LOS ANGELES – Timberwolves coach Kurt Rambis brought his new franchise back home with him to play the Los Angeles Lakers Friday night in a game that featured teams who share nothing in common except a belief in the same system of basketball.
When Rambis left Staples Center with an eighth NBA championship ring to hide away in his "attic," his former Lakers team owned an 11-game winning streak, a league-best 18-3 record and a 104-92 victory over a Wolves team that Phil Jackson had warned his players about.
The Wolves departed for Sacramento late Friday with a 3-20 record – one away from the 3-21 start reached by the franchise's 2007-08 team – and perhaps a better grasp of what it takes to succeed with a triangle offense Rambis borrowed from Jackson, his mentor who has won 10 NBA titles with it.
"I feel good, I'm ready to play again," Rambis said about a night that honored him before the game with a ring ceremony and a video montage that declared him "Always a Laker." "I'm ready to see another ballgame and see if our team can add something to this and get better tomorrow."
The Wolves inevitably were overcome by Kobe Bryant's presence and 20 points – achieved despite playing the final three quarters with a fractured index finger on his shooting hand– and the champions' size and length on a night when Lakers forward Pau Gasol exceeded Kevin Love's career-tying 19-rebound night with a career-high 20 rebounds of his own.
"They're such a big team, a long team," said Wolves forward Al Jefferson, whose 24-point, 13-rebound night was his fifth consecutive double-double. "We're a small team."
Love moved into the starting lineup Friday for the first time this season, exactly one week after he made his return in New Orleans from that broken hand that caused him to miss the season's first 18 games.
He made three of 14 shots and scored just seven points, but matched that career rebound high before a Staples Center crowd that stood and applauded Rambis to being the evening and ended it by cheering the two free tacos owed each of them because their Lakers held the visitors to fewer than 100 points.