The Toronto Raptors continued their strong stretch at Scotiabank Arena on Monday night, pulling away from the Atlanta Hawks for a 118-100 victory that completed a two-game sweep in three days.
Toronto improved to 22-15 by controlling the paint and spreading the scoring load, following up Saturday’s 134-117 road win with another authoritative performance. Atlanta fell to 17-21 and struggled to keep pace for most of the night.
Rookie Collin Murray-Boyles played a central role, scoring 17 points while adding seven rebounds and seven assists in place of injured center Jakob Poeltl. The first-year forward operated effectively in traffic and helped stabilize the offense from the opening tip.
Scottie Barnes filled the box score with 18 points, 10 assists, and eight rebounds as the Raptors leaned on ball movement and interior pressure. Toronto finished with 34 assists on 47 made field goals, a reflection of consistent offensive flow.
Brandon Ingram led all scorers with 19 points and collected nine rebounds, while seven Raptors reached double figures. That balance allowed Toronto to maintain control even during brief shooting lulls from the perimeter.
The Raptors built their advantage inside, outscoring Atlanta 64-44 in the paint and converting 52.2 percent of their shots overall. Despite hitting only 32 percent from three-point range, Toronto repeatedly created high-percentage looks near the rim.
Atlanta struggled to generate efficient offense without Trae Young, who missed another game due to a right quadriceps contusion. The Hawks shot 39.3 percent from the field and never found consistent rhythm against Toronto’s defensive rotations.
Onyeka Okongwu posted 17 points and 12 rebounds to lead Atlanta, while Jalen Johnson added 13 points and 14 boards. Kristaps Porzingis returned to the lineup after sitting out the second night of a back-to-back, finishing with nine points in 20 minutes off the bench.
Toronto steadily pulled away after halftime, using defensive stops to fuel transition opportunities and extend the margin into double digits. The lead grew as the Raptors continued to win second-chance opportunities and limit clean perimeter looks.
RJ Barrett contributed 17 points, while Immanuel Quickley added 16 to round out the starting unit’s production. The bench also chipped in timely minutes, allowing the Raptors to maintain tempo across all four quarters.
Atlanta never closed the gap below single digits in the second half, as missed shots and turnovers stalled any sustained push. Toronto’s discipline on both ends prevented the game from tightening late.
The Hawks return home to host the New Orleans Pelicans on Wednesday night. The Raptors hit the road next, traveling to Charlotte for a matchup with the Hornets on Wednesday.

















