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TSN Raptors Reporter

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TORONTO - Shortly after Raptors' rookie Lucas "Bebe" Nogueira returned to the locker room following his NBA pre-season debut Wednesday, he received an emotional phone call from back home.

His family and friends had watched the game live from Brazil. His mother was first on the line.

"My mom, she's so emotional," the 22-year-old Nogueira said after scoring eight points and blocking three shots in the Raptors' 92-85 victory over Israeli club, Maccabi Haifa. "She [was] crying a lot. She cries about everything, but I understand why she is crying, because they adopted me."

Nogueira went on to praise his family and his upbringing.

"They gave me all the support to be, not [only] a basketball player, but a good person and a good human," he continued. "I think the most important thing about making money and playing basketball is that you get to be a good person. They gave me a whole education and support so right now to see her son in the NBA, she's so proud. So I understand why she's crying."

Leave it to Nogueira, a player who has already become known for his trademark afro and infectious positivity, to make the best of a three-week delay to the start of his first-ever NBA training camp.

The seven-foot Brazilian has been a spectator for most of the fall, sitting out practices and the team's first six preseason games with a couple lingering injuries, most notably a hamstring ailment that forced the coaching staff to play it safe with the young centre.

Not the ideal start to anyone's career, let alone someone who has been waiting a long time for his first NBA opportunity - one of the reasons he could barely hide his excitement when he learned he'd be in uniform and available for Wednesday's contest.

"I was nervous because it was my first game," he admitted when it was all over. "I had just two practices with the team, so I was a little bit nervous."

Nogueira waited anxiously, standing in front of his locker just over an hour ahead of tip-off. James Johnson, his neighbour and one of his biggest supporters on the team, came over to give him a pep talk.

He didn't have to wait long to get his feet wet, checking into the game with fellow rookie and countryman, Bruno Caboclo, midway through the second quarter. He didn't look out of place but, as he pointed out before the game, he's not the typical first-year player.

"It's my first year in the NBA, [but] it’s not my first professional year," said Nogueira, who has been playing pro ball in Spain since he was 16-years-old. "If I have a chance to play, I'll try to show the skills I learned in Spain: protect the rim, rebound [and] I can score sometimes."

Less than a minute after entering, Nogueira drained a pair of free throws after he was fouled around the rim. Later in the quarter, he blocked shots on back-to-back possessions, a brief glimpse into the defensive presence the Raptors hope he can become with some added strength and seasoning.

With their foreign visitors on a 16-0 run to begin the fourth quarter and take a five-point lead, the Raptors turned to both rookies, Nogueira and Caboclo, to close out the game.

Down by one with two-and-a-half minutes remaining, Johnson found Nogueira wide open under the rim for an easy dunk. Moments later, he followed up a missed Caboclo jumper with a put-back lay-up to give Toronto a five-point advantage. 

"Lucas came in and deterred some shots and that's what he should do," coach Dwane Casey said of his young centre. "I was really impressed with the way he came in and played."

The original timetable for Nogueira's absence - nursing what he called a fatigued hamstring muscle - was six-to-eight weeks. Asked how long he had been out, he knew instantly. "Yesterday was six weeks."

"We worked so hard," he said. "Three weeks ago, I was not 100 per cent, but I was, like 80 per cent, because we worked so hard. Sometimes, it was two sessions a day. So it's not surprising to me [to be back]. Maybe if you stay home and do nothing, maybe it’s surprising. But I worked hard to come back early."

Even in the middle of the game, during timeouts, Nogueira worked with team trainers to keep his hamstring loose.

Given the amount of time he's spent with Alex McKechnie, Raptors' director of sports science, of late, one would think they might be tired of each other by now. But that's not in Nogueira's makeup. As Casey says, "he's never met a stranger".

"He’s my guy," the chatty Brazilian said of McKechnie. "He’s an amazing guy, an amazing professional. We are friends. I hope I’ll have that friendship all my life."

It's that uniquely positive approach that helped him bare the lay-off while he watched the rest of his teammates bond on the court throughout camp. It's also what he's relying on as he plays catch-up.

"I’m a young player," he said. "I don't have problems adapting. Of course, the guys ahead of me are in better shape than me because they didn’t stop working the whole summer. I worked the whole summer too, except right now, my six weeks out. Maybe I’m a little bit [behind], but I don’t have a problem of [getting back into] shape."

With the preseason winding down, Nogueira returned just in time to get some run. Wednesday was likely the final opportunity for Casey to get an in-game look at his younger players - and those who are in contention for the team's final roster spot - before he goes back to his regular rotation in Friday's exhibition finale.

If all goes right once the season begins for real next week, Nogueira - like Caboclo - will have to develop on the sidelines, in practice and, perhaps, in short stints with the D-League affiliate in Fort Wayne, but he's well aware of what his role will be in year one and doesn't seem remotely fazed by it.

"I’m okay because I’ve played six years professionally," he reiterated. "The first three years, I didn’t play. I stayed on the bench the whole year. Sometimes, the [centre] got hurt, coach put the shooting guard in the post, but didn’t [play] me. I’m okay if I don’t play 82 games."

"The good thing about it is the D-League," said Casey. "We can see [Nogueira and Caboclo] playing in real games against players there if they're not playing here. That's going to be very beneficial to both of them, getting those minutes in the D-League and learning in game situations there more so than here." 

"Our goal is totally different now, along with developing them, winning is as important as the development," Casey continued. "They're going to get their opportunities in practice and, knock on wood something doesn't happen [with injuries], but right now, they're kind of down on the totem pole as far as rotation is concerned."

Wherever Nogueira finds himself - whether it's the bench, the D-League, or elsewhere - he'll be wearing a smile across his face and perhaps the newest addition to his wardrobe.

"[Kyle Lowry] gave it to me," he said of the fluffy pink rabbit hat sitting in his locker, a form of rookie hazing. "I have a rabbit, [Will Cherry] has a wolf, Bruno has a rabbit too, but a white [one]."