Sounding as tired as his team looked at times Sunday night, Timberwolves coach Flip Saunders sat down after a 109-98 loss to the Charlotte Hornets at Target Center and laid out the facts.
Too many injuries, too many minutes for young players, too many problems as a result.
"Guys, we're tired," Saunders said. "I wish I could tell you we have 19-year-old-guys used to playing lots of minutes. What happens is, you get tired and you lose some of your concentration.''
With seemingly as many players healthy as hurt, the Wolves started fast, operated efficiently and led considerably before, collectively, running into a wall.
The Wolves shot the ball at a 55.4 percent clip. They built a 13-point lead with less than two minutes left in the first half. And then, over about the next 10 minutes of game time, that all changed.
A 24-6 run that ended the first half and began the second was enough to give the Hornets (30-38) a five-point lead on Gerald Henderson's 20-foot jumper with 8 minutes, 17 seconds left in the third quarter. Charlotte, still battling for a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, never trailed again.
The Wolves continued to shoot the ball well, but the deadly combination of turnovers (10 over the final two-plus quarters) and problems rebounding (Charlotte had a 17-5 edge on second-chance points) was too much to overcome.
Indeed, the loss added yet another statistical milestone to the books: It was only the third time since the 1996-97 season the Wolves had lost a game when shooting 55 percent or better. Their record in such games in that time: 63-3.