ORLANDO, Fla. _ The Orlando Magic's home struggles continue.
The high-powered Toronto Raptors humiliated them Sunday night at Amway Center.
The Raptors dominated the second and third quarters and cruised to an easy 109-79 win in front of an announced crowd of 17,251.
The Magic have lost seven of their last eight home games, and this was their worst performance of the bunch.
The Raptors received a game-high 31 points from shooting guard DeMar DeRozan, who didn't play in the fourth quarter.
The Raptors didn't need him anymore.
Failing to make extra passes and often misfiring on the decent shots they did generate, the Magic made only 35 percent of their attempts from the start of the second quarter onward.
Orlando made only three of its 21 3-point tries the entire game.
The Magic (12-17) actually started well.
They took a 34-23 lead early in the second quarter on a layup by Bismack Biyombo, who was playing against the Raptors for the first time since he bolted Toronto for Orlando in free agency.
But the Raptors outscored them 61-30 from that point through the end of the third quarter.
A turning point may have occurred while Orlando led 38-35 midway through the second quarter.
As Orlando was on offense, reserve Magic shooting guard Jodie Meeks made contact with Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry and Lowry went sprawling into Raptors Pascal Siakim.
No foul was called.
After a Magic miss, Meeks fouled Lowry on the other end of the court, and Lowry fell hard to Amway Center's parquet floor.
Lowry and Meeks jawed face-to-face for a short while.
Meeks was whistled for a Flagrant 1 foul, and Lowry made both of his subsequent free-throw attempts.
Lowry finished with 16 points, three rebounds and a game-high 10 assists.
Toronto (19-8) played with more urgency, no question.
A case in point: The Raptors led 42-40 when DeRozan missed a jumper. But Jonas Valanciunas collected the rebound. Two more jumpers followed _ one from Terrence Ross, another from Lowry _ and the Raptors gathered two more offensive boards.
Biyombo blocked a shot on that Toronto trip down the court, and Nikola Vucevic hauled in the defensive rebound. But Ross immediately stole an errant pass by Elfrid Payton. When DeRozan missed a 3-pointer, Siakim grabbed yet another Raptors offensive rebound. Seconds later, Ross made a shot from beyond the arc to extend the Raptors' lead to 45-40.
Toronto led 55-51 at halftime after it had scored nine second-chance points.
Magic shooting guard Evan Fournier picked up his third and fourth fouls early in the third quarter on questionable calls. Referees whistled him for fouling DeMarre Carroll on a 3-pointer, and the whistle arrived late; indeed Fournier didn't appear to touch Carroll until after Carroll landed.
Fournier's fourth foul occurred when Carroll drove into the lane, and Fournier seemed to grab only the basketball. Magic coach Frank Vogel had to sit Fournier on the bench because of Fournier's foul trouble.
The Magic needed Fournier, too.
Orlando was trailing 68-56 with 7:32 remaining in the third quarter at the time.
Toronto extended its lead to 77-60 when Lucas Nogueira dunked a lob from Lowry, prompting Vogel to call a timeout.
It just deteriorated from there.
The Raptors ended the third quarter with a 19-foot pull-up jumper by DeRozan.
Toronto led 84-64 _ much too large a deficit for Orlando to overcome.
Midway through the fourth quarter, some Magic fans chanted, "We want Mario! We want Mario!"
A short while later, Vogel subbed in Mario Hezonja.
Some fans cheered.
They had nothing else to cheer for.