Matchup Overview
Toronto is stabilizing after a rough patch and still fighting to secure home-court advantage in the East. New Orleans, stuck near the West’s basement and running on fumes at the tail end of a road trip, is mostly evaluating young pieces—especially with key contributors sidelined. For the Raptors, this is business; for the Pelicans, it’s survival mode.
Stats Corner
- Toronto is 40-32 with a solid TQS of 1.45; New Orleans drags at 25-48, TQS -3.65.
- The Raptors hold a steady net rating of +1.6 versus the Pelicans’ -3.6.
- Toronto gives up 112.3 PA/G, while New Orleans allows a leaky 119.2 PA/G.
- The Pelicans’ offense is a shade more productive (115.5 PS/G) but negated by the lowest DRtg (117.2) among these teams.
- Recent form: Raptors have beaten two playoff teams (Utah, Chicago) by >10 points in their last five.
- New Orleans is 1-3 in their last four, with key starters playing heavy minutes or nursing injuries.
The Edge & What Could Break It
BAC Model pick: Toronto Raptors. Toronto wins because their defense can hold the line, and the Pelicans are depleted and exhausted on the last leg of a three-game road swing.
Supporting the Pick:
– Pelicans are 6-29 on the road; tired legs, thin roster, low morale.
– Toronto’s offense quietly efficient: 114.2 ORtg and five recent games with two blowout wins.
– Pelicans list three rotation players as doubtful/questionable—Murray (doubtful), Murphy III (questionable), McGowens (doubtful)—all recent injuries impacting creation and wing depth.
What Can Break It:
– Immanuel Quickley is out for Toronto, putting PG duties onto Jamal Shead; a rookie mistake spree would open the door for a Pelicans backcourt to generate turnovers.
– A hot shooting night from New Orleans’ role players (they average 52.9 eFG%) could offset Toronto’s edge, especially if Raptors’ recent home inconsistency (losses to PHX, DEN, LAC) resurfaces.
Confidence: Decisive. 74% BAC model win probability for Toronto reflects the reality of two teams moving in opposite directions and the Raptors’ huge rest-and-roster advantage.
The Bottom Line
Toronto’s defense, home-court edge, and New Orleans’s depleted bench add up to a clear Raptors advantage. Expect Toronto to handle business and stay on their playoff track. The Pelicans are simply too battered, too tired, and too unfocused to spring an upset here.
Pick: Raptors win—comfortably.
