Knicks Fans Can Already See How This Kawhi Gamble Burns Toronto

Will the Raptors' bold move to bring back Kawhi Leonard pay off, or has New York's success sparked a costly gamble?

The Raptors have made their move, and it’s the kind of bet that can reshape a season fast - for better or worse. Toronto has agreed to bring back Kawhi Leonard, a reunion that instantly changes the conversation in the East even if it comes with plenty of baggage attached.

Leonard is coming off a season in which he averaged a career-high 27.9 points per game, and he got to 65 games for the second time in three seasons. That matters.

So does the fact that he just turned 35. The Raptors clearly decided the upside was worth the risk, even with the injury concerns that still hang over him.

The price was steep. According to the report, the Clippers will receive unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033, 2030 and 2033 second-round picks and a 2027 first-round swap. Toronto is also expected to sign Leonard to a two-year extension that would keep him with the team through the 2028-29 season, though the exact structure of that deal has not been revealed.

This is a very different situation from 2018, when Toronto traded for Leonard and took a swing that ended up delivering a title. Back then, he wasn’t even his preferred landing spot. This time, the reporting says Toronto was the only team Leonard wanted to go to, which helps explain why the Raptors went all in.

From Toronto’s perspective, the logic is easy to see. The roster as it stood wasn’t close to the top tier, and adding a player like Leonard gives them a real shot to close the gap with the champion New York Knicks, who will be trying to repeat.

The Raptors also needed scoring, and Leonard still has the kind of offensive game that can bend a matchup on its own. He remains a strong defender, too, even if he no longer moves the way he once did.

Still, this is the danger zone for any front office chasing a star at this stage of his career. If Leonard gives Toronto at least 65 games next season and performs like the player he was a year ago, the move could look bold and smart. If the injury issues resurface, the regret could come quickly.

And even if everything goes right for Toronto, the Knicks are still sitting there as the standard in the conference. In 2018, that would have felt like a mountain the Raptors could climb.

Now, it’s a different story. There isn’t a team in the league New York can’t beat, Toronto included.

For now, the Raptors get their homecoming story. Whether it becomes a celebration or a warning sign may not take long to find out.

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