If you're a Timberwolves fan suddenly concerned your now-healthy team just might win too many games these final two months, know this:
Monday night's home game against Atlanta began a stretch of 14 opponents who were winning games at a 63 percent rate.
Between Monday and a March 15 game at San Antonio, the only team on their schedule with a winning percentage below .570 is Denver.
The rest: The NBA's second-best Hawks followed by league-best Golden State, followed after the All-Star break by Phoenix (twice), Houston, Washington, Chicago, Memphis, the L.A. Clippers (twice), Oklahoma City and the Spurs.
"For me, it's even more interesting, it's fun to play against those kinds of teams," Wolves point guard Ricky Rubio said. "We want to compete every game. The record doesn't mean anything when you step on the court. We beat Memphis [Friday] here at home and they had, what, 20 or 25 victories more than us? We don't play for the record. We play every game like it's 0-0."
Wolves coach Flip Saunders said it's not much different than a recent completed stretch that included Cleveland, Dallas, Memphis and now offers the Hawks and Warriors.
"I'm not looking past the next one," Saunders said. "We're not scheduling any Division III Augsburgs here, and that's not taking anything from Augsburg. They're just not the University of Minnesota."
Veteran Mo Williams isn't peering into the future, either. "I don't know the schedule past Wednesday, I'm not going to lie to you," he said.