PORTLAND, ORE. – Just when the Timberwolves rid themselves of one statistical anomaly, another old one popped up again with Saturday night's 115-104 loss to the Portland Trail Blazers.
One night after they won their first game decided by four points or fewer all season, the Wolves missed their 10th chance since the night before Thanksgiving to push themselves over .500 into winning territory and couldn't do so on a night when they were battered and bruised and overmatched by the league's most surprising success story so far this season.
"Well, it's a back-to-back game against one of the best teams in the league," Wolves coach Rick Adelman said afterward. "It's not going to be an easy game."
And it certainly wasn't.
Adelman tried to find some rest of hurting starters Kevin Love and Ricky Rubio, but had to keep calling upon both as well as Kevin Martin for his scoring in a game when the disparity between the starters and the team's bench proved problematic yet again.
The Blazers' bench primarily put this one away, outscoring their Minnesota counterparts 35-14. It was responsible for a pair of 16-4 runs – one that opened the second quarter, the other that arrived midway through the fourth quarter – that pushed the Blazers to their first double-digit lead and then allowed them to stretch an 89-84 lead with 10 minutes left into an 105-88 bulge with 5 ½ minutes left.
The Wolves starters -- particularly the scoring of Martin (30 points) and Nikola Pekovic (23 points, 11 rebounds) and Ricky Rubio's aggressive attacks at the basket – tried to keep them close. But with Love playing on a sore knee he banged Friday in Oakland and Rubio playing on a sprained ankle sustained there as well, Adelman couldn't keep them on the floor long enough to counter a Blazers team that got 16 points from veteran reserve guard Mo Williams as well as valuable bench contributions from Thomas Robinson and rookie C.J. McCollum.
"Just trying to stay in the game," Adelman said.