Sam Mitchell, the Timberwolves interim coach, said he thought his team was dealing with an emotional hangover when Wednesday's game with Sacramento began at Target Center.
Two days earlier, in the same building, with fans hanging from the rafters, the Wolves had taken defending champion Golden State to the limit before losing. Wednesday, the crowd was smaller, quieter. And the Kings came in limping, without high-scoring center DeMarcus Cousins.
So it took awhile.
But, after a lethargic and loose first half, the Wolves came out and took control in the second in a 113-104 victory. The Wolves built a 14-point lead late in the third quarter, allowed the Kings back within two early in the fourth, then pulled away to break a two-game losing streak. The Wolves (23-48) have won three of their past six games.
"We could have won [Monday],'' said Zach LaVine, whose game mirrored that of his team. LaVine was scoreless in the first half, but had 23 in the second — 11 in the third quarter, 12 in the fourth. "We had the champs on the ropes, and I feel we could have closed it out better. We needed to come out today in a game when you're tired, when you played your hearts out the game before …''
And win.
Now, not everyone subscribed to Mitchell's theory. Center Karl-Anthony Towns, for example. He said he felt fine, and showed it, scoring 26 points with 11 rebounds; he and Gorgui Dieng (16 points, 12 rebounds) had double-doubles. Ditto for Andrew Wiggins. Aggressive from the start, he scored 23.
But it was clear in the first 24 minutes of the game that something was off.