Charlotte Bobcats vs Toronto Raptors preview and teams – 2013 NBA Week 8

The third of Thursday NBA Week 8 matches is between Charlotte Bobcats and Toronto Raptors. The game is set to commence at 11:10am with the game to be played at Air Canada Centre. Home team Toronto Raptors go into the match as the favourites in the market. View our preview and teams for the game between Charlotte Bobcats and Toronto Raptors.

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When: 11:10 | Thursday 19/12/2013

Where: Air Canada Centre, Toronto, ON

Charlotte Bobcats $3.14 vs Toronto Raptors $1.39 at Sportsbet Australia get a $250 FREE BET on this match

Charlotte Bobcats $3.40 vs Toronto Raptors $1.33 at Luxbet Australia get a $500 FREE BET on this match

Odds Comparison:

Charlotte Bobcats 3.14 3.20 3.40 3.20 3.14 3.35
Toronto Raptors 1.39 1.37 1.33 1.37 1.39 1.33

Teams:

Charlotte Bobcats:

Charlotte Bobcats logo

Num Player
4 Jeff Adrien
0 Bismack Biyombo
8 Ben Gordon
33 Brendan Haywood
9 Gerald Henderson
25 Al Jefferson
14 Michael Kidd-Gilchrist
11 Josh McRoberts
5 Jannero Pargo
7 Ramon Sessions
31 James Southerland
44 Jeff Taylor
43 Anthony Tolliver
15 Kemba Walker
40 Cody Zeller

Toronto Raptors:

Toronto Raptors logo
Num Player
4 Quincy Acy
14 D.J. Augustin
13 Dwight Buycks
5 Austin Daye
10 DeMar DeRozan
2 Landry Fields
22 Rudy Gay
34 Aaron Gray
50 Tyler Hansbrough
15 Amir Johnson
7 Kyle Lowry
16 Steve Novak
31 Terrence Ross
77 Julyan Stone
17 Jonas Valanciunas

Preview:

Kemba Walker is starting to heat up for the Charlotte Bobcats, playing very differently than he did against the Toronto Raptors last month.

Walker and the Bobcats go on the road Wednesday night to face a new-look Raptors team that is gaining in confidence.

The third-year guard has scored 24 points in consecutive games, helping Charlotte (11-14) end a three-game skid with Tuesday’s 95-87 home win over Sacramento. He’s averaging 20.4 points over the last eight contests.

“I’ve been working hard since this summer,” Walker said. “I’ve put in a lot of time. I started off slow shooting the basketball (this season), but hopefully now I can hit a groove. I’ve been feeling great and I’ve been shooting a lot.”

One of those efforts when he started the season slow was a five-point performance on 2-of-13 shooting in a 92-90 victory over Toronto (9-13) on Nov. 6. Gerald Henderson picked up the slack with a team-high 23 points.

The Raptors were a different team then before last week’s trade that sent Rudy Gay to the Kings, with Patrick Patterson, Chuck Hayes, John Salmons and Greivis Vasquez joining Toronto.

Toronto is 2-1 since that deal, winning for the third time in four games Saturday with a 99-77 victory at Chicago. It marked the Raptors’ best defensive effort in terms of points allowed and opponent field-goal percentage (36.0).

“I’ve seen some good things growing, confidence growing a little bit,” coach Dwane Casey said. “The ball movement has been good, our defense has been solid, not great.”

Hayes has not seen action yet and could make his Toronto debut Wednesday.

“We’ll see where he is,” Casey said. “Right now Patrick and our other guys, Amir (Johnson) is playing pretty well, JV (Jonas Valanciunas) is playing pretty solid, so he’s going to have to bring a lot to the table because there’s so many guys.”

Terrence Ross has become a starter since the trade, with the second-year swingman averaging 15.7 points in the three games.

“You just have to be more focused, you just have to be dialed in,” Ross said. “It’s a lot more that you have to deal with and it’s a lot more that you have to go and prepare that you have to take on.”

Casey has lauded the newcomers for providing toughness to the club. All have began their Toronto careers as reserves, with Patterson and Vasquez combining for 36 points in their first two games – victories for the Raptors.

“For myself personally, I want to bring energy, toughness and new focus to this team and just keep sharing the ball,” Patterson said.

The Bobcats uncharacteristically shot well from long range Tuesday, making 8 of 17 3-pointers with Walker connecting four times. Charlotte is last in the league in that department at 29.7 percent.

“It makes us tough to guard,” Henderson said. “You have to come out there and guard the 3-point line with guys that can get to the basket, so it’s a tough thing. If we’re knocking down the 3-ball that opens up a lot for us.”

Charlotte has dropped its last three visits to Toronto.

Source: www.nba.com

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