TORONTO (AP) Glen Grunwald has watched the Raptors score 65 points or fewer four times already this season. The Toronto general manager plans to do something about that _ soon.

``It's obviously an issue that we have to address,'' Grunwald said Tuesday. ``We've had some stinker games.''

The Raptors scored just 62 points in Sunday's loss to Milwaukee, lowering their season average to 76.6. Toronto is on pace to break the record-low set by the post-Jordan Chicago Bulls of 1999, who averaged only 81.9 points.

In an effort to spark the offense, Grunwald has discussed a trade with the Bulls involving Toronto's Antonio Davis and Chicago's Jalen Rose.

``We've haven't done as well as we want,'' said Grunwald, whose team is 6-7 under first-year coach Kevin O'Neill. ``I've talked to a lot of players. I talked to them about the rumors.''

Grunwald has spoken to Davis about a possible trade, and he hasn't told Davis the deal is off.

Davis has said that he would not mind being traded from Toronto. His wife and his 8-year-old twin boys live in Chicago. Davis was initially upset when he learned about a possible trade from relatives who heard it about it from a Chicago radio station on Friday.

``I'm glad Glen called and we talked,'' he said. ``Glen called me and we had a good conversation about a lot of different things.''

Davis, averaging 8.0 points and 9.5 rebounds, has tried to not let the trade talk affect his play, but he's noticed a different locker room since rumors surfaced Friday.

``There is a lot of silence,'' Davis said. ``I don't know what to say to them. They don't know what to say to me. It's really tough as teammates.''

O'Neill said his team hasn't been adversely affected by trade talk. The Raptors are 1-1 since Friday.

O'Neill blames back-to-back games for the struggling offense. Toronto is 0-4 in the second of consecutive games.

``If you take away our four back-to-back performances, which are all sub-70 performances, we are not the worst,'' he said. ``Right now, we are not shooting the ball particularly well from certain spots, and that will get better as we play more.''

O'Neill spent last season with the Detroit Pistons where he oversaw a defense that allowed the fewest points in the NBA at 87.7. Michael Curry, a defensive specialist, started for the Pistons last year and is starting for Toronto this season despite averaging just 3.7 points. O'Neill said he won't change the starting lineup yet.

Morris Peterson, Alvin Williams, Jerome Williams and Davis have struggled to score under O'Neill's controlled, halfcourt offense.

``I don't want to get into trouble, man,'' Davis said. ``We haven't gotten to the point where we can go out there and continue to do the things that we've been doing the last few years in order to put some points up on the board.

``We're all trying to buy into this system, and do as best as we can to listen to Coach. Until we figure out how to get our points in this system, we're going to struggle.''