AUBURN HILLS, MICH. – The Timberwolves flew home after Thursday night's last-second, preseason-ending 99-98 loss at Detroit confident that they will no longer be the NBA's worst three-point shooting team this season, not by that proverbial long shot.
In Wednesday's victory at Philadelphia, the Wolves shot 29 threes and made 15 of them, which is the second highest in any game — preseason, regular season, postseason — in franchise history.
On Thursday, they made 12 more on 33 attempts.
Even point guard Ricky Rubio made three Thursday, on six attempts. But the Pistons ultimately won thanks to Josh Smith's desperation, bounding three-pointer at the horn.
Last season, the Wolves made only 30.5 percent of their threes. This preseason, with Kevin Love back healthy and Kevin Martin brought aboard, they made 37.6 percent and weren't shy doing it.
"I don't mind that if they're good shots," coach Rick Adelman said, referring to the 62 threes his team tried on consecutive nights. "I don't mind that at all. We had some good looks at it. There's where the ball is going to go."
The ball in Adelman's offense is going to find Martin and Love — deft shooters both — beyond the arc, and it's going to find Rubio, too.
If Rubio makes enough to keep opposing defenses honest — and Thursday's 15-point performance was more than that — it just might define the team's upcoming season.