LOS ANGELES - In a season when the Timberwolves can blame everything from bad knees and knuckle pushups to a family emergency for a year gone so wrong, here's one more comparatively little thing to add to the list:
The NBA schedule.
Couldn't the Timberwolves have faced the Los Angeles Lakers two or three times in November and December, when the 16-time NBA champs struggled to find both themselves and a coach?
Instead, Thursday's 116-94 loss nationally televised by TNT was their second in February -- and the second of all three games between the teams in February and March -- against rejuvenated Kobe Bryant and a Lakers team that now has won four of its past five games to keep the West's eighth and final playoff spot in sight.
"Just our luck," Wolves coach Rick Adelman said of his team's sense of timing.
The Wolves started Thursday's game with yet another starter -- small forward Andrei Kirilenko -- injured, and then they lost center Nikola Pekovic in the first quarter to an abdominal strain against an opponent that features big Dwight Howard in the middle.
"We just didn't have enough tonight," Adelman said afterward, referring perhaps both to his team's energy and number of healthy players.
The Wolves have not beaten the Lakers now since Kevin Garnett played for them. Thursday's loss was their 21st consecutive to the Lakers, a streak that dates to 2007.