Before the game Saturday night, while extolling the virtues of Robbie Hummel's value off the bench, Timberwolves coach Flip Saunders talked about his professionalism, his smarts, his basketball IQ. About how, on a team filled with youth and inexperience, his basketball IQ shines, no matter what he's asked to do, or where he's asked to play.
After his Wolves had lost, yet again, this time 108-93 to the San Antonio Spurs at Target Center, Saunders talked about how hard it was to play the defending champions.
"San Antonio's whole team, that's how they are," Saunders said. "Those guys have been around a long time."
With Manu Ginobili and Marco Belinelli both on the bench because of injuries, the Spurs (23-15) still were a deep, consistent, efficient team. Six players scored in double figures — including Austin Daye, who scored a season-high 22 points — as San Antonio took control of the game early and cruised to the finish against a Wolves team that lost yet again.
And now it is 15.
The young Wolves (5-31) tacked another game onto their losing streak, their 15th, already the third-longest streak in franchise history. And it doesn't get any easier for the Wolves, who head for a four-game road trip starting Tuesday at Indiana. The franchise record streak of 18, reached in December 2011, continues to loom.
As has become standard, there were some bright spots for the Wolves, who got yet another double-double from center Gorgui Dieng, 19 points off the bench from Zach LaVine and 10 points from Mo Williams, who shook off the pain of a turned ankle to play. Andrew Wiggins scored 18 points, coming two points shy of his seventh game with 20 or more.
But there also were the stretches during which the Wolves struggled, mightily, against the veteran Spurs.