LOS ANGELES – Nine years after his Los Angeles Lakers beat his former Timberwolves team 106-98 Friday night, Mark Madsen recalls a season finale deemed a farce, mockery, travesty and circus all compressed into one and emotions ranging from embarrassment to regret still flow from his role in such a game.
In an issue that continues in the NBA to this day, the Wolves needed to lose to Memphis in order to keep their first-round draft pick. And lose they did, but not until Madsen hoisted seven three-pointers – count 'em, seven – all in the final 10 minutes of a double-overtime loss.
A reserve forward who built his NBA career by playing in the paint, Madsen hadn't attempted a three-pointer that entire season or the season before that. But as Target Center fans implored him, he attempted seven in succession, all of which missed and the Grizzlies basically had no choice but to win 102-92 after two extra sessions.
"I look back and I still feel some pain about that game," Madsen said Friday at Staples Center. "It was a unique circumstance."
All these years later, the Wolves and once-mighty Lakers now play out the season with only draft-lottery implications at stake. Together, they started six rookies Friday while Ricky Rubio, Kevin Garnett, Carlos Boozer, Jordan Hill and Jeremy Lin, among many others, sat out because of sore knees, ankles and "coach's decision."
The Wolves trailed by as many as 18 points when rookies Andrew Wiggins, Zach LaVine and Adreian Payne wowed the Friday-night Staples Center crowd with feats of athleticism and Lorenzo Brown impressed coach Flip Saunders with his energy and toughness.
Wiggins' 29-point, 10-rebound, 6-assist, 2-steal night including a 15-for-16 shooting night from the free-throw line as he states again in this season's final days his case for Rookie of the Year award.
"He's making more plays off the ball, that's what you're looking to see," Saunders said afterward. "If you want to be good, you put the ball in the hands of your main guy – whether it's a (James) Harden, a (Stephen) Curry, a LeBron James, someone like that –and have confidence they'll either make plays for themselves, get fouled or more plays for their teammates. We've given him more responsibility to do that and he's accepted that and done pretty well with that."