Raptors Sign Mo Bamba to One-Year Deal to Address Frontcourt Depth
The Toronto Raptors are adding immediate reinforcement to their interior rotation, agreeing to a one-year deal with veteran center Mo Bamba. Agents Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports and Greer Love confirmed the agreement to ESPN on Sunday.
The move comes at a crucial time for Toronto, as the team looks to improve its frontcourt amidst injuries. With the Raptors sitting at 19-14 and looking to solidify their playoff positioning in the Eastern Conference, the front office identified a clear need for size that the 7-foot Mo Bamba can provide.
Addressing the Void in the Paint
The signing is a direct response to the Raptors’ thinning center depth. Starter Jakob Poeltl has missed five of the last six games, dealing with a lower back injury, leaving Toronto vulnerable in the paint. While Scottie Barnes was spectacular in Sunday’s 141-127 overtime win against the Golden State Warriorsโmatching a franchise record with 25 reboundsโrelying on Barnes to battle opposing centers nightly is not a sustainable long-term strategy.
Toronto needed a true center to eat innings and protect the rim, and Mo Bamba fits that profile. His addition allows Barnes to slide back to his natural position and gives head coach Darko Rajakoviฤ a legitimate 7-footer to deploy against the league’s bigger lineups while Poeltl recovers.
What Mo Bamba Brings to Toronto
As he embarks on his seventh NBA season, Mo Bamba joins the Raptors in an attempt to demonstrate that he is still a valuable rotation player. With the Salt Lake City Stars in the G League, the former No. 6 overall choice in the 2018 Draft has been keeping prepared and putting up great stats. During his time there, Bamba scored 16.5 points and 12 rebounds. Showcasing the physical tools that made him a lottery talent.
His career has been defined by his rare combination of lengthโboasting a massive 7-foot-10 wingspanโand floor-spacing potential. Last season, Bamba split time between the Los Angeles Clippers and New Orleans Pelicans, averaging 4.3 points and 4.5 rebounds in roughly 13 minutes per game.
While he hasn’t yet cemented a long-term home in the league, his ability to block shots and rebound at a high rate makes him a low-risk, high-reward acquisition for a Raptors squad that needs help on the glass immediately. If Bamba can translate his recent G League energy to the NBA floor, he provides Toronto with exactly what they are missing: a vertical threat who can alter shots and secure possessions.
