Soaring Raptors beat Nets for 9th straight win
Toronto hits 50-win mark for third straight season
The Toronto Raptors reached 50 wins for the third straight season.
DeMar DeRozan and Kyle Lowry are seeking much more.
"There's a bigger goal," said DeRozan, the lone holdover from a Raptors team that went 22-60 in 2010-11. "Success during the regular season is great, but we're playing for something bigger than all of us. That's to get in the postseason and win all the rounds to get that gold trophy."
Jonas Valanciunas had 26 points and 14 rebounds, and the Raptors won their ninth straight and 16th of 17, 116-102 over the Brooklyn Nets on Tuesday night.
DeRozan and reserve guard Fred VanVleet each scored 15 points, and Lowry added 11 points and 11 assists for the Raptors, who held Brooklyn to 35 points after halftime and won a franchise record-tying seventh straight road game.
'Bigger fish to fry'
Toronto increased its lead in the East over the Boston Celtics, who were off Tuesday, to four games with the start of the playoffs just a month away.
"It's a good mark. It's a good milestone for us. It's a good thing for the franchise," Lowry said. "But we got bigger things to fry, bigger fish to fry. It's another win, another steppingstone for our organization, for our journey."
D'Angelo Russell hit his first seven shots — all 3-pointers — and scored 24 points in the first quarter for the Nets, who have lost 11 straight to the Raptors.
The Nets point guard was subbed out with 4:20 remaining in the period and managed to make just 3 of 14 from the field the rest of the way. He finished with 32 points, and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson scored 19.
"They trapped me, forced me to pass it," Russell said. "We just missed shots down the stretch. I think if we make those shots it might be a different game."
Despite owning the league's third-best overall record, the Raptors have struggled coming out of the gate this season, and trailed 74-59 after Dante Cunningham's tip-in layup in the opening minutes of the second half.
But Toronto went on a 15-0 run, capped by VanVleet's 3-pointer that made it 74-all with 6:04 left in the third quarter.
"It was nothing magical," Raptors coach Dwane Casey said of his team's play in the second half. "But again, I shouldn't have to yell and scream to get guys to play hard at half. Just start at the beginning of the game."
The teams traded baskets the rest of the period. In the fourth, CJ Miles led a 14-4 run with three 3-pointers, his last one extending Toronto's lead 103-95 with 7:15 left. Miles finished with 12 points.
Brooklyn got within 103-100 with 5:48 remaining. The Raptors shut the Nets down the rest of the way, setting up DeRozan's streak of seven straight points that increased the lead to 110-100 with 2:27 to play.