July 7 belonged to Kyle Lowry in Toronto, but the day also made the Raptors’ future feel a whole lot clearer.
As No. 7 was headed to the rafters, Lowry stood at the podium and reflected on his career, his life in the city, and the nine years he spent with the Raptors. Before he finished, he turned to the biggest current storyline sitting right in front of him: Kawhi Leonard, who was in the front row even though the trade had not yet been made official.
Lowry made it plain what Leonard’s return means.
“Championship is the only aspiration. That’s why he’s here,” Lowry said regarding Leonard and his return to the Six.
What does Kyle Lowry think of the #Raptors ' reunion with Kawhi Leonard?
"They're trying to win another championship, starting with that guy over there (Kawhi). You get to that point, championship is the only aspiration. That's why he's here." pic.twitter.com/gyKGFto5nQ
- Daniele Franceschi (@Daniele_Media) July 7, 2026
That message lands differently after a 2025-26 season that gave Toronto something to build on. The Raptors won 46 games and reached the playoffs for the first time in three years, but Leonard changes the temperature of everything.
A young, promising group that had been growing together is no longer just trying to sort itself out. With a proven No. 1 option in place, the conversation shifts fast from development to contention.
For a team that had seemed headed into next season with BI and Barnes at the center of the picture, the Leonard move changes the math. The Raptors are no longer in a patient evaluation phase, trying to figure out who fits and who doesn’t while avoiding major disruptions.
That kind of approach works when the ceiling is still being discovered. It looks very different when a 35-year-old former Finals MVP is in the building.
Lowry’s own remarks carried that point too. He referenced how close a trade involving him came during the 2018-19 campaign, a reminder that no one is truly safe when a title is the target. In that kind of environment, front offices have to be willing to make hard calls, because the goal is bigger than comfort.
And that’s the message Toronto sent by bringing Leonard back. The franchise is not hiding what it wants next season.
If the team needs to make a move after a slow start, if it needs a deadline swing like the Marc Gasol addition in 2019, or if someone has to accept a different role, all of it is on the table. The only standard that matters is whether it pushes the Raptors toward another title.
That’s why Lowry’s final moment at the podium mattered beyond the ceremony itself. It honored the past, but it also pointed straight at the 2026-27 Raptors. With Leonard back in Toronto, the expectation is simple: win another championship.
In Other News...
Raptors Reunion With DeMar May Have Been Doomed All Along
The Raptors long-ago pivot to Kawhi Leonard still hangs over any conversation about a DeMar DeRozan reunion, because the idea has always been about more than nostalgia. Toronto has spent years trying to balance star power, lineup fit and the cultural pull that comes with being the citys team, and DeRozans name keeps surfacing whenever the roster looks like it could use another proven scorer. Even the outside chatter has reflected that tension, with some around the league wondering whether the franchises identity, not just its basketball fit, would make a return feel complicated.
Sam Quinn of CBS has argued DeRozan is not the cleanest fit for what Toronto would need now, suggesting the Raptors could instead lean on staggered usage with Scottie Barnes and Leonard to create offense. Drakes presence in the Toronto conversation only adds another layer, since his influence around the team has often been part of the backdrop whenever old Raptors ties come up. For now, the reunion remains more of a debate than a transaction, and the real question is whether the organization ever decides the basketball case is strong enough to override everything else. [Read more 🡒]
Raptors Urged To Reunite Kawhi With A Familiar Franchise Star
The Raptors offseason has already taken a dramatic turn with the move that brought Kawhi Leonard back to Toronto, and the front office now faces the harder part of building a roster around him. One name that has surfaced in that conversation is DeMar DeRozan, whose release by Sacramento has reopened the door to a possible reunion with the franchise that helped define his prime years.
There is appeal in the idea of adding a veteran scorer who could steady second units and take some pressure off the stars, but the fit is not especially clean. Toronto would have to weigh shooting concerns and the overlap between DeRozans game, Leonards usage and Scottie Barnes role as an offense driver when Leonard sits, which makes this a more complicated basketball question than a nostalgic one. [Read more 🡒]
