Toronto Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic delivered one of the angriest rants in recent NBA history after the LA Lakers were given 23 last-quarter free throws in a 132-131 win.

The Lakers escaped by the skin of their teeth at home with the Raptors stunned when a tying three-pointer was wiped out by an offensive foul on RJ Barrett in the final 30 seconds.

Minutes earlier fellow ex-Knick Immanuel Quickley fouled out, while Anthony Davis and Austin Reaves hit 10 free throws in the last 34 seconds of the game alone.

In total the Raptors went eight of 13 on free throws, while the Lakers shot 28 of 36.

“That’s outrageous. What happened tonight, this is completely BS,” Rajakovic declared post-game.

“Shame for the referees, shame for the league to allow this. 23 free throws for them and we get two free throws in the fourth quarter.

“How (are we supposed) to play the game? I understand, respect for all stars, but we have star players on our team as well. Scottie Barnes, who’s an All-Star calibre player in this league, he goes every single time to the rim with force without flopping and not trying to get foul calls. He gets two foul calls for the entire game. How are you gonna explain that to me?

“They get to win tonight? If that’s the case, just let us know so we don’t show up for the game, give them the win. But this was not fair tonight.

He concluded: “It’s complete crap.”

STAGGERING IMPACT OF TRADE MASTERSTROKE LAID BARE

The Knicks won their first nine games with Josh Hart in their line-up following his deadline acquisition last February, and OG Anunoby also is enjoying a wildly successful introduction to New York.

Anunoby scored a team-best 23 points on 9-for-12 shooting with four made 3-pointers Wednesday (all times AEDT) in the Knicks’ wire-to-wire 112-84 rout of the Trail Blazers — and he deservedly was showered with loud chants of “O-G” multiple times from the Garden crowd.

The instant fan favourite had another massive two-way impact, finishing plus-26 in 29 minutes to boost his staggering overall rating to a cumulative plus-111 during his 5-0 start with the Knicks since a late December trade from the Raptors during a period New York has been the only undefeated team.

According to Tommy Beer, Anunoby is the first player in NBA history to have a plus/minus of 100-plus in his first five games with a new team.

“If it continued at that level, I would obviously be very pleased,” Tom Thibodeau said of Anunoby with a laugh before the game. “When you come in and you’re in the middle of the season, you’re adjusting on the fly. It’s how quickly can you adapt?

“And I told him that I feel like he’s playing great, just because of the impact that he’s having when he’s on the floor.”

Julius Randle added 20 points, and Jalen Brunson registered 12 with seven assists — with neither playing in the fourth quarter — in a thorough pounding of the rebuilding Blazers (10-26).

Quentin Grimes (17 points), Miles McBride (16) and Donte DiVincenzo (13) also scored in double figures as the Knicks (22-15 overall) improved to 15-1 this season against teams that had posted a losing record entering Wednesday’s action — with their lone loss versus sub-.500 teams coming against the Jazz in mid-December.

“You play those games, and when the year ends, you are looking at seeding and all that different type of stuff, and you don’t want to look at the schedule and say these are the games that got away,” Randle said. “You want to make sure you are taking care of your business.”

Brunson had been named the Eastern Conference’s Player of the Week on Tuesday for the second time this season, only bolstering his case for the first All-Star designation of his career.

Brunson, was snubbed one year ago — with Randle representing the Knicks at All-Star weekend for the second time in his career. But the $104 million point guard has posted career highs in scoring (25.6 points per game), assists (6.5) and 3-point percentage (42.6 per cent) through the team’s first 37 games.

The Knicks began play Wednesday in a five-way logjam for the fourth through eighth playoff positions in the East, and Thibodeau believes the stacking of more wins should help Brunson’s case.

“In my eyes, he is (deserving), yeah, but I think it’s a by-product of winning,” Thibodeau said. “I always say there’s so many great players in the league, and many are deserving. I know from when I vote, and obviously I don’t have a vote for my own players, but it comes down to the end, and it’s a tough job.

“But there’s guys that are real close, and usually the thing that sways the close votes, is the amount of winning that player does. So hopefully we can continue to build and win and our players get recognised. But in my eyes, he’s certainly deserving.”

Brunson, who currently ranks sixth among backcourt players in the All-Star fan voting, also received a pregame endorsement from former Knick and current Blazers coach Chauncey Billups, a five-time All-Star guard and a former NBA champion with the Pistons.

“I’m a huge fan of Jalen. I think he’s a winner more than anything,” Billups said. “You can talk about how crafty he is and how he can score and how he’s just a winner. He makes big plays. He makes winning plays. He’s leading the league in taking charges and he’s just a winner.”

Brunson managed only four points in the first quarter, mostly deferring the early scoring load to Anunoby, who drained four of five 3-point attempts and netted 16 points, as the Knicks raced to a 38-22 lead.

McBride and Grimes came off the bench and drilled two 3-pointers apiece in the first half, combining for 14 points as the Knicks extended their advantage to 63-41 by intermission.

Brunson and Randle finished the half with 10 points apiece, and Anunoby added one free throw in the second to match his previous high of 17 with the Knicks, who led by as many as 39 in the third.

ELSEWHERE …

The Sacramento Kings recovered a 19-point deficit to take down the Detroit Pistons 131-110 and hand more pain to Monty Williams’ side.

The Cade Cunningham-less Pistons exploded out of the gates with a 47-point opening term before leading 59-40 with seven minutes remaining in the first half. From that point on, Sacramento outscored Detroit 91-51 in a dominant stretch.

Domantas Sabonis (37 points, 10 rebounds, 13 assists, three steals), Keegan Murray (32 points, five triples, two blocks), De’Aaron Fox (26 points, four threes) all fired for Sacramento, who improved to 22-14 to consolidate the fourth seed in the Western Conference.

Bojan Bogdanovic’s 26 points led the Pistons and Jaden Ivey dropped 22 of his own as Detroit dropped a fifth-straight game and had its NBA-worst record slide to 3-24.

In the later game, the Memphis Grizzlies took care of the Dallas Mavericks in a 120-103 win to improve to 2-0 without Ja Morant.

Desmond Bane went off for 32 points and Marcus Smart scored 23 in just 21 minutes before a finger injury prematurely ended his night.

Though it was an injury Smart initially played through — including hitting a three with a dislocated finger — before exiting the game for the locker room and not returning to the court.

The Grizzlies, who were also missing Jaren Jackson Jr in addition to Morant, improved to 14-23 overall.

Kyrie Irving and Luka Doncic combined for 64 points, but it wasn’t enough as the Mavs sunk to 22-16 on the season.

Josh Green went scoreless in 23 minutes in a game to forget for the Aussie, while Dante Exum remained sidelined with a injury.

 

 

ALL RESULTS

TIMBERWOLVES 113 MAGIC 92

KINGS 131 PISTONS 110

TRAIL BLAZERS 84 KNICKS 113

GRIZZLIES 120 MAVERICKS 103

RAPTORS 131 LAKERS 132