Toronto Notes For Medical Students 2009
2009-11-23 - extension: rar - size: 52 MB
Toronto Notes For Medical Students 2009
Toronto Notes for Medical Students 2009 & 2008 -FULL Package
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Toronto Raptors vs New Orleans Hornets Dec.31/07 Chris Bosh suspected the Toronto Raptors grew up a little during an arduous seven-game road trip on (More) Chris Bosh suspected the Toronto Raptors grew up a little during an arduous seven-game road trip on Western Conference courts.
They way they finished it off confirmed it.
Bosh scored 29 points and the Raptors rallied from a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat the New Orleans Hornets 97-92 on Monday night.
"We just have more experience. We know we have to come out each and every game tough and with energy. We have to believe in ourselves," Bosh said. "They made a run. Nobody panicked. As soon as the crowd started getting into it, everybody was like, 'OK, calm down, let's make plays."
The Hornets' winning streak ended at five after Chris Paul, perhaps exhausted from a 44-minute effort, committed a turnover with just over a minute to go and then missed a pair of crucial free throws that could have given New Orleans the lead with 25.8 seconds left.
It was a bitter end to an otherwise strong performance for the Hornets' star point guard, who finished with 23 points, 16 assists and seven rebounds.
"You don't think that would happen," Hornets coach Byron Scott said of Paul's mistakes. "We just did a lot that was uncharacteristic of our team. It goes back to the beginning of the game with a lack of focus and it caught up with us in the end."
A week ago, the Raptors appeared to be sliding with consecutive road losses at Portland, Seattle and Phoenix. It wasn't going to get any easier with three more games at San Antonio, Houston and New Orleans.
But an upset of the Spurs helped the Raptors win two of their last three and finish the trip at 3-4.
"You would have liked for it to be a little better, but it could have been a lot worse," Raptors coach Sam Mitchell said. "You've got to give a lot of credit to the players. A long trip like this, they just hung in there. They could have easily packed it in."
Toronto guard Jose Calderon had 17 points and 12 assists against New Orleans and hit a pair of free throws with 5.9 seconds left, forcing the Hornets to set up a potential tying 3-pointer. Peja Stojakovic's off-balance attempt missed the hoop and Toronto secured the rebound as well as the victory.
Anthony Parker scored 19 for Toronto, including a fast-break layup that cut Toronto's deficit to 86-85 before Calderon hit a 3-pointer to put the Raptors back in the lead with 3:11 to go.
New Orleans regained the lead once more on a basket by David West, who finished with 33 points and 11 rebounds. Then Bosh converted a driving layup as he was fouled to put Toronto in the lead for good.
Andrea Bargnani added 17 points for the Raptors, which shot 51.4 percent in winning for the second time in three games. Jamario Moon had 10 rebounds.
The Hornets shot 43.4 percent and played the last five minutes without Tyson Chandler, who fouled out. But more than the loss of Chandler, New Orleans was done in by its struggles from behind the arc, where the Hornets were 5-of-26.
Stojakovic finished with 19 points and 10 rebounds.
"We just came out with the wrong effort," West said. "They've got a team full of guys who can shoot the basketball and we can't keep pace. ... We just went cold."
Coming off a loss in Houston two nights earlier, Toronto started fast, shooting 75 percent in the first quarter. Early in the second quarter, Kris Humphries' driving floater as he was fouled was called good on a goaltend and he hit the free throw to put the Raptors ahead 37-25.
The Hornets missed their first 10 3-pointers and shot 35.3 percent overall through the first 18 minutes.
Stojakovic finally hit New Orleans' first 3-pointer with 1:07 left in the second period, part of a 7-2 run that helped the Hornets pull to 52-48 at halftime.
New Orleans surged into the lead in the third quarter as West scored six quick points and Morris Peterson sank a 3-pointer. Paul's jumper at the end of the third period ignited a 9-0 run that continued into the final quarter as New Orleans took an 81-71 lead.
The Raptors refused to fold. Calderon and Bosh responded with back-to-back jumpers, followed by Parker's dunk and Bosh's free throws for an 8-0 run of their own.
"You have to play like that every time on the road, especially against good teams," Bosh said. "You come in their house, if you don't start off the game aggressive, you're going to get run out. We kind of had a little slippage in the middle of the game, but we ended well so it's good for us."
Game notes:Bobby Jackson hit a 3-pointer at the first quarter buzzer that was initially ruled good, but overturned when video review showed the ball did not leave Jackson's hands before the clock ran out. ... The Hornets promoted the contest as "Ladies Night," offering free entry to women who printed vouchers off of the team Web site. Still, competing with the French Quarter nightlife on New Year's Eve proved challenging. Attendance was announced as 11,444. (Less)
Toronto Raptors vs Phoneix Suns Dec.6/07 Steve Nash had 10 points and 18 assists to lead the Phoenix Suns to a 136-123 win over the (More) Steve Nash had 10 points and 18 assists to lead the Phoenix Suns to a 136-123 win over the short-handed Toronto Raptors on Wednesday.
Leandro Barbosa added 33 points for the Suns, who were coming off a 121-117 road win over Indiana on Monday.
T.J. Ford had 27 points in his return from injury to lead the lead the Raptors. Anthony Parker added 22 points in front of a sellout crowd of 19,800 at the Air Canada Centre.
The Raptors played again without injured forwards Chris Bosh and Andrea Bargnani. But the bench players who proved so valuable in Toronto's 98-79 win over Charlotte on Monday were mostly invisible against Phoenix.
Kris Humphries, who had 17 points against the Bobcats, finished with eight Wednesday, while Joey Graham started again in place of Bosh and scored eight points on 1-of-6 shooting.
The wheels came off for Toronto in the third quarter.
The Raptors went to halftime trailing 61-56 but Phoenix reeled off an 11-2 run to start the third and led by as many as 23 points in the quarter.
Toronto threatened a comeback in the fourth. Humphries was whistled for a technical foul at 9:12. After Grant Hill missed the free throw, Humphries stole the ball on the next play and ran down for a dunk that cut Phoenix's lead to 112-99.
That was as close as the Raptors would get, as Phoenix scored the next five points and held on from there.
Bosh, the team's leading scorer and rebounder, missed his fourth straight game with a strained groin, while Bargnani sat out his second in a row with a hyperextended knee.
Toronto did have Ford back after he missed five games with a ``stinger'' in his right arm. He came off the bench and looked good, providing 21 points in the second half for Toronto. Starting point guard Jose Calderon was similarly effective, finishing with 14 points and nine assists.
But the Suns' backcourt of Nash and Barbosa was simply dominant.
Nash was a force all game long, getting into the paint and dishing out to open teammates around the perimeter. Phoenix's shooters were game; they hit 13 three-pointers and shot 46.4 per cent from beyond the arc.
Barbosa, meanwhile, proved impossible to contain for the Raptors in the first half. He camped out in the corner to drill open threes and used his speed to get to the hoop. The fleet-footed guard _ nicknamed ``The Brazilian Blur'' _ finished the first half with 22 points.
The Raptors kept pace with the Suns early, with centre Rasho Nesterovic taking advantage of Amare Stoudemire's lackadaisical defence for 10 points and four rebounds in the first quarter.
In one pretty play, he caught a high lob from Calderon and laid the ball in with a fluid layup.
The Suns led by as many as 11 in the second on the strength of 11 first-half assists from Nash and four three-pointers from Barbosa, but the Raptors hung around, trailing 33-28 at the end of the first quarter.
Parker brought the crowd to its feet when he picked off a Raja Bell pass and raced down for a dunk with 1.7 seconds left in the first half.
Delfino then stole an errant Nash pass on the ensuing possession, but his three-point attempt at the buzzer rimmed out.
Notes: Technical fouls were called on Suns assistant coach Alvin Gentry at 8:25 of the second quarter and Bell at 7:01 of the third. . . . The Suns are 7-0 against Toronto since Nash signed with Phoenix in 2004. (Less)
Toronto Notes 2008 Package
2009-07-21 - extension: rar - size: 24 MB
Toronto Notes 2008 Package
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Toronto Notes 2009
2009-11-05 - extension: rar - size: 52 MB
Toronto Notes 2009
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toronto notes cd
2009-09-02 - extension: rar - size: 19 MB
toronto notes cd
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