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TSN Raptors Reporter

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TORONTO - It wasn't until practice let out that Raptors' players learned about the news sending shockwaves around the NBA early Sunday afternoon.

Kevin Durant, the league's reigning MVP, could be sidelined for up to eight weeks with a right foot fracture that may require surgery. The Raptors were already in the gym as word of the injury spread over social media.

"It's very tough, man, it's very tough," said Raptors' guard Greivis Vasquez, a good friend and high school teammate of Durant, as he processed the information. "I didn't know about KD, I just found out and I'm going to pray for him and hopefully he comes back even stronger."

Durant is just the latest star player to sustain a significant injury before the start of the upcoming regular season. Wizards' talented third-year guard Bradley Beal broke his wrist in an exhibition contest last week, an injury that required surgery and will keep him out of action for roughly two months. Celtics' all-star point guard Rajon Rondo broke his hand in a freak accident at home. And then there's Paul George, whose gruesome leg injury in a Team USA scrimmage over the summer will cost him his entire season.

"It's just hard," Vasquez added. "Our sport is very physical and injuries are part of the sport, unfortunately. The NBA is going to continue."

Like many others around the Association, Raptors head coach Dwane Casey has taken notice and plans to exercise caution before the stakes rise at the end of the month.

"We're going to be smart with it," Casey said Sunday, promising to monitor the minutes of his prized backcourt - DeMar DeRozan and Kyle Lowry - closely for the duration of the pre-season.

The list of recently fallen star players serves as further proof that injury prevention is not a simple proposition. High performance athletes, like anyone else really, can get hurt anywhere, at any time, whether it's the result of overexertion or simply bad luck. "You can slip down the stairs and hurt yourself," DeRozan noted.

The Raptors were fortunate with good health a year ago, losing just 52 games to injury or illness, fewest in the NBA. While Toronto's training and medical staff, one of the league's finest, deserve credit there are far too many variables - some of them luck dependent - to count on that good fortune repeating itself in 2014-15.

For a team with their sights set on April and May, the risk of setting an impact player back before games begin to matter is just not worth it.

"You can work hard but we've got to be smart in making sure we are efficient with [their] minutes on the floor," said Casey. "That way [they] maintain that rhythm offensively and also establishes our defensive identity but we don't want to wear out everything in exhibition, especially with the guys who are going to have high minutes in regular season play."

Both of Toronto's starting guards logged career-highs in minutes played last season. Only two players, Durant and the Mavericks' Monta Ellis, saw more court time than DeRozan. By late March, Casey and his staff were forced to cut back on Lowry's minutes as the aches and pains of a long season began to catch up with him. Meanwhile, DeRozan - coming off a busy summer, playing for USA in the FIBA World Cup - hasn't had much time for rest since the Raptors were eliminated in seven games during the first round of the playoffs.

Looking to be in mid-season form, they've each hit the ground running in exhibition but, through three games, Lowry is playing just over 26 minutes per night and DeRozan has logged an average of 22.

The Raptors will be halfway through their eight-game pre-season slate following Monday's contest in New York. Casey intends to utilize the next couple weeks to experiment with different lineups, take a look at some of the team's younger players and, hopefully, manufacture some much-needed rest for his two workhorses. He didn't rule out the possibility of giving them a night off before the regular season gets underway on Oct. 29, at home to the Atlanta Hawks.