Toronto Raptors rotation guide: who plays, who closes, who is fragile
Toronto’s 2025-26 rotation is built around a stable starting five and a flexible bench. When the Raptors have their preferred group available, they lean on two creators (Immanuel Quickley and Brandon Ingram), a two-way hub (Scottie Barnes), a downhill wing (RJ Barrett), and a true center (Jakob Poeltl). Sportsnet noted Poeltl’s return recently gave Toronto its planned starting five for the first time since Nov. 21.
Who plays: the nightly rotation that actually matters
ESPN’s depth chart reflects a clear hierarchy: the starters are the “locks,” and the next layer is defined by which bench wings are hitting shots and which bigs are healthy.
| Rotation tier | Players you see most | Why they play |
|---|---|---|
| Starters and locks | Quickley, Ingram, Barrett, Barnes, Poeltl | This is the identity group: creation, size, and a real center screen game. |
| First bench layer | Jamal Shead, Gradey Dick, Collin Murray-Boyles, Sandro Mamukelashvili | Shead changes pace, Dick is the spacing wing, Murray-Boyles supplies defense and connective play, Mamukelashvili gives bench scoring at forward or small-ball big. |
| Extra minutes based on availability | Ja’Kobe Walter, A.J. Lawson, Alijah Martin, Chucky Hepburn | These minutes swing with injuries and G League assignments, and can disappear when the core is healthy. |
Current availability snapshot (Feb. 19, 2026 at Chicago): Murray-Boyles is listed probable (left thumb sprain), Mamukelashvili is questionable (right rib contusion), and multiple two-way players are listed out due to G League status.
Who closes: the five-man logic late in games
Toronto’s closing groups are usually about one question: do the Raptors need more spacing and shot creation, or more defense and rebounding?
Default closer when healthy
| Likely closers | Why it closes |
|---|---|
| Quickley, Ingram, Barrett, Barnes, Poeltl | Two creators, two wings who can pressure the rim, and a center who stabilizes screens, rebounds, and rim contests. |
Offense and spacing closer
If the half-court gets sticky, Dick can close to keep the floor wide for Quickley and Ingram.
| Likely closers | When you see it |
|---|---|
| Quickley, Ingram, Dick, Barnes, Poeltl | When Toronto wants more shooting gravity and cleaner driving lanes. |
Defense and switch closer
If the matchup demands more switching and physicality, Murray-Boyles becomes the swing piece.
| Likely closers | When you see it |
|---|---|
| Quickley, Ingram, Barrett, Barnes, Murray-Boyles | When Toronto wants to guard across positions and trade some center size for mobility. |
Who is fragile: roles that can vanish fast
“Fragile” here means minutes that swing hard based on health, matchup, or one specific skill.
| Player | Why the role is fragile | What keeps it safe |
|---|---|---|
| Sandro Mamukelashvili | Availability and defense. He is listed questionable right now, and his minutes can shrink if Toronto needs stops. | If he scores efficiently and rebounds, he can stick as a bench forward. |
| Collin Murray-Boyles | Thumb issue is lingering, and closing minutes depend on matchup. | If he defends without fouling and keeps the ball moving, he can close as a switch piece. |
| Jamal Shead | Guard minutes tighten quickly when Toronto wants more shooting. | If he pressures the ball and creates tempo, he earns his stint. |
| Gradey Dick | Can be targeted defensively late, depending on opponent. | If he hits early threes, his spacing becomes hard to bench. |


Post Comment