The Timberwolves boarded a plane Tuesday morning and flew home from Los Angeles following Monday's 127-101 loss to the Clippers that veteran Mo Williams described as "beat so bad" and led him to discuss matters such as pride.
Just a day later, they'll face maybe their biggest test yet in a young, careening season already filled with them: Wednesday at Target Center they meet a winless Philadelphia team that will tie an NBA record for most consecutive losses to start a season if they lose their 18th consecutive.
The 76ers' 109-103 home loss to San Antonio on Monday matched the 1998-99 Clippers and 1988-89 Miami Heat teams that lost the first 17 games to start a season. The only team left on the list is the 2009-10 New Jersey Nets team that didn't win a game until Dec. 4 that season.
Somebody always loses to a winless team. In 2010, it was Charlotte that ended the Nets' unwanted streak.
Let it be Oklahoma City on Friday or Detroit next week. The Wolves just don't want it to be them.
"It's a game you've just got to go out and play," said Wolves veteran forward Thaddeus Young, who played his first seven NBA seasons in Philadelphia. "At any given moment any team can beat you in the NBA, we all know that. Hopefully, we can go out and get this victory.
''I mean, if they beat us and get their first win, it's definitely going to make us look bad as a team."
Wolves coach Flip Saunders said after Monday's loss in Los Angeles that he's more concerned about his own injury-depleted team and a bench that made rushed decisions and took bad shots in losses to the Clippers, Portland and Milwaukee in the last week.