Raptors Coach Just Pumped The Brakes On Allen Graves Buzz

Raptors fans should be optimistic about Allen Graves's potential impact next season, but Summer League coach Ivo Simovic reminds them to temper expectations with patience.

Allen Graves gave Raptors fans a promising first look in Summer League, but head coach Ivo Simovic is making sure nobody gets ahead of themselves.

Toronto’s first-round pick helped power the Raptors’ Summer League squad in a three-point loss to Boston, finishing with 22 points on 9-16 shooting from the field and 3-8 from deep, along with 13 rebounds, 3 steals, and 2 blocks. The performance checked a lot of boxes for what Toronto wants from him: spacing, rebounding, and active defense.

Simovic liked what he saw from Graves’s basketball IQ, according to an interview with the Hello and Welcome podcast, but he also stressed that one strong outing in Summer League doesn’t tell the whole story about how quickly a rookie will adjust to the NBA. The jump in competition is real, and there’s still a long way to go.

When asked how one can know which parts of Summer League will translate well to the NBA, Simovic said, “Do we know 100%? We don’t know.

Nobody knows. What we can do, we can keep working.

It’s a process, obviously. The guy just got drafted two weeks ago, maybe less than that.

He did five days of practice, seven days of practice with us, and played well. So, that’s a good starting point.

So, we’re going to keep building from here.”

That’s the right level of caution. Graves looks like a clean fit with what the Raptors are trying to build, but expecting him to arrive as a finished product right away would be asking too much.

Still, there’s plenty to like here. The defensive upside jumps off the page, especially if Kawhi Leonard remains on the roster next season despite the trade being on hold right now.

A group featuring Jamal Shead, Ja’Kobe Walter, Leonard, Scottie Barnes, and Collin Murray-Boyles would be a nightmare to score on. If Graves can bring the same kind of disruption at the NBA level that he showed in college and in his first Summer League game, Darko Rajakovic suddenly has even more ways to deploy defensive-heavy lineups.

The shot from deep matters too. Graves knocking down 3 of 8 from beyond the arc is a strong sign for how he could mesh with Barnes, Murray-Boyles, and Jakob Poeltl.

Barnes is willing to let it fly, and Murray-Boyles has spent the offseason working on his jumper, but neither is a proven floor-spacing threat. If Graves develops into that kind of shooter, he could slide in naturally next to Toronto’s frontcourt pieces and help solve a real roster need.

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