3 takeaways: Thunder fall to Raptors, suffer 10th straight loss

Chris Boucher got the better of fellow Montreal native Lu Dort in the OKC Thunder loss to the Toronto Raptors.

As ready as some Oklahoma City Thunder fans were for a losing season, and as much as some are as happy with a loss as they would be with a win, the players are in a different boat.

An organization may try to tank, but the players don’t.

With the Thunder’s 10th loss in a row on Sunday, this one a 112-106 battle with the Toronto Raptors, head coach Mark Daigneault hinted that some frustration is beginning to mount even while he expressed some optimism for his crew.

“This has been a tough stretch and these last couple games we’ve been right on the doorstep, but they come out and they compete every night,” he said. “If the frustration bleeds into the beginning of games and the way that we play, then that would be concerning, but it really hasn’t.”

Lu Dort was neutralized after scoring 21 points in the first quarter alone. Fellow Montrealer Chris Boucher of the Raptors scored 17 in that frame and finished with 31, closing it off with the 3-pointer that iced the game.

Here are three takeaways from the Thunder’s loss:

Raptors’ roster holds the lowest-average draft position among NBA teams

The Toronto Raptors head into the resumption of play for the NBA season re-start with the second-best record in the Eastern Conference.

When the Raptors won the title in 2019, it was the only time that the NBA champions did not have a lottery pick on their roster since the league changed to a weighted lotto system in 1990.

In fact, the 2019 Raptors had the lowest drafted players among NBA champions since the Houston Rockets in 1993-94. (Although those numbers were a bit impacted by the fact that Mario Elie was selected at No. 160 overall, fully one hundred spots later than the final selection eligible in the modern draft).

This year, the only Toronto player selected in the lottery was Stanley Johnson. The former University of Arizona forward was picked at No. 8 overall in 2015. But he averaged just 4.8 minutes per game in 2019-20, making zero appearances in the starting lineup.

The only first-rounders on the team are OG Anunoby (No. 23 overall), Rondae Hollis-Jefferson (No. 23 overall), Kyle Lowry (No. 24 overall), Serge Ibaka (No. 24 overall) and Pascal Siakam (No. 27 overall). All of these players were taken in the second half of the first round.

Among NBA teams, the Raptors currently have the roster with the lowest average draft positions.

© Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

One interesting observation: the rosters with higher draft positions are not doing that well. The six NBA teams that have the lowest draft position all have winning records this season. Meanwhile, 10 of the eleven teams with the highest-drafted players have losing records.

HoopsHype’s Alberto de Roa contributed research to this report

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