Two weeks ago, the Timberwolves brought Kevin Garnett back to the family for a veteran's leadership and late-game intellect.
After Wednesday's disappointing 100-85 loss to Denver, he turned provocateur, criticizing the collective heart and will of an opponent that just beaten his new team resoundingly.
Until Tuesday, the Nuggets had lost six consecutive, 12 of 13 and 19 of their past 22 games. Then they fired head coach Brian Shaw on Tuesday morning, elevated assistant Melvin Hunt to interim coach and won at home that night for the first time in six weeks. Then they came to Minneapolis and dismantled the Wolves 23 hours later.
Before Wednesday's game, Wolves coach Flip Saunders said he expected the Nuggets will get an emotional "bounce" from firing one coach and promoting another.
It's a premise with which Garnett apparently disagreed when asked if he had expected to see a Nuggets team energized and different from the losing one that existed before Tuesday morning.
"To be honest, they quit on Brian Shaw, I thought they'd quit again," Garnett said. "A quitter is a quitter. That was my take on that."
The Nuggets beat Milwaukee 106-95 at Pepsi Center on Tuesday and thumped the Wolves one night later, beating them soundly in nearly every statistical category — namely points in the paint, fast-break points, second-chance points — including the only one that really counts.
Afterward, Hunt praised his players' resiliency, their unselfishness and their determination one night after they celebrated his first NBA career victory by throwing a ball at him, a gesture he misunderstood by swatting away their unique presentation of the game ball.