Orlando Magic 102, Toronto Raptors 92

Hedo Turkoglu of the Orlando Magic encourages the fans at the Amway Arena to cheer during the final minutes of the Magic's 102-92 win over the Toronto Raptors on Monday night.
Photo by John Raoux, the Associated Press
I've run out of things to say about this team, which is probably good, because I screamed myself hoarse along with 17,518 other fans at the Amway Arena. And after 12 excruciatingly long, cruel years of futility, disappointment, and waiting we finally did it: We won a playoff series.
We're back.
After squandering an early 10-2 lead and sleepwalking through the first half, we came out strong in the third quarter and held the Raptors to just 18 points in the period. We fought for rebounds, contested every shot, and worked hard on our end, turning a one-point halftime deficit into a six-point lead heading into the fourth quarter, which we dominated, thanks in large part to the incredible crowd at Amway Arena. It's not as though we caught some lucky breaks, or that our guys hit lucky shots, or that Toronto affixed a stamp on this game and mailed it in: we earned this win, and it feels good. Real good.
Honestly, is there anything negative we can say about this team after watching its performance in this series? We still have trouble with turnovers, committing too many while not forcing enough on the other end, and our three-point shooting has been well below average, but the gutsy performances by each and every player have offset those deficiencies.
- Dwight Howard's final averages for this series: 22.6 points, 18.2 rebounds, and 3.8 blocks. He continues to amaze, and the only thing he's changed is his attitude. He's simply working harder. Stan Van Gundy mentioned it in his postgame comments: not once since the Magic began preparing for the playoffs, beginning with the first night the team studied film of the Raptors, has Van Gundy had to reprimand Dwight for not focusing like he should.
- I'm at a loss to explain Rashard Lewis. We sign him for three-point shooting and floor spacing, but this series he stunk it up from long distance, but made up for it by crashing the boards. He had 13 tonight, matching the season-high total he posted in the Game Four win. That's back-to-back double-doubles for Rashard Lewis. Okay, he's a 6'10" forward, he should rebound that well in his sleep, whoop-de-do. But he reached double-figures in rebounding just twice in 81 regular season games. So yes, let's commend him for his willingness to battle for loose balls.
- Jameer Nelson's assists went down (4.8 this series compared to 5.3 in the regular season) but his shooting went up, and I mean way up, as he made the Raptors pay for leaving him open to double-team Dwight Howard. I don't expect him to shoot 58% from the field over the course of a whole season, but there's no reason why he can't average even 15 points per game next year. He's leading this team emotionally, as he should, and is making a strong case that he indeed deserved the 5-year, $35 million contract extension he signed prior to this season.
I think we might have earned the mantle of "Team No One Wants to Face" in the Eastern Conference for the rest of these playoffs.
And we're just in Year One of the Dwight/Rashard/Hedo/Jameer/Van Gundy Era.
And our three-pointers will drop in eventually.
And we're the first team to advance in the playoffs this year, one year to the day after being the first team KO'd in the first round last season.
Let's take some time to enjoy this series win, our first in 12 years, and to express our appreciation for the guys who brought it to us.
And, uh, for those of you who are interested: tickets for Round Two (!) go on sale Wednesday morning.
One last thing: if I were mean spirited, I would have titled this recap "Lame Canada!", but that would have been unfair to the Raptors, who played hard, and to their fans, who are a classy bunch.
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It was an awesome game
I was there too and it was so loud during certain times that I couldn’t even hear the whistle when there was a stoppage in play. That run in the 4th happened so quickly that it’s hard to remember what triggered it and how they sustained it.
It doesn’t seem like Hedo made much of an impact, but he nearly had a triple double. And Dwight’s 21/21 was pretty “quiet,” if that’s even possible…I didn’t realize he had a huge game until after it was over.
by Marie on Apr 29, 2008 10:22 AM EDT 0 recs
I know, right?
I could hardly hear Paul Porter when he announced the second-half lineups. As you’re aware, it takes a loud crowd to drown out Porter’s voice. Outstanding effort from the fans.
Turk’s shot was off (again) but he made up for it with his dribble penetration. It’s gotten to the point that defenses collapse on him whenever he has the ball. Like he’s a scoring threat on par with LeBron or Kobe. That aids our drive-and-kick game because it gives our corner shooters extremely wide-open.
by Ben Q Rock on
Apr 29, 2008 7:49 PM EDT
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Way to go Magic!
This team really took care of business and capitalized on Toronto’s weaknesses. Great coaching, and Stan deserves a lot of credit. Bring on the 2cd round!
'Coach, Dwight is a nice guy. Dwight don't hit anybody. But Superman will knock the crap out of you.' - D12
by Eyriq the Red on Apr 29, 2008 10:33 AM EDT 0 recs
The second round
I am really looking forward to the second round. I still expect the Pistons to beat the 76ers in 6 games, even though Philly is playing them really tough. There’s no reason why they can’t beat the Pistons in a 7 game series. Let me go on record as saying that if Howard can be as dominant against the Pistons as he was against the Raptors, and they get the same team effort, the Magic will advance to the Eastern Conference Finals. Heck, I think they have as good a chance as anyone now of making it to the NBA Finals!
Not too many people picked the Magic to beat the Raptors in only 5 games, but they did it, and it was no fluke. Look at how much they dominated Toronto in the second half of the last two games, outscoring them by a combined 28 points in the two second halves.
I shouldn’t get too far ahead of myself, but one game and one series at a time.
by Mike from Illinois on Apr 29, 2008 3:18 PM EDT 0 recs
I think the Magic have really narrowed the gap between themselves and the Pistons since last year. 1. Stan the Man. 2. Sweet Lew 3. Team overall development, and most importantly Dwights development. I think we win this series and I never thought we had a chance before, so maybe I am getting caught up in the moment. But either way, win or lose, this goes 7! (My official pick will now be Magic in 6 though, screw losing at home once, we must protect this house!)
Even better if Philly wins!
'Coach, Dwight is a nice guy. Dwight don't hit anybody. But Superman will knock the crap out of you.' - D12
by Eyriq the Red on
Apr 29, 2008 4:11 PM EDT
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To clarify...
By “they”, of course I’m referring to the Magic beating the Pistons in a 7 game series.
by Mike from Illinois on Apr 29, 2008 3:22 PM EDT 0 recs
That game was out of this world. I don’t think I sat down the entire fourth quarter :B (And the fight that broke out in the section next to ours was also totally awesome. Only not. Honestly, throwing beer? Way to act responsible, morons.)
I’m so proud of this team. /tears of joy
Also, Hedo manscapes. Discuss.
by TheGiantSquid on Apr 29, 2008 7:06 PM EDT 0 recs
Fight?
Ugh. We’re better than that.
Was anyone else appalled that some people booed the Canadian national anthem?
by Ben Q Rock on
Apr 29, 2008 7:50 PM EDT
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A few people booed the Canadian anthem at the first playoff game, unfortunately, but it stopped almost immediately because the woman singing was very good and, oh yeah, in a wheelchair. Jesus.
Then at the second game, people were chanting “U-S-A! U-S-A!” Um, okay? I found it interesting, considering both teams have several internationally diverse players on their rosters.
The fight was between one redneck and his two chicks and another redneck and his friends. All I know is that one minute I’m watching Dwight attempting not to brink a freethrow and the next everyone is standing up and security is stomping up the stairs. Good times.
by TheGiantSquid on
Apr 29, 2008 7:56 PM EDT
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I was!
And there was a lot of cheering and what not during our anthem as well when it should have been relatively quiet.
by Marie on
Apr 30, 2008 4:34 PM EDT
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Was that what that was?
I could see there was some kind of commotion from where I was sitting (section 215, Row N), but had no idea what was going on.
by Marie on
Apr 30, 2008 4:33 PM EDT
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Yeah, my dad and I were in section 217, right on the end seats next to section 218, where the fight took place, in rows G-H, I think. At first I was so confused because everyone was standing up and I thought something was happening on the court, but then I realized Dwight was just attempting some free throws. Then the beer was thrown and it all became clear.
by TheGiantSquid on
Apr 30, 2008 8:51 PM EDT
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