PORTLAND, ORE. – Whether one of them still gets there remains uncertain, but the Timberwolves' 105-98 loss at Portland Thursday felt a little like something called the playoffs.
For the Blazers, it meant a much-needed comeback victory that pushed them 1 ½ games ahead of Denver in pursuit of the Western Conference's eighth and final playoff spot with just six days left in the regular season. For the Wolves, it was their second game in four days – and their third in 12 days – against Portland, the kind of familiarity usually only experienced between two teams come playoff time.
On Monday, they overcame the Blazers 110-109 at Target Center. On Thursday, they lost a 15-point, third-quarter lead after they missed their first 13 shots from the field in the fourth quarter and finished 3-for-23 while Blazers reserve guard Allen Crabbe couldn't miss, particularly from three-point distance.
"The start of the fourth quarter, we got hit pretty good," Wolves coach Tom Thibodeau said. "We let Crabbe get loose. That was a problem."
The Wolves now have lost a double-digit lead 21 times this season, the most by an NBA team in the last two decades. Thursday's defeat was the 15th time they led by at least 15 points and still lost. They held a 70-55 advantage in the third quarter's opening minutes and trailed by six points before the fourth quarter was five minutes old.
"That's something we definitely have got to fix next year," said Wolves big man Karl-Anthony Towns, whose team has just four games left in its season. "We've got to come back a more disciplined and focused team."
Towns delivered a 24-point, 16-rebound performance on a night when teammate Andrew Wiggins led everyone with 36 points. But Towns took just two of his 16 shots and scored just two of his 24 points in a fourth quarter that started with Gorgui Dieng as the only Wolves' starter on the floor because Tom Thibodeau needed to get the others some rest.
Towns played the game's final nine minutes and the Blazers double-teamed him at every turn for every bit of that. The Wolves didn't make a field-goal attempt until Wiggins' short running shot with 2:46 left. By then, the Blazers had started the fourth quarter on a 17-4 run and grabbed the game's momentum.