SALT LAKE CITY — Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman knows he needs to preserve star forward Kevin Love's legs, his mind and his shooting touch during this lockout-shortened 66-game season in which games come so fast and furious, as they did once again with Saturday's 108-98 loss at Utah.
He knows he needs to do so to save Love's body and to find playing time for No. 2 overall pick Derrick Williams at the same power forward spot that Love plays.
There's just one problem: He feels this nagging little need to win.
"I'm just funny that way," he said.
The two issues collided once again in Salt Lake City on Saturday, when the Wolves peered at reaching .500 this late in the season -- an entire 16 games -- for the first time since 2006-07 but watched the opportunity slip away.
They also watched their three-game winning streak -- their longest in two seasons -- end one night after Love's deep, buzzer-beating three-pointer defeated the Clippers in Los Angeles in a jubilant moment played over and over on ESPN's "SportsCenter" for hours afterward.
Adelman worried about an emotional hangover and tired legs after the Wolves arrived at their Salt Lake City hotel at 3:30 a.m. Saturday, and he predicted they would get blown out by the tough, physical and surprisingly successful Jazz if they weren't mature enough to match them physically and emotionally from the start.
They survived the game's opening just fine, building a 26-22 lead after the first quarter.