Whether it's as a player or coach, Adrian Griffin said there's no better practice than actual games.

The Toronto Raptors assistant was promoted to head coach for Wednesday's seeding-round game against the Philadelphia 76ers, and planned to cherish the opportunity.

"Well, I think coach (head coach Nick Nurse) is an awesome human being. He understands that a coach like me needs some reps at being a head coach," Griffin said prior to tipoff at Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, Fla. "He knows my ambitions and he wants to see me grow as an individual on and off the court.

"Definitely just an awesome gesture by coach, he approached me with it and it just kinda shows what kind of character that coach Nurse has."

The Raptors said it's the first time the team has had a substitute head coach since Feb. 13, 2008 when Jay Triano stepped in for Sam Mitchell after the death of his father-in-law. It was the first time a Canadian had coached a regular-season NBA game. The Raptors won 109-91 over New Jersey.

The 46-year-old Griffin, who played nine seasons in the NBA, was hired by the Raptors in 2018 after assistant coaching stints with Milwaukee, Chicago, Orlando and Oklahoma City.

What did he hope to glean from his temporary promotion?

"Well, just like when athletes and basketball players are training in the summer, there's nothing comparing to game condition," he said. "You can work out all you want, but until you get in those games and you get up and down the court, there's a difference. It's really equivalent to an assistant coach moving over to that chair. You do all the training that you can and practise, but it's good to get those game reps."

Nurse isn't the first Toronto head coach to hand over his duties for a game with no meaning in the standings in recent years.

In his final game with the Blue Jays in 2018, John Gibbons gave managerial duties to veteran Canadian catcher Russell Martin.

Griffin said Nurse's gesture goes hand-in-hand with the Raptors' "first-class organization," starting at the top with president Masai Ujiri and general manager Bobby Webster.

"There's a reason why we've had success over the years," Griffin said.

He also credited the numerous coaches he played for and coached with including Don Nelson, Rick Pitino, Jeff Van Gundy, Tom Thibodeau and Billy Donovan.

"The list goes on, man, and I've been fortunate to be under that type of calibre of coaching," Griffin said.

The Raptors were 51-19 heading into Wednesday's matchup with Philly, their penultimate game in the seeding round. They'd clinched the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference, and will face Brooklyn in the first round of the playoffs.

"These guys are phenomenal, we have great players, they know the game-plan, they know how to play, they're proven winners," Griffin said. "I'm not trying to reinvent the wheel. I'm just gonna go out there, execute the plan that coach Nurse has really provided a great blueprint to follow and just kinda let the cards fall where they may."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 12, 2020.