TORONTO

Raptors fans will love this.

Canadian hoops phenom Andrew Wiggins, expected to be selected first overall in the draft next summer, revealed Tuesday that, given his druthers, he'd like to play at home.

After winning the Gatorade High School Athlete of the Year Award Tuesday, Wiggins told esnewsreporting.com he wants to win a national championship at Kansas, would love to play Kobe Bryant one-on-one and considers Michael Jordan the greatest ever, before talk turned to his preferred NBA home.

"I would like to say the Raptors, I want to play for them," said Wiggins, who has been spotted many times sporting a Raptors cap.

The team would need quite a bit of lottery luck in order to make Wiggins' wish come true, but there's always free agency down the line.

Wiggins, a Thornhill native, averaged 23.4 points, 11.1 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per game for Huntington Prep in West Virginia in his final high school season.

Meanwhile, unable to find a team willing to trade for his contract, the team has bought out Marcus Camby and signed veteran point guard D.J. Augustin.

Augustin, a six-foot guard who played last season for the Indiana Pacers, inked a one-year, $1.26 million contract, according to Yahoo! Sports.

Augustin, the No. 9 pick of the 2008 draft made the NBA’s all-rookie second team in 2008-09 when he finished ninth in the league in three-point shooting percentage (43.9%) and averaged 14.4 points and 6.1 assists for the Bobcats two years later.

However, Augustin’s game fell off a cliff in his first season with the Pacers. He shot just 35% from the field, and averaged just 4.7 point and 2.2 assists in 16.1 minutes per game for the Eastern Conference finalists.

Augustin is a former McDonald’s All-American, New Orleans player of the year and won the 2008 Bob Cousy award while with the Texas Longhorns.

It's not immediately clear how much the Raptors saved by buying out the 39-year-old Camby, but he was due to make $4.38 million U.S. this season and was guaranteed $1 million in 2014-15.

The veteran's minimum for 10+ year veterans is $1.4 million, so the Raptors likely collected at least that much in exchange for allowing Camby to sign with a contender.

Camby, selected No. 2 overall in 1996 by the Raptors (a year after Wiggins was born), was reaquired in the Andrea Bargnani trade with New York.

He immediately said that he would not return and the Raptors didn't have much interest in bringing him back anyway.

“I have nothing but positive things to say about the city of Toronto and its great fans, having been drafted by the Raptors 17 years ago. Given that my goal at this point in my career is to have a shot at a championship, however, I’ll have to evaluate my options going forward," Camby said at the time in a statement.

Quentin Richardson, also acquired in the deal, will not play for the Raptors either. The team will either trade or waive him, given its glut on the wings.