The Orlando Magic are the most offensively challenged outfit in the postseason field. Steve Clifford's team finished 22nd in offensive rating during the regular season, and is scoring a paltry 97.2 points per 100 possessions so far in its first-round series against the Toronto Raptors. The Magic, obviously, will need to win with defense first and foremost.

Scoring is of utmost importance, of course, and conventional wisdom said Orlando would be better offensively after the series shifted to Amway Center. Instead, the Magic were unable to get anything going on that end of the floor until late in the fourth quarter on Friday night, when their last-gasp comeback attempt was cut short by the final buzzer, sending the Raptors to a 98-93 victory.

On Saturday, Evan Fournier, who scored seven points on dismal 1-of-12 shooting in Game 3, allowed for the possibility that his desire to play well in front of the home crowd might have actually contributed to his immense struggles.

Evan Fournier, to be fair, was hardly the only one on his team who never found any traction offensively on Friday. Nikola Vucevic was Orlando's lone player to make more than half of his field goal attempts, as the team shot 36.3 percent from the field and 29.5 percent from beyond the arc. If not for the Magic missing just one of their 23 free throws, Game 3 would have been over before they had a long-shot chance to steal a victory late.

Game 4 is on Sunday. With Amway Center sure to be rocking, expect Fournier and company to acquit themselves better offensively after ridding the jitters of hosting Orlando's first playoff game since 2012.