Before the Timberwolves played host to Memphis on Wednesday night, Grizzlies forward Zach Randolph and center Marc Gasol had a message for Kevin Love.
"They came up to me and said, 'We're going to make sure you don't get it this game,' " Love recalled. "So it added a little more incentive to go out there and get it."
It, of course, is the double-double. And those two weren't the first ones to challenge Love, who has sensed more and more often that teams are trying to end the streak.
Love needed a rebound late in Wednesday's game to extend his double-double streak to 44 consecutive games, the longest in the NBA since Moses Malone had 44 in a row for Philadelphia in 1982-83.
Love extended the streak to 45 with about 9 1/2 minutes to go in Friday night's 95-81 loss to New Orleans -- the second-longest streak in the league since the NBA-ABA merger in 1976. Malone had a 51-game streak with Houston that ran from the 1978-79 season into the 1979-80 season.
There is no question the streak has taken on a life of its own. Love said after the Memphis game, and again before Friday's game, that he wouldn't mind if it ended.
Not everyone believes such statements. Some critics have suggested the Love wants the streak to continue, even if he has to get some extra points or rebounds late in games that are already decided.
Love took issue with this. "That's their opinion," he said Friday. "They're not me. I said this all along that I kind of wish that it would end. At the same time, it is a good thing going for me. I do have goals in this league that I want to achieve. I'm just going out there and playing hard, and whatever happens happens."