OAKLAND, CALIF. – The Timberwolves saw – and heard – the difference one little year can make for a downtrodden franchise at the end of Tuesday's 105-89 loss at Golden State.
The home team's victory combined with Utah's loss to Oklahoma City earlier in the evening earned the Warriors their second trip to the playoffs in the last 19 years, and for the first time since 2007.
And another Oracle Arena sellout crowd wasn't about to leave early or quietly. They stuck around for the final minutes of a game the Warriors won with a decisive 31-16 third quarter and chanted the "P" word over and over until the visitors trudged through the tunnel to their locker room while their team danced off in celebration for what they achieved, not to mention the right to finally shave off beards they had let grow until this special occasion.
"I cannot wait," Warriors guard Steph Curry said. "It means everything. Just listen to this crowd."
Curry and backcourt mate Klay Thompson outscored Wolves starting guards Ricky Rubio and Luke Ridnour 54-13 on a night that started with Wolves coach Rick Adelman speaking enviously about the evening's opponents. He did so not because the Warriors in a season have gone from 23-44 record to now 45-33. He did so because the Warriors possess the kind of shooters that the Wolves do not, a fact that was never more than clear than Tuesday night.
The Warriors entered the night No. 1 in the NBA in three-point shooting percentage while the Wolves were dead last, a position in which they have languished almost all season. Thompson then went out and simply made his first eight shots – including his first five three-pointers – and scored 25 points by halftime.
"They have a great shooting team," Adelman said, referring to Thompson, Curry and Jarrett Jack. "You've got three guys out there shooting 40 percent (from three-point range). On our team that would be unbelievable. I'm really impressed with that. They can blow open a game or come back on you anytime. When you have three guys who can make plays and shoot the ball, that is a big advantage."
The Warriors proved Adelman's point when they twice rallied from double-digit deficits to win at Target Center earlier this season.