HOUSTON – Even when they won games recently, the Timberwolves never felt like they were the team they were to start the season.
Their defense was lagging, their offense was turnover-prone. That went whether they won or lost, and so the team's first two-game losing streak this week had felt like it was building for a while.
The question in front of the Wolves against the Rockets: how would they respond to this slide as they embark on a four-game road trip?
Just fine, it turned out. But Friday's 122-95 victory didn't feel like the Wolves were lucky just to get by, the way they might have in recent victories over the Mavericks and Lakers. It felt like a much-needed return to form on both ends of the floor.
"There was a couple games like that when we won — the Dallas game at home [Dec. 28] — it tastes a little sour," Rudy Gobert said. "It's a win, but it wasn't who we were, so tonight it tastes good and now we got to keep pounding every day."
Gobert took it upon himself to play better on defense, and on Friday morning coach Chris Finch showed the team some clips of their best defensive sequences as motivation to reach the level that made them the top unit in the league. The Wolves responded by holding their 10th opponent of the season under 100 points.
"I saw our defense," Finch said. "I saw our defense in a lot of different ways. We rebounded the ball real well. We were into it. We were being bothersome. Rudy was back doing his thing at the rim and everybody was out there making some grimy defensive plays."
Houston shot just 40% and committed 15 turnovers while the Wolves shot 52% and had 31 assists, a sign their ball movement was where they wanted it. Anthony Edwards had 24 points and five assists, while Karl-Anthony Towns had one of his best recent performances with 22 points, eight rebounds and six assists. That led six Wolves in double figures.