INDIANAPOLIS - Two nights after playing only 13 minutes in North Dakota, Timberwolves forward Derrick Williams started Friday's 96-91 loss at Indiana and played himself to exhaustion on a night when Andrei Kirilenko was given the night off and none of the other four starters played much beyond the first quarter.
Wolves coach Rick Adelman wanted to save Kirilenko, Brandon Roy, Kevin Love and Nikola Pekovic for Saturday night's game against Chicago before a Target Center home crowd, so he called upon Williams for a 25-point, 38-minute performance that pleased him.
"I thought he played pretty good," Adelman said of the No. 2 overall pick in last year's NBA draft. "What I liked about him was he made two or three efforts. He'd go to the basket, they'd bother him and he'd go right up and get it. That's good to see. ... If he plays that hard all the time at both ends, that's a completely different circumstance for him."
Williams played less than five minutes in the second half of Wednesday's preseason opener against the Pacers in Fargo, N.D. He attempted three three-pointers that night and looked for his outside shot more than he attacked the basket. Adelman said that although he wants to see a better balance than that, it wasn't the reason Williams played little more than 13 minutes.
Instead, Adelman said he wanted to get Love, Lou Amundson and Dante Cunningham playing time.
On Friday, Williams got his chance, persevering through a difficult matchup at small forward against Paul George by scoring 15 points in the second half. The Wolves had a 12-point lead before halftime, but they were overcome by a 24-5 Pacers run when the visitors relied solely on their reserves.
"I'm glad Coach liked that," Williams said. "I have to continue to give that second effort, that third effort throughout the whole season. If that's what I got to do to get on the court, I'm going to keep doing it."
A resting RoyRoy played the game's first eight minutes and then sat down for the night so he could rest his knees for Saturday's game. He scored six points on 2-for-3 shooting and impressed Indiana coach Frank Vogel with his first two games back in the NBA.