No matter the ups and downs of this season, the Timberwolves seem to find themselves back at .500. The pattern has been to hit .500, lose a few games, then win a few to get back to even or one game over, then dip back below it.
The challenge now is to get above .500 and stay there, and the 24-24 Wolves get to play the league-worst Rockets again Monday night in Houston as they attempt to go a game above .500 for the first time since they were 16-15.
There are a few constant troublesome issues the Wolves have, and if they improve in those areas, perhaps they wouldn't find themselves constantly on the treadmill around the .500 mark.
One of those areas is fouling. The Wolves commit 22.1 fouls per game, which entered Sunday tied with Golden State and Detroit for the most in the league. Opponents attempted 25.8 free throws per game against the Wolves, the third-worst mark in the league, while the Wolves were in the middle of the pack generating free-throw attempts (23.9, tied for 13th).
Their foul rate has been a thorn in the side of coach Chris Finch, who said this problem has not been getting better even with the Wolves winning eight of their last 11 games.
"I don't see improvement there," Finch said. "We talk about it all the time. We show them film. We work on our technique. A lot of defense is about poise. It's not a zero-sum game. It's not like I steal it from you or you score. Some of our guys kind of think it is."
Finch said he sees a lot of fouls happening after the Wolves try to to make up for a bad play on offense or a missed assignment on defense. They become extra aggressive in trying to compensate for their mistake, and instead they compound their error.
"They feel they have to make a great play, particularly when they've been beaten," Finch said. "They have bad habits, and it's evident. There are certainly guys who are big culprits, and a lot of those guys are coming off our bench, which means we're in the bonus when they come into the game or get us to the bonus quickly. Neither is great."