TORONTO – The Timberwolves slipped three games under .500 for the first time this season with a 94-89 loss at Toronto on Friday, a night when starting point guard Ricky Rubio again sat for the entire fourth quarter while J.J. Barea tried unsuccessfully to will his team back.
Unlike Wednesday's home loss to Sacramento, this one — the Wolves' third consecutive loss and their sixth in the past nine games — didn't come and go in the visitor's dressing room at Air Canada Centre with the same expressions of desperation or discord that other recent losses have.
Barea worked the room afterward, encouraging teammates, praising them for their defensive effort and calling a five-point loss to a Raptors team rolling since they traded away star Rudy Gay "progress."
"We played hard," Barea said. "If we play with that passion and that energy on the defensive side, we're going to be fine."
Wolves star Kevin Love sat at his locker, his head actually raised while he answered questions this time and pointed his finger at nothing but the Wolves' 44 percent shooting and Toronto guard Kyle Lowry's deft long-range shooting.
"I thought we played extremely hard tonight, we just didn't necessarily shoot the ball well," Love said. "I thought we played hard, I really did."
The Wolves (18-21) head home to play Utah on Saturday night, trailing Dallas by 4½ games for the West's eighth playoff berth, after they had stayed at or within two games of .500 for the past six weeks.
Before the game, Wolves coach Rick Adelman spoke about the importance of keeping that .500 mark in sight, saying "You can't stray too far away because you're going to get left behind."