After the Timberwolves 141-137 loss to Indiana, one of the most damning observations of the Wolves' effort came from coach Chris Finch, who said the Wolves tried everything — zone, switching, whatever they could throw at the Pacers — to try and keep even an undermanned Indiana team from torching the Wolves.
Little worked, and at the end of Finch's explanation he concluded by saying: "We just didn't have a will to guard the ball."
As the Wolves search for explanations about why they have been so inconsistent this season, it all tends to come back to the defensive end of the floor and the concept of effort.
"Defense is effort," rookie Anthony Edwards said. "You give effort and you've got great defense."
At some point maybe that listen will creep into the minds of a young team. The Wolves rank 27th in defensive efficiency for the season. Since the All-Star break they are also 27th as Finch has had over a month to tweak what he wants to do on that end of the floor with this group. Finch's philosophy has focused on protecting the paint, something the Wolves didn't do very well against an Indiana team that had 66 on Wednesday, and telling the Wolves to use their athleticism and sweat to compensate for mental mistakes that may happen.
Edwards' progress on that end of the floor can be symbolic of the team as a whole as he tries to find consistency on that end.
"There's games where I've been great, games where I've been trash and games where I've been all right," Edwards said. "So I'd say I've been all right. I'm in the middle."
Edwards said the Wolves have issues with consistency as a whole, especially on the defensive end.