LOS ANGELES – Ending a three-game road trip that both started and ended in Los Angeles, the Timberwolves received a sobering reminder of just how far the road rises ahead of them in a ridiculously competitive Western Conference on Monday.
Missing three starters once again and playing for tomorrow against an opponent backed by the billions for today, the Timberwolves lost convincingly 127-101 to the Clippers, who returned to Staples Center from a 6-1 road trip to win yet again. This time, they did it basically by halftime.
"We self-destructed," Wolves coach Flip Saunders said. "We started out, we had good tempo. Our bench came in — same thing in Portland, same thing in Milwaukee — and we took ill-advised shots, one-pass shots and changed the tempo of the game. Once they get going, they're a tough team to catch from behind."
And still the 12-5 Clippers find themselves only seventh in a conference led by 15-2 Memphis and 14-2 Golden State. Three other teams — Portland, Houston and San Antonio — are 13-4 in a season that's just getting started.
"I literally did not know that," Clippers coach Doc Rivers said before his team at home for the first time in nearly two weeks. "You've just got to win. You've got to play every night. That's the conference we're in. It's not frustrating, it's realistic. We're in a hard conference. A good record in our conference means not a lot. Everyone has one."
With 65 games to go, Rivers' team trails Memphis by only three games while the Wolves at 4-12 already are aimed at yet another trip to the NBA draft lottery.
"We have 60 games to catch 'em," Rivers said.
They moved one victory closer Monday when newly named Western Conference Player of the Week Blake Griffin and guard J.J. Redick each scored 23 points before they and the other Clippers starters sat down for the night before third quarter's end. By then they led by as many as 33 points, with the Clippers making 15 three-pointers to the Wolves' two.