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Indiana Pacers
vs
Toronto Raptors
Today's Featured Sports Pick

Game Date:
04/18/2016
7:05pm EST

Lines:
Indiana +8
Toronto -8

Total:
Over 195 (-102)
Under 195 (-108)

Community Picks: Indiana Pacers 0% vs Toronto Raptors 0%

Indiana Pacers and Toronto Raptors Thread

Team Tweets & News Articles
Toronto Raptors
> One game into their NBA playoffs and it’s not like the sky is falling in on the Raptors. Worse than that. Paul George is settling in. More than any of the alarms out of a Game 1 loss, that’s the one ringing loudest ahead of Monday’s encore. George is back to a stage we knows well. It's up to the Raptors to respond, as Gregg Doyel of the Indianapolis Star relates: “It’s a make-or-break thing for me,” George told Doyel. “This is where you make your mark. This is where you showcase it. This is where you put yourself in that category of being one of the top guys in this league, and some guys want it. Some guys don’t.” Maybe he was sticking it into the Raptors a little with that last bit - Pierce'ing them. Perhaps Toronto forget about him, after George missed most of last year with a broken leg and in two trips to the Air Canada Centre this season managed only a combined total of 31 points versus the Raptors. But that’s doubtful. The other time into the ACC this year was on All-Star Weekend, and George dropped 41. He’s a proven 20-point playoff scorer who's taken the Pacers to two conference finals. No, the far more logical explanation is that the Raptors had no answer for him. “Mostly I was searching for someone to stop Paul George,” Dwane Casey said afterward. More than a Kyle Lowry uptick, this is where the series rests: whether the Raptors have the personnel to stop George, after he went off for 27 second-half points Saturday matched mostly against his L.A. contemporary DeMar DeRozan , then as the minutes ticked down started playing the distributor-manager role when the defence started doubling. There was no better player on the floor all day, and it wasn't particularly close, Toronto sparkplug Lowry pounding the air out of the ball when he wasn't missing shots. DeMarre Carroll has been playing under a nightly 20-minute limit and has just four of those under him since returning from a lengthy rehab. Giving him more time would mess with the rotation some, Casey said Sunday. But with the Raptors into a pivotal point right away in this series, surely the time has come to take the wraps off Carroll and send him out for what he was signed for in the first place last summer: to make life difficult for the best opposing player. That would be George, who no one is forgetting about now. If things stay the same, though, we’ll all be forgetting the Raptors soon enough.     Continue to Article
April 18, 2016 10:10:am EST
Toronto Raptors
After Paul George provided the latest postseason pain, the Toronto Raptors are searching for answers as they look to stop their recent cycle of playoff failures. Dwane Casey believes his outstanding backcourt will regroup Monday night when the Raptors try to avoid an eighth consecutive postseason defeat and even their first-round series with the Indiana Pacers in Game 2 at Air Canada Centre. George regrouped from a 2-for-9 shooting performance in the first half Saturday by hitting 10 of 13 attempts in the final two quarters on the way to 33 points as Indiana stole homecourt advantage with a 100-90 win. Continue to Article
April 17, 2016 1:53:pm EST
Indiana Pacers
After Paul George provided the latest postseason pain, the Toronto Raptors are searching for answers as they look to stop their recent cycle of playoff failures. Dwane Casey believes his outstanding backcourt will regroup Monday night when the Raptors try to avoid an eighth consecutive postseason defeat and even their first-round series with the Indiana Pacers in Game 2 at Air Canada Centre. George regrouped from a 2-for-9 shooting performance in the first half Saturday by hitting 10 of 13 attempts in the final two quarters on the way to 33 points as Indiana stole homecourt advantage with a 100-90 win. Continue to Article
April 17, 2016 1:53:pm EST
Indiana Pacers
TORONTO – Don't tell Dwane Casey the Raptors are in tough after losing Game 1 of their first round series at home on Saturday against the Indiana Pacers. "I know the percentages and the numbers and all that bullcrap, but it's a long series," Casey said following the 100-90 loss. "I know our team and we didn't play to our identity, but I know we'll come back Monday night and play to our identity." You don't have to look back far for recent examples of what's happened when these Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan-led Raptors have fallen behind 0-1 in a series, losing to the Nets in seven games in 2014 and being swept by the Wizards last year. Taking into account the franchise's entire history, Toronto has now dropped the opening game in eight of their nine playoffs series and have come back to win once, a five-game first round series against the Knicks in 2001. So based on their own history the odds are stacked against them, but what does history of the NBA say?  According to WhoWins.com , the team that goes down 0-1 has rebounded to win a seven-game series 23% of the time. When that loss comes at home, however, the percentage jumps to 46%. Good teams, the ones that have earned home-court advantage, are in a better position to bounce back. Why the Raptors lost Saturday is less of a mystery. Toronto turned the ball over 20 times and shot 21.4% (4-of-19) on three-pointers. Needless to say, that's not a recipe for success. NBA teams went 65-135 (.325 winning-percentage) this season when turning the ball over 20 or more times and 42-123 (.255%) when shooting 21% or worse from three. The first step to avoiding another first-round exit is to get sharper with the ball offensively and knock down open threes. Finding a way to slow down Pacers All-Star Paul George, who scored 33 points in Game 1 , is also important. The focus now turns to Game 2 on Monday night, because if the Raptors turn in a repeat performance and go down 0-2 with the series shifting to Indiana, then they'll really be in trouble. And they won't need any percentages and numbers to tell them that. The boos they'll hear from the home crowd will confirm that loud and clear. More NBA coverage from Yahoo Canada Sports: - - - - - - - Israel Fehr is a writer for Yahoo Canada Sports . Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter. Follow @israelfehr Continue to Article
April 16, 2016 10:30:pm EST
Indiana Pacers
TORONTO – Don't tell Dwane Casey the Raptors are in tough after losing Game 1 of their first round series at home on Saturday against the Indiana Pacers. "I know the percentages and the numbers and all that bullcrap, but it's a long series," Casey said following the 100-90 loss. "I know our team and we didn't play to our identity, but I know we'll come back Monday night and play to our identity." You don't have to look back far for recent examples of what's happened when these Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan-led Raptors have fallen behind 0-1 in a series, losing to the Nets in seven games in 2014 and being swept by the Wizards last year. Taking into account the franchise's entire history, Toronto has now dropped the opening game in eight of their nine playoffs series and have come back to win once, a five-game first round series against the Knicks in 2001. So based on their own history the odds are stacked against them, but what does history of the NBA say?  According to WhoWins.com , the team that goes down 0-1 has rebounded to win a seven-game series 23% of the time. When that loss comes at home, however, the percentage jumps to 46%. Good teams, the ones that have earned home-court advantage, are in a better position to bounce back. Why the Raptors lost Saturday is less of a mystery. Toronto turned the ball over 20 times and shot 21.4% (4-of-19) on three-pointers. Needless to say, that's not a recipe for success. NBA teams went 65-135 (.325 winning-percentage) this season when turning the ball over 20 or more times and 42-123 (.255%) when shooting 21% or worse from three. The first step to avoiding another first-round exit is to get sharper with the ball offensively and knock down open threes. Finding a way to slow down Pacers All-Star Paul George, who scored 33 points in Game 1 , is also important. The focus now turns to Game 2 on Monday night, because if the Raptors turn in a repeat performance and go down 0-2 with the series shifting to Indiana, then they'll really be in trouble. And they won't need any percentages and numbers to tell them that. The boos they'll hear from the home crowd will confirm that loud and clear. More NBA coverage from Yahoo Canada Sports: - - - - - - - Israel Fehr is a writer for Yahoo Canada Sports . Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter. Follow @israelfehr Continue to Article
April 16, 2016 10:30:pm EST
 
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