
"This year, however, while there isn't a set goal, the influx of talent through another draft class, free agent signings, and last year's trade deadline acquisition, Brandon Ingram, has made the team have more talent than it has had in the last couple of years, suggesting things should improve. With general manager Bobby Webster now fully calling the shots, there isn't necessarily a target for what he wants the outcome of the season to look like."
"Pair that with all the young talent that has come in recently, and the front office is in information-gathering mode with what they have and how everything will mesh together. We have a starting group that we really haven't ever seen play together," said Webster. "Darko [Rajakovic] is in year three, so I think we have a lot of things in our favour and a lot of things that suggest we will be competitive, but we haven't put that full season together yet."
The Toronto roster gained talent via the draft, free agency and the Brandon Ingram trade, raising the team's overall talent level and potential competitiveness. GM Bobby Webster emphasizes incremental, day-to-day improvement without setting a specific win total, focusing on development rather than a fixed outcome. Persistent injuries and frequent lineup turnover have created uncertainty about continuity and on-court fit. The projected starting group has rarely played a full season together, and the front office is gathering information to assess chemistry. Coach Darko Rajakovic enters year three with the organization hopeful the improved talent can translate into competitiveness once cohesion is established.
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