Raptors Late Game Heroics Help Them Defeat Hornets 110-108
It was the kind of ending that sticks to your ribs, a frantic, heart-pounding final minute for the Raptors that felt less like a regular-season game in November and more like a playoff preview. The Toronto Raptors, in a nail-biting showdown against the Charlotte Hornets, clawed their way to a 110-108 victory, a win forged in the fire of clutch plays and defensive heroics. This wasn’t just a win; it was a statement. This new-look Raptors team has ice in its veins.
The clock showed less than a minute to play, the score knotted at 108. The energy in the Scotiabank Arena was thick enough to cut with a knife. This was the moment—the kind of gut-check time that separates contenders from pretenders. And in that moment, the Raptors didn’t blink.
How the Raptors Delivered in the Clutch
It started with a defensive stand, then a thunderous, game-tying dunk from Scottie Barnes with 58 seconds left that sent the 19,000-plus fans into a frenzy. The ball came back to Toronto, and the weight of the game fell on the shoulders of Brandon Ingram, the team’s prized offseason acquisition. Everyone in the building expected him to take the final shot. The Hornets certainly did, sending a second defender scrambling his way as he drove the lane.
This is where the story could have gone differently. An earlier version of Ingram might have forced the issue, a hero-ball attempt against a swarm of defenders. But this is a more seasoned, patient Ingram. In a moment of sheer basketball brilliance, he took a breath, drew the defense, and saw RJ Barrett making a hard, decisive cut to the basket. A perfect pass, a deft finger-roll layup, and the Raptors were up by two with just 18 seconds to go.
“It’s come with time,” Ingram admitted later, a wry smile on his face. “I wasn’t able to be that patient earlier in my career.” He even joked that the old instincts almost took over, that he nearly shot it anyway. But he didn’t. He made the winning play, and that’s precisely why he’s here.
Defense Wins Championships, and This Game
But the drama was far from over. Charlotte had one last chance. LaMelo Ball drove, dished, and the ball found its way to Hornets rookie Ryan Kalkbrenner under the rim for what looked like a sure-fire, game-tying dunk. Out of nowhere, Ingram, fresh off his game-winning assist, soared in from behind and swatted the ball away. It was a rejection filled with defiance, a declaration that this was Toronto’s house.
Still, the ball caromed out. A mad scramble ensued. Collin Sexton grabbed the loose rock and threw up a desperate putback attempt as the final buzzer sounded. But Scottie Barnes was there. Again. He met Sexton at the apex, his hand smothering the shot, sealing the victory in the most emphatic way possible. It was a defensive one-two punch that left the Hornets stunned and the Raptors victorious. The crowd erupted, a wave of cathartic relief and pure joy washing over the arena. This is the basketball this city loves.
Key Performances That Shaped the Night
While the final minute will be what everyone talks about, the victory was built on a foundation of solid performances. Ingram was the engine, pouring in 27 points and making the right plays when it mattered most. Barnes and Barrett were the perfect co-pilots, each chipping in 16 crucial points. Barnes, in particular, was a defensive menace all night, setting a Raptors franchise record with his 10th consecutive game recording at least one block and one steal, surpassing a mark set by the legendary Vince Carter.
For the Hornets, it was a night of what-ifs. They fought hard, with Kon Knueppel leading the charge with 24 points, and both Miles Bridges and LaMelo Ball adding 20-plus points of their own. But their Achilles’ heel was their long-range shooting. An abysmal 10-for-40 (25%) from beyond the arc ultimately doomed them, a cold streak on a night when they needed every point they could get.
This fourth-straight victory for the Raptors feels different. It wasn’t just a win; it was a lesson in closing out a tough game, a taste of the grit and poise required in the NBA’s pressure cooker. It was a thriller that proved this Raptors team has the heart, the talent, and the defensive will to make some serious noise.

