Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose.
That astounding truth might never have been more evident than during a 48-hour span just completed by the Timberwolves, one in which they on Wednesday smothered a Portland team that had won 14 of its past 15 games and were trounced 111-92 Friday by an Oklahoma City team that's now both healthy and desperate.
If this was a test of maturity for how a young team handles just a little success, well ….
"Our main focus for two days was using the Portland game as a springboard," Wolves coach Flip Saunders said, "and evidently we didn't have any springs in the board because we didn't do that."
Saunders remarked how some of the team's injured players noticed before the game that their healthy teammates seemed, well, perhaps satisfied by beating a Blazers team by eight points just two nights before.
"When the game started, we didn't have that edge," Saunders said, "and they pretty much mauled us."
Fresh off Thursday's home victory over a LeBron James-less Cleveland team, a Thunder team that played stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook in back-to-back games for the first time this season led from start to finish. That included leads of 6-0, 24-9 and 39-17 before the first quarter ended as well as a 24-point, third-quarter lead before the Wolves reduced the deficit to as few as 11 points with eight minutes remaining.
Former UCLA guards Westbrook and Wolves rookie Zach LaVine met in an NBA regular-season game for the first time and Westbrook delivered a focused, decisive 34-point, six-assist, six-rebound performance on a night when Durant (16 points, five assists) was placed on a 30-minute playing-time limit in his seventh game back from a fractured foot.