TORONTO - Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman doesn't much look like a guy given to crystal-ball gazing or numerology readings, but that doesn't mean he can't be clairvoyant.
Somebody asked him before Sunday's 105-86 loss at Toronto about what it was like to coach new Raptors guard Kyle Lowry when both worked in Houston.
"He's a pain," Adelman deadpanned after a dramatic pause just for effect, "and I'm afraid he's going to be a pain tonight, too."
Pain was the prescient prognostication Sunday night.
Backup Wolves guard J.J. Barea felt it from the bruise on his face and the cuts in his mouth after a whack in the head knocked him out of the game after less than eight minutes because he experienced "concussion-like symptoms."
His Wolves felt it all night in a different way, from the disappointment of a 24-turnover game -- 16 in the first half alone -- in which Lowry headlined a bigger, faster, more physical Raptors backcourt that seemingly both scored the ball and stole the ball at will.
Lowry, whom Adelman coached for two-plus seasons in Houston, scored 22 points, barely missed a shot (8-for-10) and had three steals. Starting backcourt mate DeMar DeRozan likewise scored 22 and had three steals for a Raptors team that won its first game after starting the season with losses to Indiana and Brooklyn.
"He's a very good player," Adelman said of Lowry, whom he watched blossom into an NBA starter with the Rockets. "He really gets them going."