After winning Game 1 of their second-round matchup with the Toronto Raptors, the Miami Heat expected a physical fight in Game 2. But they got more than they expected.

This time, the Raptors won the fight, going to overtime for the second straight game to tie the series.

Goran Dragic, Miami’s star guard, got the worst of it, taking an elbow from DeMar DeRozan that required eight stitches after he lost two teeth. The stitches, inside and outside his lower lip, came from his tooth breaking through the skin.

The play, which resulted in a Dragic foul, came as DeRozan drove to the key. It was one of the many physical plays in the game. But Dragic wasn’t impressed by the call.

“Of course it was a charge. If he hit me with the elbow first then it’s a charge. But what should I say? This season every time I get the foul. I lost two teeth, get stitches and the call’s on me,” he said. “I don’t know if the referees were there watching the game or not, I didn’t even want to talk to them because it was going to get only worse.”

Late in the game, after returning with a frozen lip, Dragic drained a last-second three to tie the game and force overtime.

Despite finishing 8-for-12 for 20 points, Dragic knows he and his Heat teammates need to do a better job responding to the Raptors’ physical brand.

“It was a hole. I just got an injection and tried to go out there and play,” Dragic, lip puffy and swollen, said after the game. “We need to regroup and have a huge two games in Miami.”

DeMarre Caroll, signed to a $60-million contract before missing 56 games due to a knee injury, also brought the physicality that earned him a four-year contract. He led the team in points, steals and shooting percentage and drew a key charge.

After shooting 57.1% for 10 points in Game 1, Carroll responded in Game 2 with his best performance since arriving in Toronto with 21 points, five rebounds and four steals on 7-for-13 shooting.

He started the game with eight first-quarter points and a couple of physical, elbows-out loose ball recoveries. Through three quarters, he’d shot 70% with a team-high 17 points, including a couple of buckets late in the shot clock.

For the third consecutive game, Carroll, who has returned to his role as one of the team’s starters in the post-season, also played more than 37 minutes. He’s starting to grind, and the Heat couldn’t match him.

For the Heat, there’s no comfort in taking one of two games.

“We feel like we should have won this one,” Dragic said.

“There’s no comfort, we understand we have to go back and take care of our home court now,” Heat swingman Joe Johnson said with his feet in a bucket of ice and knees wrapped.

“It’s a little bit of a bad taste in our mouth,” Dragic added, speaking of the game but also perhaps of himself.