In a league that's changing and downsizing by the season, Timberwolves coach Tom Thibodeau can see a future for 6-10 European forward Nemanja Bjelica upsized as a NBA small forward. Thibodeau started Bjelica there in Sunday's victory over the Los Angeles Lakers out of necessity and intends to experiment more with him there.
Thibodeau likes the look Bjelica's presence gives his team alongside starters Andrew Wiggins, Karl-Anthony Towns and Gorgui Dieng because of Bjelica's wingspan and his shooting range.
"The league is shifting a bit," Thibodeau said. "You see a lot of small forwards playing power forward."
You also see a lot of point guard-sized players at shooting guard and in a bit of a contrarian thinking, Thibodeau is intrigued by a big lineup in an NBA that's going small.
Wiggins scored a career-high 47 points Sunday playing primarily as a shooting guard and Bjelica's 24 points, five three-pointers made and nearly 41 minutes played all were career highs.
"He looked like a '3' man," said Charlotte coach Steve Clifford, who was impressed with Bjelica's ball-handling and playmaking. "That would have been the old NBA. When I first got in the league, everyone wanted to play big. It was an iso, one-on-one league. Size was everything."
Bjelica wasn't as active Tuesday, scoring only six points and grabbing two rebounds in 21 minutes.
Zach is back
Zach LaVine returned to Tuesday's starting lineup after he missed Sunday's game because of what he called "a little tendinitis and a little something else" in his right knee, but swingmen Shabazz Muhammad (knee) and Brandon Rush (big toe) remained out.