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TORONTO RAPTORS
HISTORY
Toronto Raptors,
professional basketball team and one of eight teams in the Central
Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball
Association (NBA). The Raptors play at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto,
Ontario, Canada. The team wears jerseys of red, purple, black, and
silver.
The Raptors franchise joined the NBA in
1994 when the league awarded an expansion team franchise to a group
headed by Toronto businessman John I. Bitove. As part of the same
expansion, the NBA admitted another Canadian club, the Vancouver
Grizzlies. The Raptors and Grizzlies became the league’s first Canadian
teams since the Toronto Huskies competed in the 1946-47 campaign of the
Basketball Association of America (BAA), the forerunner of the NBA.

In May 1994, the name Raptors—from the name of a carnivorous
dinosaur—was selected for the club, and Isiah Thomas, a well-known
former NBA player who won two NBA titles with the Detroit Pistons, was
hired as general manager. Thomas named former Pistons assistant coach
Brendan Malone as Toronto’s first head coach.
The Raptors won a coin toss with the Grizzlies for the right to the
first pick in the 1995 NBA expansion draft, in which the new teams would
each select one player from an existing NBA team. The Raptors selected
guard B. J. Armstrong of the Chicago Bulls. They then traded Armstrong
to the Golden State Warriors in exchange for forward Carlos Rogers and
center Victor Alexander. In the regular draft of college players, the
Raptors selected guard Damon Stoudamire. In the team’s inaugural season,
Stoudamire led the Raptors in scoring with an average of 19 points per
game, finished fifth in the league in assists with 9.3 per game, and won
the rookie of the year award. The Raptors finished the season with a
21-61 win-loss record. In the 1996 NBA draft, the Raptors selected
forward-center Marcus Camby, the college player of the year.
In 1997 Thomas left the Raptors to work as a basketball analyst for the
National Broadcasting Company (NBC). His departure precipitated a
shake-up in the team’s roster, including trades of both Stoudamire and
Camby. The most highly regarded new player to join the team was guard
Vince Carter, who won the rookie of the year award in the
lockout-shortened 1999 season.
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