Raptors and fans are the 'real Toronto': Loud, multicultural and hungry for historic win - Action News
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Raptors and fans are the 'real Toronto': Loud, multicultural and hungry for historic win

On Saturday night, fans like Yasmin Said will watch as the Toronto Raptors try to defeat the Milwaukee Bucks and earn the franchise's first-ever trip to the NBA Finals.

Team's success brings 'beautiful rainbow' of people together, making Toronto feel like 'one big family'

Kawhi Leonard, left, and the Toronto Raptors could make history with a win tonight. Torontonian Yasmin Said, right, said she'll be watching the game with the intensity of an assistant coach. (Dan Hamilton/Reuters/CBC)

Catch Yasmin Said putting up jump shots on a concrete courther red hijab matching the Toronto Raptors logo on her T-shirt.

The 15-year-old is a huge Raptors fan, who has also been playing the sport for eight years, most recently as part of the group Hijabi Ballers, which encourages young Muslim women to get involved in sports.

The program also offers other sports,but basketball is "part of me," Said says, surveying herlocal outdoor court in Toronto's Scarborough neighbourhood.

Thanks to the Raptors' success, thousands of Torontonians and even more across Canada are feeling the same way these days.

On Saturday night, those fans will watch as the Raptors try to defeat the Milwaukee Bucks andearn the franchise's first-ever trip to the NBA Finals. Historic is not a big enough word.

Expect some loud Toronto Raptors fans outside Scotiabank Arena on Saturday night. (James Wattie/CBC)

Said, who says she watches the game with the intensity of an assistant coach, can't wait. When everyone comes together over the game, she says, Toronto feelslike "one big family."

Raptors inuncharted territory

The Raptors'story is well-known at this point. At first, Toronto's fans just didn't get basketball. Then the team struggled, in part because American players didn't want to come to the city. Then Vince Carter slam-dunked the team into relevance. In recent years, Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan led the team into the playoffs, but left the party early.

Now, they have Kawhi Leonardand some high hopes.

Leonard, left, dunks on Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo during Game 4 of the Eastern Conference final. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

But the more interesting story is thatthe Raptors have inspired so many in this multicultural country.

There are kids who grew up watching Carter and the Raptors, who are now starring in the NBA, like Andrew Wiggins, Jamal Murray and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to name just a few.

Then there are the newcomers, or the children of immigrants like Said, who see themselves reflected in the Raptors lineup. Those fans can cheer for African players (Serge Ibaka and Pascal Siakam), as well as Canadian-born talent like Chris Boucheror Marc (Big Spain) Gasol. Guard Jeremy Lin was so popular with the Greater Toronto Area's Asian community that he won cheers at Scotiabank Arena in downtown Toronto even when he was on rival teams.

There's also the whole Drake effect, and hislarge sprinkling of celebrity.

Drake gives passionate speech following Raptors' Game 5 win

5 years ago
Duration 0:32
The Canadian rapper joined fans in Toronto and made a passionate speech following the Raptors' 105-99 victory.

And if you need proof of the team's universal appeal, just scan the crowd inside that roaring arena, or better yet, those cheering along outside in Jurassic Park.

Nobody knows Raptors fandom better than Nav Bhatia better known as Superfan.During a Raptors game, you can't miss him jumping around on the baseline in his turban and jersey (No. 95, referencing the Raptors' inaugural 1995 season).

Bhatia has missed just a handful of Raptors games since thenand speaks about being at Scotiabank Arena with reverence. The crowd is cooler than American crowds, he says, likening it to a "beautiful rainbow" of people.

At a Raptors game, he said, it "doesn't matter how you look, what you wear. Deep inside our passion is the same."

"We see the real Toronto there. And they're all for the team to win."

Milwaukee's Eric Bledsoe attempts a shot in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference final on Friday. (Morry Gash/The Associated Press)

Next generation watching closely

Part of that "real Toronto" isa contingent of the city's youngest and among them some aspiring future NBAers.

Grade 8 student MikkelTynebecame addicted to the game playing outside with his brother when he was little. Now, he'salready attracting buzz from schools down south as one of the top players in his age group in North America.

Jaylen Andrew Simmons, left, in Grade 6, and Javion Tyndale, 10, are some of the rising stars at Toronto City Elite, a program that helps to develop young basketball talent in the Greater Toronto Area. (Paul Borkwood/CBC)

Watching the Raptors succeed is a huge motivator for Tynne, a player with Toronto City Elite, a program that helps to develop young basketball talent in the GTA.

"It inspires me. It makes me want to go harder," he said.

It's the same for Grade 6 student Jaylen Andrew Simmons. His dream? Getting drafted, winning championships and having a spot of his own in the hall of fame.

And compared to Canada's other favourite sport, he says, "it costs less. Hockey is an expensive sport. And people who don't have the money can't play."

'My brother, he inspired me to play,' says Grade 8 student Jordan Dickson. 'Ever since that, I've been trying to pursue my dream to make it to the NBA.' (Paul Borkwood/CBC)

But as for just what has so many young basketball fans and all-star hopefuls glued to the game, Grade 8 student Jordan Dickson sums it up best: "They came from the same place as us."

With files from Kelda Yuen