Agitated Timberwolves coach Tom Thibodeau called for improvement Monday night, after formerly floundering Miami won its 11th consecutive game and his team lost its fourth in a row, 115-113 at Target Center.
Thibodeau said he will seek it from himself, his team and most pointedly from his best players after the Wolves gave up 71 points and 11 three-pointers in the first half. Despite that, the Wolves still had two Andrew Wiggins jumpers in the final 11 seconds that could have tied or maybe won the game.
The Wolves shot nearly 54 percent from the floor and scored nine points more than their season average, but they still couldn't prevail over an opponent that started the season 11-30 and now hasn't lost since Jan. 13 at Milwaukee.
"It's got to change," Thibodeau said. "We're scoring the ball plenty. We are. The defense, if we don't straighten it out, it's going to be hard to win. It is."
Goran Dragic, the Heat's veteran point guard, made his first seven three-point attempts, didn't miss one until nearly three minutes gone in the fourth quarter and finished a 33-point night by going 13-for-17 from the floor.
Thibodeau said his team played without an "edge" right from the game's start.
"Our best players have to lead," he said. "They can't be one-sided players. This isn't football, where there's an offense and a defense. You have to play both sides of the ball to play it well. You have to play it unselfishly, you have to play it together and you have to have the discipline to do it over and over again. And so until we figure that out, it's going to be hard to move forward."
A strength much of this season, rebounding helped doom the Wolves. Miami outrebounded them 38-34 and turned 13 offensive rebounds into 25 second-chance points.