NEW YORK – After Friday's loss against the Lakers, Wolves center Karl-Anthony Towns offered a cryptic-sounding quote when asked about the Wolves' offense.
"I got a lot of things to say tomorrow at practice," Towns said Friday after the game. "I'm gonna go in there and do what I gotta do, speak up for our team. I know the words I say will help us win games. So I'm just trying to do that. That's all I'm gonna say. Keep it in the locker room."
The Wolves didn't have practice Saturday before they laid their biggest egg of the season Sunday against Portland, when Towns seemed disengaged from the offense while putting up just three shots. Foul trouble also didn't help his frustration level, and the Wolves lost to the tanking Trail Blazers while perhaps their best offensive weapon barely put up any shots.
Before Tuesday's win over Brooklyn, which clinched at least a play-in spot in the Western Conference, Towns and coach Chris Finch had a chat.
Finch took responsibility for Towns' low volume of shots on Sunday, and Towns made a few points to Finch about what the Wolves should be doing on offense — that they should be taking advantage of matchups presented by the two-big lineup they have. The Wolves did that from the first possession Tuesday, which was a Towns post up that turned into a basket.
The Wolves went back to that down the stretch when Brooklyn went small, and it resulted in four key points from Towns.
"One hundred percent we want to make sure that we had a matchup that we could go to," Finch said. "If they doubled, it would create open shots. If they didn't, which they didn't, he was able to punish that."
That strategy of posting Towns up more often is something Finch has spoken more of doing in recent days. One obstacle to doing so was Towns' health, and how he is feeling coming back from his right calf injury. He mentioned it had not been easy for him to move with the same "leverage" that he is accustomed to in the post.