999
MARCH 23: The Raptors set an NBA record for most blocks in a
JANUARY 21: The Raptors hold training camp at Air Canada Centre game with 23 vs. Atlanta.
for the first time.
APRIL 3: The Raptors defeat the Sixers 100-85 to secure their second
FEBRUARY 21: The Raptors play their first game at Air Canada consecutive trip to the postseason.
Centre, defeating the Vancouver Grizzlies, 102-87, in front of a sellout
crowd of 19,800. APRIL 18: Toronto defeats Washington, 98-92, to set a franchise
record for wins in a season at 47.
MAY 26: Vince Carter is named the Schick NBA Rookie of the Year.
APRIL 26: Toronto records first playoff win defeating the New York
SEPTEMBER 30: The team unveils its new uniforms for the start of Knicks, 94-74, at Madison Square Garden.
the 1999-2000 season.
MAY 4: Toronto wins first playoff series with a 93-89 win in Game
2000 Five at Madison Square Garden.

FEBRUARY 13: Vince Carter becomes the first Raptor to start and MAY 18: The Raptors defeat Philadelphia in Game Six of the Eastern
play in the All-Star Game as he accumulates more votes than any Conference Semifinal in front of an over-capacity crowd of 20,499,
other player. The previous day, he won the Slam Dunk Contest at the largest attendance for a sporting event at Air Canada Centre.
All-Star Weekend in Oakland.
SEPTEMBER 7: Raptors NBA TV hits the airwaves.
MARCH 26: Vince Carter named to the U.S. Olympic Team for the
2000 Summer Games in Sydney and would later capture the gold NOVEMBER 1: Antonio Davis named to play on USA Basketball Mens
medal. Senior team for the 2002 FIBA World Basketball championship.

APRIL 12: The Raptors qualify for the NBA playoffs for the first time NOVEMBER 12: Vince Carter is selected NBA Eastern Conference
in club history. Player of the Week for games played Nov. 5-11. It is the fifth Player of
the Week honour for Carter during his NBA career.
APRIL 30: The Raptors host their first-ever playoff game, falling 87-
80 to the Knicks, ending the series in three games. DECEMBER 6: Hakeem Olajuwon passed Dominique Wilkins for
eighth place on the NBAs all-time scoring chart with 26,669th points
in a 95-89 loss at Milwaukee.
FRANCHISE HISTORY
DECEMBER 16: Antonio Davis passed Charles Oakley to become JANUARY 24: Vince Carter voted as a starter in the NBA All-Star
the Raptors all-time rebounding leader with his 1656th carom in a Game for a fourth consecutive year.
93-88 loss to Washington Wizards. Hakeem Olajuwon passed Oscar
Robertson for seventh on the NBAs all-time scoring list with his JANUARY 26: Lenny Wilkens became only the second coach in
26,711th point. NBA history (Larry Brown) to record 100 wins with four different teams
(Seattle, Cleveland, Atlanta, Toronto).
DECEMBER 23: Assistant Coach Stan Albeck suffered a stroke in
the locker room before the game versus Miami. Albeck missed the FEBRUARY 2: Voshon Lenard tied a Raptors franchise high for points
remainder of the regular season before returning to the Raptors bench off the bench scoring a season-high 30 in a 100-86 victory over the
for the regular season finale April 17 vs. Cleveland. L.A. Clippers.

2002 FEBRUARY 9: Vince Carter relinquishes his starting position in the


NBA All-Star Game to MichaelJordan.
JANUARY 4: Morris Peterson is named to the Sophomore team for
the NBAs 2002 Got Milk? Rookie Challenge. FEBRUARY 11: Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. announced
new ownership structure with Larry Tanenbaum becoming the
JANUARY 26: Vince Carter voted as a starter in the NBA All-Star chairman of the board.
Game for a third consecutive year.
FEBRUARY 14: Antonio Davis recorded his 100th double-double in
JANUARY 31: With a 97-92 Toronto win over Boston, Lenny Wilkens a Raptors uniform in a 118-114 (OT) loss vs. Golden State.
recorded his 74th victory to surpass Butch Carter as the Raptors
winningest coach. FEBRUARY 17: Game at Washington postponed due to inclement
weather.
FEBRUARY 12: The Raptors returned from the All-Star break to lose
in Cleveland, 99-81, marking the beginning of a 13-game losing streak. MARCH 4: The Raptors played their make-up game from February
17 at Washington and defeated the Wizards, 89-86, to record their
MARCH 5: The Raptors announced that scout Walker D. Russell only season series sweep of the year.
had been reassigned to the coaching staff for the remainder of the
season. Alvin Williams set a franchise record for consecutive games MARCH 11: At Denver, Vince Carter surpassed Doug Christie (431)
played with 146 surpassing Vince Carters 145. for first place on the Raptors all-time three-pointer list.

MARCH 8: The Raptors snapped their season-long 13-game losing APRIL 4: With a 124-98 defeat vs. San Antonio, Lenny Wilkens
streak with an 83-74 victory at Miami. Antonio Davis recorded his recorded his 1,107th loss to surpass Bill Fitch as the coach with the
87th double-double with Raptors, moving past Damon Stoudamire most losses in NBA history.
for most career double-doubles in a Raptors uniform.
APRIL 17: Lenny Wilkens and the Toronto Raptors reached a mutual
MARCH 22: The Raptors began their franchise-high winning streak agreement that concluded Wilkens coaching tenure with the team
of nine games, defeating Cleveland 94-80. after three seasons.

MARCH 26: Vince Carter underwent successful arthroscopic surgery. MAY 22: Senior Vice-President and General Manager Glen Grunwald
and guard/forward Vince Carter attend the NBA Draft Lottery where
APRIL 18: The game versus Cleveland marked the 40th sellout of the Toronto Raptors are selected as the fourth pick in the 2003 NBA
the season, setting a franchise high. Draft.

OCTOBER 30: The Raptors opened the 2002-03 season at home JUNE 18: Kevin ONeill becomes the fifth head coach in Toronto
with a 74-68 win over Washington. The Wizards 68 points matched Raptors history.
the Raptors franchise record for fewest points allowed.
JULY 2: Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. makes closing of
NOVEMBER 12: Alvin Williams scored a career-high 32 points and shareholder transaction official.
Jerome Williams added a career-best 30 points in a 115-109 victory
at Orlando. It was the third time in franchise history that two players JULY 28: Vince Carter is added to 2003 USA Senior National Team.
had scored more than 30 points in a game.
AUGUST 1: Third annual Vince Carter Charity All-Star Game televised
NOVEMBER 20: Toronto signed guard Jermaine Jackson after the internationally on Raptors NBA TV and NBA TV.
team was granted a second roster exemption under the NBA special
hardship rule. AUGUST 26: Eric Montross retires after missing the entire 2002-03
2003 season with a stress reaction in his left foot.

JANUARY 5: Alvin Williams became the Raptors all-time games AUGUST 26: Kevin ONeill named Bob Beyer, Shaun Brown, Tony
played leader (315) surpassing Doug Christie. Brown, Ron Oliver, Jim Sann and Jay Triano as assistant coaches.

JANUARY 14: At Washington, Antonio Davis recorded his 361st OCTOBER 10: As part of its preseason schedule, Toronto played its
blocked shot to move past Marcus Camby into first place on the first game against a non-NBA team, hosting Panathinaikos of Greece.
Raptors all-time blocks list. Toronto defeated Washington, 84-7,5 The Raptors led 100-76 with 59.4 seconds remaining when the power
despite dressing only eight players (three on 10-day contracts). Signed went out at Air Canada Centre and the game was called.
forward Damone Brown after being granted a third roster exemption
under the NBA special hardship rule.
FRANCHISE HISTORY
OCTOBER 21: The Raptors and Cavaliers preseason game at Mile MARCH 21: New Orleans set franchise bests, NBA season highs
One Stadium in St. Johns, Newfoundland is cancelled following and Raptors franchise highs for an opponent with 46 free throws and
pregame warmups due to unsafe playing conditions. Toronto tied a 60 attempts at home versus Toronto. The Raptors won 121-120 in
franchise best by finishing the preseason with a 5-2 record. overtime.

OCTOBER 29: Toronto opened the 2003-04 campaign with a 90-87 MARCH 22: Vince Carter is named Eastern Conference Player of the
win over New Jersey at Air Canada Centre. The game marked the Week for the season time this season and the seventh time in his
debut of the Raptors alternate road jersey. career. He led the Raptors to a 2-1 record and posted averages of
32.0 points and 5.3 assists.
NOVEMBER 1: The Raptors set a franchise- and NBA season low by
scoring 56 points at Minnesota. The team also set a franchise low by MARCH 31: Morris Peterson played in his 188th consecutive game
making 19 field goals. to move past Alvin Williams for the franchise record.

NOVEMBER 7: Toronto set another club team low by netting 23 points APRIL 1: Announced that Glen Grunwalds contract as senior vice-
in the first half at Washington, which included a franchise-low tying president and general manager, which expired June 30, 2004, will
four points in the second quarter. not be renewed and he relinquished his general manager position.
Jack McCloskey is named interim general manager.
NOVEMBER 17: NBA Board of Governors approves realignment plan
that will take effect for the 2004-05 season, moving the Raptors to APRIL 11: The Raptors were defeated 114-108 to the Chicago Bulls
the Atlantic Division, joining Boston, New Jersey, New York, at home in overtime. Chicago guard Jamal Crawford became the first
Philadelphia. Raptors opponent to score 50 points in Toronto and only the second
opponent all-time to top the 50-point plateau.
DECEMBER 8: Vince Carter is named Eastern Conference Player of
the Week. He led Toronto to a 4-0 record and averaged 23.5 points APRIL 16: Dismissed Head Coach Kevin ONeill, along with assistants
and 7.8 assists. Bob Beyer, Tony Brown, Ron Oliver and Jim Sann.

DECEMBER 12: Boston snapped Torontos franchise-best streak of JUNE 7: Announced Rob Babcock as Raptors general manager,
22 games keeping opponents under 100 points with a 114-111 victory. Wayne Embry as senior advisor to the general manager and Alex
English as director of player development / scout.
DECEMBER 14: Jalen Rose recorded his 10,000th career point.
JUNE 29: Sam Mitchell became the sixth head coach in Raptors
DECEMBER 26: The Raptors tied a franchise low by grabbing three history.
offensive rebounds at Utah.
JULY 2: Named Alex English, Jay Triano and Jim Todd as assistant
2004 coaches. Mike Evans named as a scout.

JANUARY 29: Vince Carter received the most votes (2,127,183), JULY 22: Named Scott Howard director of international player
second-highest total in history, in the NBA All-Star balloting program personnel and Mike McCollow assistant director of player personnel
for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. / director of video scouting.

FEBRUARY 8: In what turned out to be the greatest defensive quarter OCTOBER 2O: The Raptors defeat Benetton Treviso, 86-83, to
in team history, the Raptors held Golden State to two points in the capture Naismith Cup.
fourth quarter. It was the lowest-scoring fourth quarter in league history
and tied the lowest-scoring period, set by the Dallas Mavericks against 2005
the Los Angeles Lakers on April 6, 1997. Toronto outscored the
Warriors 18-2 in the quarter to force overtime and eventually won the JANUARY 10: For the first time in his career, Chris Bosh was named
game 84-81. Jalen Rose fractured the fourth metacarpal in his left Eastern Conference Player of the Week for games played Monday,
hand during the second quarter of the game. He remained in the January 3 through Sunday, January 9. He led the Raptors to a 3-1
contest but would miss the next 16 games. record, posting averages of 20.5 points, 13.0 rebounds and 1.30
blocks.
FEBRUARY 13: Chris Bosh scored eight points as starting centre in
the got milk? Rookie Challenge played during All-Star weekend in JANUARY 17: Toronto defeated the Timberwolves, 100-91, marking
Los Angeles. the first win for the Raptors at Minnesota in franchise history.

FEBRUARY 15: Vince Carter nets 11 points as a starter in the 2004 JANUARY 19: Chris Bosh set the franchise record for consecutive
All-Star Game. games with a double-double, registering at least 10 points and 10
rebounds in nine straight games (Jan. 3-19).
FEBRUARY 17: Donyell Marshall set franchise records with 24
rebounds, including 17 on the defensive end at Chicago. JANUARY 30: Suspended guard Rafer Alston for two games for
conduct detrimental to the team.
MARCH 9: Toronto set a franchise low by scoring three points in
overtime at Indiana. The Pacers outscored the Raptors 13-3 in the FEBRUARY 4: After coming back from 19 points the previous game
extra frame and won 94-84. against the Indiana Pacers, Toronto, down by 22 (69-47) at the 8:20
mark of the third quarter, mounted the largest comeback in franchise
MARCH 12: The Raptors signed forward Corie Blount. He became history, defeating the Washington Wizards, 103-100, at Air Canada
the 23rd player to suit up for the Raptors this season, second-most in Centre. Toronto won a total of five games during the season where
franchise history. they came back from deficits of 19 or more.
FRANCHISE HISTORY
FEBRUARY 11: Reached an agreement with centre Alonzo Mourning DECEMBER 30: The Raptors defeated Indiana, 99-97, to finish the
to buy out the remaining two years of his contract. month with a 6-3 road mark, tying a franchise record for road victories
in a month (March 2000).
FEBRUARY 18: Chris Bosh recorded 26 points, shooting nine-for-13
from the field and eight-for-10 from the line, to go along with game 2006
highs of 14 rebounds and four steals in 29 minutes in the got milk? JANUARY 3: Charlie Villanueva is named Eastern Conference Rookie
Rookie Challenge during All-Star Weekend in Denver, Colorado. of the Month for December after posting averages of 14.2 points, 4.9
rebounds and 24.8 minutes in 13 games. He shot .527 (77-146) from
FEBRUARY 22: Chris Bosh became the third-youngest player (Kevin the field and .765 (26-34) from the foul line.
Garnett, Tracy McGrady) in NBA history to reach the 1000 career
rebound plateau. JANUARY 8: Mike James is named Eastern Conference Player of
the Week for games played Jan. 2-8, averaging 25.3 points, 4.0
FEBRUARY 27: Toronto defeated the L.A. Lakers, 108-102, at Air rebounds and 7.0 assists, while shooting .547 (35-64) from the floor,
Canada Centre, tying a season high with its third consecutive win. including .619 (13-21) from three-point range, and .857 (18-21) from
The Raptors would not win consecutive games again for the remainder the foul line.
of the season.
JANUARY 15: Toronto set a franchise record for the most points in a
FEBRUARY 28: Jalen Rose was named NBA Eastern Conference home victory in a 129-103 win over New York.
Player of the Week for games played Monday, February 22 through
Sunday, February 27. He led the Raptors to a 3-0 record, posting JANUARY 22: Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant scored 81
averages of 24.0 points, 4.7 rebounds, 1.00 blocks and 37.0 minutes. points in a 122-104 victory over Toronto. The 81 points is the second-
most scored in a single-game in NBA history.
MARCH 9: When Washington Wizards forward Antawn Jamison (386
games) missed the March 8 game at New York due to right knee JANUARY 26: Relieved General Manager Rob Babcock of his duties.
tendinitis, he relinquished the current NBA iron man streak to Morris Named Special Advisor to the President Wayne Embry as Interim
Peterson, who, at the end of the 2004-05 season, had played in 279 General Manager.
consecutive games.
JANUARY 27: Relieved Director of NBA Player Development Pete
MARCH 13: Several NBA and franchise records were met during Babcock and Director of International Player Development Scott
Torontos 128-110 win over Philadelphia at Air Canada Centre. The Howard of their duties.
Raptors set the NBA record for most three-pointers in a game with
21. Toronto tied the NBA record for most three-pointers in a half with FEBRUARY 6: Chris Bosh is named Eastern Conference Player of
12 in the first half. The Raptors and Sixers set the NBA record for the Week for the second time in his career for games played Jan. 30
most triples in a game, both teams, with 31 (Toronto 21, Philadelphia Feb. 5 after averaging 30.3 points, 12.0 rebounds and 4.0 assists,
10). The 34 three-point attempts set a Raptors franchise record while shooting .534 (31-for-58) from the field and .853 (29-for-34)
(previous 32, Jan. 14 at Philadelphia). The Raptors tied a franchise from the line.
high with 128 points in the game. Donyell Marshall tied the NBA record
for most treys in a game with 12. He also tied the franchise record for FEBRUARY 9: Chris Bosh is named as a reserve to the Eastern
three-pointers in a half making six three-pointers in both halves. Conference All-Stars for the 2006 NBA All-Star Game.
Marshall recorded a career-best 38 points, set the franchise mark for
most points off the bench and a Raptors season high for points. Rafael FEBRUARY 17: Charlie Villanueva scored a rookie team high-tying
Araujo tied the franchise record for offensive rebounds in a quarter 18 points and had a game-high 12 rebounds in the T-Mobile Rookie
with seven during the third frame. Challenge at All-Star Weekend in Houstin.

MARCH 25: Chris Bosh became the fourth-youngest player in NBA FEBRUARY 18: Chris Bosh appeared in first All-Star Game (in
history to record at least 20 points and 20 rebounds in a game when Houston), netting eight points to go with eight rebounds in 16:35
he registered 24 points and a career-high 22 boards at Philadelphia. minutes.

APRIL 18: Wayne Embry named senior basketball advisor to the FEBRUARY 28: Named Bryan Colangelo president and general
president. manager.

APRIL 19: Toronto defeated Milwaukee, 127-109, at the Bradley MARCH 5: Chris Bosh is named to USA Basketball Senior Mens
Center, scoring the most points in a road game in franchise history. Program.

APRIL 22: With an identical record as New York, the Raptors won MARCH 12: The Raptors set the all-time NBA record for most
the coin toss held by the league to secure the seventh-best odds in consecutive games with a made three pointer at 595. Morris Petersons
winning the 2005 NBA Draft Lottery. three-point shot at 1:41 of the first quarter versus Indiana broke the
mark previously held by Miami.
OCTOBER 20: The Raptors fell to Maccabi Tel Aviv, 105-103, at the
Air Canada Centre in the Naismith Cup. MARCH 13: Charlie Villanueva received the NBA Community Assist
Award for February for his efforts on behalf of the National Alopecia-
NOVEMBER 20: Toronto defeated Miami, 107-94, to post its first win Areata Foundation.
of the season, after starting the season with a franchise-worst 0-9
mark. MARCH 26: Charlie Villanueva set a Raptors rookie record with a 48-
point performance in Milwaukee (37, Camby). His point total is the
DECEMBER 28: Morris Peterson set the franchise record for most most by a rookie since 1997 (50, Iverson) and is tied for the third-
games played (418). highest total since the NBA-ABA merger in 1976-77 (Jordan).
FRANCHISE HISTORY
APRIL 2: The Raptors suffered a team-record ninth overtime loss JANUARY 26: Toronto returned to the .500 mark (22-22) with a 96-90
falling, 120-113, to New Orleans in double overtime. The nine overtime win over Boston. Toronto had not been at the .500 mark since Feb.
defeats is second-most in NBA history (10, LA Clippers, Baltimore); 10, 2004 when the team was 25-25.
Charlie Villanueva set a Raptors rookie record with 18 rebounds (16,
Camby, Bosh). FEBRUARY 2: Toronto became the first team in NBA history to sweep
all three NBA Eastern Conference Awards for the Month of January.
MAY 23: The Raptors won the first overall pick in the NBA Lottery. Andrea Bargnani was named Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month;
With only an 8.8 per cent chance of getting the top selection, the Sam Mitchell was named Eastern Conference Coach of the Month
Raptors jumped up form the fifth spot based on their record during and Chris Bosh was named Player of the Month.
the 2005-06 season.
FEBRUARY 16: Andrea Bargnani and Jorge Garbajosa participated
JUNE 22: Named Maurizio Gherardini Vice-President/Assistant in the T-Mobile Rookie-Sophomore Challenge at the NBA All-Star
General Manager. Gherardini becomes the first European to hold a Weekend in Las Vegas. Bargnani scored 12 points, while Garbajosa
senior management position with an NBA franchise. added six.

JUNE 27: Named Marc Eversley Director of Basketball Operations. FEBRUARY 18: Chris Bosh scored 11 points and grabbed seven
rebounds as a starter for the Eastern Conference at the NBA All-Star
JUNE 28: The Raptors selected Benetton Treviso forward Andera Game in Las Vegas.
Bargnani with the first overall selection in the NBA Draft. Bargnani
becomes the first European in the history of the NBA to be take with MARCH 1: Andrea Bargnani named NBA Eastern Conference Rookie
the first pick. of the Month for February.

NOVEMBER 1: Opened the season at New Jersey with a 102-92 loss. MARCH 21: Andrea Bargnani underwent emergency surgery for a
non-perforated acute appendicitis at Torontos Mount Sinai Hospital.
NOVEMBER 3: Recorded a 109-92 victory over Milwaukee in front of
a sold out crowd of 19,832, the second-largest crowd for a home MARCH 26: Forward Jorge Garbajosa suffered a displaced left ankle
opener in franchise history. joint in a 95-87 loss at Boston.

NOVEMBER 14: Chris Bosh posts only the third 20/20 game (23 MARCH 30: Chris Bosh passed Antonio Davis as the teams all-time
points, 22 rebounds) in franchise history at Golden State. leader with 111 double-doubles. Sam Mitchell earns 100th win as
Raptors head coach.
NOVEMBER 20: Finished a five-game west coast road trip with a
101-96 loss at Utah, dropping the team to 2-8 to start the season. APRIL 1: Toronto clinched a playoff berth for the first time since 2001-
02 with a 107-94 win over Charlotte.
NOVEMBER 22: Guard Morris Peterson had his NBA Ironman streak
end at 371 consecutive games played (partial tendon tear, left elbow), APRIL 3: Chris Bosh named NBA Eastern Conference Player of the
the longest streak in team history. Toronto also snapped a season- Week.
high five-game losing streak with a 95-87 victory over Cleveland.
APRIL 5: Toronto clinched first division (Atlantic) championship in
NOVEMBER 24: Lost a 97-93 decision in Atlanta after a key basket franchise history.
by T.J. Ford was not counted by the scorekeeper late in the fourth
quarter. APRIL 13: Toronto clinched homecourt advantage for the first time in
franchise history with an 87-84 win over Detroit.
NOVEMBER 28: The Raptors earned their first road victory of the
season, 94-77, over the NOK Hornets at Oklahoma City. APRIL 15: Toronto earned its 47th win of the season, tying the franchise
record for wins in a single season.
NOVEMBER 29: Darrick Martin hits the Raptors lone three-pointer
of the game at the final buzzer to ensure the teams NBA record for JUNE 14: Named Mike Evans to the coaching staff.
games with a consecutive made three-pointer continues at 629.
JULY 30: Named Masai Ujiri as Director of Global Scouting.
DECEMBER 17: Guard Jose Calderon was taken off the court on a
stretcher after a collision with a Golden State player caused a lower SEPTEMBER 12: Named Eric Hughes as basketball development
back contusion. Calderon missed two games with the injury. consultant.

2007 SEPTEMBER 29: Signed Wayne Embry to a contract extension


through 2009-10.
JANUARY 2: Jorge Garbajosa named NBA Eastern Conference
Rookie of the Month for December. OCTOBER 1: Toronto opens training camp in Treviso, Italy. This is
the first time the Raptors have held training camp outside North
JANUARY 22: Pape Sow was activated and played against Charlotte America.
less than six months after he fractured a vertebrae in his neck.
NOVEMBER 4: Toronto opened its road schedule with a 106-69 victory
JANUARY 25: Chris Bosh is named a starter in fan balloting for the at New Jersey. The 37-point margin of victory eclipsed the previous
Eastern Conference at the 2007 NBA All-Star Game to be held Feb. franchise-high of 33 points in a road win, set February 19, 1997 at
18 in Las Vegas. San Antonio.

NOVEMBER 6: Toronto became the first team in NBA history to


successfully make a three-point field goal in 700 consecutive games
FRANCHISE HISTORY
in a 112-85 loss at Milwaukee. Toronto finished the season with 778 APRIL 4: Toronto clinched a playoff spot for a second consecutive
consecutive games with at least one made three-point field goal. season and the fifth time in franchise history.
APRIL 9: Jamario Moon passed Damon Stoudamire with his franchise
NOVEMBER 25: Toronto defeated Chicago 93-78 and Sam Mitchell record 71st start as a rookie.
passed former Raptors head coach Lenny Wilkens to become
Torontos all-time leader in wins with 114. JULY 12: Named Gord Herbert as assistant coach/player
development.
DECEMBER 11: Jorge Garbajosa underwent surgery on his left leg
and ankle at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore, Maryland. Garbajosa, NOVEMBER 4: Chris Bosh named Eastern Conference Player of the
inactive since November 20, missed the remainder of the season. Week.

DECEMBER 11: T.J. Ford left the game against the Atlanta Hawks at DECEMBER 9: Jose Calderon ties Chaucey Billups franchise record
Philips Arena at the 1:32 mark of the fourth quarter after a collision for most consecutive free throws made (51). Calderon breaks the
with Hawks centre Al Horford. Ford missed 24 games with a left arm record the following night in Indiana.
stinger.
DECEMBER 3: Relieved Sam Mitchell of head coaching duties and
DECEMBER 18: Chris Bosh became the Raptors all-time leading named assistant coach Jay Triano head coach on an interim basis.
rebounder in grabbing his 2,840th rebound in Torontos 80-77 victory
versus the Los Angeles Clippers. 2009

DECEMBER 20: Chris Bosh blocked the 416th shot of his career to JANUARY 16: Andrea Bargnani sets an NBA record for centres with
move past Vince Carter for first place on the teams all-time list. 10 consecutive games with two or more three-point field goals made.

2008 JANUARY 23: Jose Calderon passes Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf for the
second-longest streak of consecutive free throws in NBA history (81).
JANUARY 14: Chris Bosh named NBA Eastern Conference Player of
the Week. JANUARY 28: Chris Bosh named as a reserve for the Eastern
Conference at the 2009 NBA All-Star Game in Phoenix.
JANUARY 31: Chris Bosh is named a reserve for the Eastern
Conference team for the 2008 NBA All-Star Game. JANUARY 30: Jose Calderons streak of 87 consecutive free throws
ends at home versus Milwaukee.
FEBRUARY 1: Jamario Moon named NBA Eastern Conference Rookie
of the Month for January. FEBRUARY 10: Chris Bosh announced he will not participate in the
2009 NBA All-Star Game due to a sprained knee.
FEBRUARY 8: Toronto played its 1,000th regular season game, falling
to the Los Angeles Clippers 102-98. FEBRUARY 24: The Raptors streak of consecutive games with at
least one three-pointer reachd the 10-year mark. The streak began
FEBRUARY 15: Rookie Jamario Moon and forward Andrea Bargnani February 24, 1999 at Air Canada Centre.
started in the T-Mobile Rookie-Sopohomore Challenge at All-Star
Weekend in New Orleans. Moon finished with 13 points in 18:39 MARCH 13: Jose Calderon became the all-time franchise leader with
minutes, while Bargnani had eight points in 17:14 minutes for the 1,795 assists.
Sophomores.
MAY 11: Promoted Jay Triano to head coach.
FEBRUARY 16: Jason Kapono had a record-tying 25 points in the
final round to successfully defending his Foot Locker Three-Point JUNE 5: Named Alex English and Marc Iavaroni as assistant coaches.
Shootout title at All-Star Weekend in New Orleans. Kapono became
the first repeat champion since 2002-03 (Peja Stojakovic). Jamario JULY 1: Named Eric Hughes and Alvin Williams as assistant coach/
Moon finished third in the 2008 Sprite Slam Dunk competition. player development. Named Francesco Cuzzolin as assistant coach/
strength and conditioning.
FEBRUARY 17: Chris Bosh made his second consecutive start for
the Eastern Conference, finishing with 14 points and seven rebounds. JULY 8: Signed forward Andrea Bargnani to a multi-year extension.
Bosh made the start in place of injured East teammate Kevin Garnett.
JULY 9: Acquired forward Hedo Turkoglu in a sign and trade with
FEBRUARY 27: Chris Bosh scored 28 points against Minnesota to Orlando, plus forward Devean George and guard Antoine Wright from
pass Morris Peterson for second place on Torontos all-time scoring Dallas as part of a four team trade. Dallas received forward Shawn
list. Marion, forward Kris Humphries and forward Nathan Jawai, plus guard
Greg Buckner from Memphis. The Grizzlies received forward Jerry
FEBRUARY 29: Named John Lucas as a basketball development Stackhouse from Dallas and a future second-round draft pick from
consultant for the remainder of the 2007-08 season. Toronto. Orlando received cash considerations from Toronto.

MARCH 19: Toronto set a franchise record with a 42-point margin of JULY 21: Signed free-agent guard Jarrett Jack to a multi-year contract.
victory in defeating Miami 96-54. The 54 points by Miami was an NBA
season-low and the third fewest points in the 24-second shot clock JULY 21: Signed free-agent centre Rasho Nesterovic to a one-year
era. contract. Acquired Marco Belinelli from Golden State in exchange for
forward Devean George and cash considerations.
APRIL 3: Forward Chris Bosh named a divisional winner for the 2007-
08 NBA Sportsmanship Award. AUGUST 18: Acquired forward Amir Johnson and guard-forward
Sonny Weems from the Milwaukee Bucks for guard-forward Carlos
Delfino and guard Roko Ukic.
FRANCHISE HISTORY
OCTOBER 14: Forward Reggie Evans left in the second quarter of a MARCH 22: Forward Chris Bosh records his 44th double-double of
preseason game against Boston with a midfoot sprain in his left foot. the season, breaking his own team single-season record.
He would miss the first 51 games of the regular-season.
APRIL 5: Forward Chris Bosh named Eastern Conference Player of
OCTOBER 28: Toronto opens its 15th season with a 101-91 victory the Week. Tied Vince Carter for the most honours in team history
over Cleveland in front of 20,152 at Air Canada Centre. with seven.

NOVEMBER 13: Raptors overcome a 22-point deficit against the Los APRIL 6: Forward Chris Bosh sustains a displaced nasal fracture
Angeles Clippers for a 104-89 victory - the largest comeback win on during the first quarter at Cleveland following an elbow to the face
the road in team history. from Antawn Jamison.

DECEMBER 23: Defeated the Pistons 94-64 for the teams first victory APRIL 7: Forward Chris Bosh undergoes successful surgery in
at the Palace of Auburn Hills since 2003, ending an 11-game losing Cleveland to repair a displaced nasal fracture. Forward Hedo Turkoglu
streak at Detroit. Also set a team record for fewest points allowed leaves in the first quarter vs. Boston with a non-displaced fracture on
during a road game (64) and lowest opponent field goal percentage an old nasal fracture in the face. Forward Sonny Weems scores a
(.279) during a road game. career-high 21 points against the Celtics.

DECEMBER 27: Claimed the season-series vs. Detroit for the first JUNE 1: Named P.J. Carlesimo as an assistant coach.
time in franchise history with a 102-95 win at Air Canada Centre.
AUGUST 15: Named Scott Roth as an assistant coach.
DECEMBER 30: Defeated Charlotte 107-103 to set a team record
with nine wins during the month of December. Extended win streak to
a season-high five games.

2010
JANUARY 3: Forward Chris Bosh passed Vince Carter as the teams
all-time career scoring leader with a 16-foot jumper at the 1:39 mark
of the third quarter vs. San Antonio. Carters previous record was
9,420 points.

JANUARY 6: Recorded the fastest return to .500 in team history with


a 108-103 victory at Orlando. Toronto was six games under .500 on
December 15.

JANUARY 11: Indiana rallies from a 23-point deficit to defeat Toronto


and post the largest comeback by an opponent in team history.

JANUARY 20: Forward Chris Bosh scores a career-high 44 points at


Milwaukee.

JANUARY 24: Toronto defeats the defending NBA Champion Los


Angeles Lakers 106-105 at Air Canada Centre.

JANUARY 31: The Raptors defeat Indiana 117-102 for a season-


high five-game winning streak. Forward Hedo Turkoglu sustains a
non-displaced fracture of the orbital bone under his right eye after
taking an elbow from Mike Dunleavy during the first quarter.

FEBRUARY 12: Rookie DeMar DeRozan defeats L.A. Clipper guard


Eric Gordon in the inaugural NBA All-Star Dunk-In at All-Star Weekend.

FEBRUARY 13: Forward DeMar DeRozan advances to the final round


of the Sprite Slam Dunk contest, but loses to New Yorks Nate
Robinson.

FEBRUARY 14: Forward Chris Bosh scored 23 points and a team-


high 10 rebounds for the Eastern Conference at the 2010 NBA All-
Star game in Dallas. Bosh earned his fifth All-Star selection, tying
Vince Carter for the most in team history.

FEBRUARY 20: Toronto plays its first Saturday night home game in
over nine years, defeating the Washington Wizards 109-104.

MARCH 17: Forward Chris Bosh becomes the first player in team
history to reach the 10,000 point mark.

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