Kawhi will be the next great test of Toronto’s place in the NBA
4:03 am | December 5, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
8:33 AM ET
All terms being equal, would I want to play here?
How the best basketball players in the world answer this question governs the entire power structure of the NBA.
No two players hold every team in the same regard, and the impressions of these teams fluctuate day to day. But it’s not hard to identify which organizations can be found on the good list, which ones reside on the bad list and which are in between. Who can get an audience with the summer’s marquee free agents? Who struggles to retain their homegrown stars? Which teams do the best players feel offer them the best chance to achieve their professional goals?
In fairness to the people who run these organizations, the playing field isn’t level. They can’t account for market appeal or championships won decades ago. But for those not on the good list, like the Toronto Raptors through much of their existence, making it there is the singular mission of the franchise and its ownership.
The journey toward a place on the good list is, in many respects, the story of the Toronto Raptors. Their presence on the good list has started to become faintly visible, even with a string of disappointing playoff exits. What was not long ago a young franchise outside the United States that had trouble holding on to its young stars and winning consistently is now a team with the league’s best record, top-five talent in Kawhi Leonard and an intensely aggressive front office.