Two days after a blowout loss to lowly Sacramento, one day after the players were given a day off, the Timberwolves returned to practice to prepare for perhaps the toughest stretch of the season.
The Wolves did this without Kevin Love but with questions of what that 32-point loss said about the team's direction.
First, Love: The power forward's sore left groin -- first injured in Utah last week -- kept him out of practice and has him listed officially as day-to-day. More will be known Wednesday, but the team and coach Kurt Rambis is preparing for the possibility Love will be unavailable for Thursday's game in Dallas at the very least.
But what of the mood of the team? After Sunday's loss, Rambis again bemoaned the team's lack of ball movement on offense and inability to make stops on defense. After the game, forward Anthony Tolliver talked of the team's Jekyll-and-Hyde nature, playing well one night but poorly the next, and wondered why some players on the team don't "bring it every night."
So, the question being asked Tuesday: Is Rambis' message still reaching the players?
Love, Tolliver and Martell Webster, each speaking for himself, said yes.
"He's doing a great job," Tolliver said of Rambis. "He's doing what he's supposed to be doing. It's us, as players, we just have to take more accountability and responsibility for our actions. ... I've been bought in from Day 1. It's tough sitting back and watching sometimes when people don't buy in. Because you can't do more than he does."
Nobody is mentioning names. But it's hard to ignore the Wolves' up-and-down nature. Rambis has said it a bunch of times -- and again Tuesday -- that the Wolves' offense flows when the ball is being moved and shared. And yet time and again, the Wolves stop moving the ball and try to play one-on-one basketball.