Chris Boucher will play for the Toronto Raptors in July's NBA Summer League.

A week after the Golden State Warriors waived former Oregon shot-blocker extraordinaire Chris Boucher, the Toronto Raptors elected to add him to their NBA Summer League roster.

The 6-foot-10 forward will be one of 15 players playing for the NBA's lone team north of the border next month in Las Vegas. The team will play its first summer league game on July 6 against the New Orleans Pelicans at 12:30 PM at the Thomas & Mack Center. The Las Vegas Summer League runs through July 17.

The single-season shot block record-holder becomes the sixth former Oregon player set to play in summer league. He joins Tyler Dorsey (Atlanta), Jordan Bell (Golden State), Elijah Brown (Golden State), Troy Brown (Washington) and MiKyle McIntosh (Portland).

Boucher was waived by the two-time defending NBA champions on June 22. He had signed a two-way contract last summer after going undrafted in the 2017 NBA Draft. Two-way deals allow players to spend time on both the NBA squad, but also with the team's G-League affiliate.

Boucher spent most of the 2017-18 season with the G-League Santa Cruz Warriors. He averaged 11.8 points per game, 7.5 rebounds per game and 2.1 blocks per game. His high games included a 24-point and 18-rebound outing against the Northern Arizona Stars and a 21-point and 15-rebound offering against the Sioux Falls Skyforce.

He played one game with Golden State. He entered for one minute in the team's win over the Los Angeles Lakers in mid-March. He missed one three point shot and grabbed a rebound.

During a Pac-12 Tournament semifinal game against California last March, Boucher tore his ACL. The injury cost him the remainder of his collegiate career and put his professional career in jeopardy. He discussed the recovery process and the gratitude he had for the Warriors for adding him to their roster in a 12-mintue documentary short released last week.

“I didn’t expect the Warriors to be like ‘we wanna give him a two-way’," he said in the documentary. "That really gave me confidence in coming because that means they really see potential in me."

During his first season in 2015-16, he swatted away a single-season Oregon record 110 shots. He blocked another 79 during his senior year the next season. His 189 shot blocks rank second all-time behind former Duck and former Warrior teammate Jordan Bell.

His addition to the Raptors summer league team is non-binding, meaning he's yet to sign a deal with the club. He is free to sign with any franchise in the coming months.