MEXICO CITY – Eleven months after the Timberwolves didn't play a game they might never forget, they lost 113-101 to the Houston Rockets on a night they rightfully soon won't remember.
Last December, the Wolves traveled all the way to Mexico for a game scheduled against San Antonio that was postponed after smoke from a generator fire billowed into newish Mexico City Arena just 75 minutes before the opening tip.
On Wednesday, 18,996 long-waiting Mexican fans came to the 22,500-seat arena garbed in NBA gear — everything from vintage Michael Jordan No. 23 jerseys to those representing Rockets stars Dwight Howard and James Harden, Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant, the New York Knicks and Timberwolves present and past: Andrew Wiggins and missing Ricky Rubio as well as Kevin Garnett and almost-forgotten Latrell Sprewell.
They came for everything an NBA game far to the north presents, only delivered in Spanish.
"It was a great atmosphere, a fun game to play," Wolves coach Flip Saunders said afterward. "I wasn't sure when they were whistling, if they were whistling for us or against us. If you didn't know, you would have thought you were playing an NBA game in an NBA city."
The Wolves kept it a game for a half, trailing 53-49 at intermission, before the Rockets (7-1) used a 31-21 third quarter to pull away. The Wolves missed their first seven shots to start each half.
"You got two 19-year-old guys you're putting out there," Saunders said. "Sometimes it takes a little time for them and for the team to get into the game."
Howard delivered a 22-point, 10-rebound, four-block night but perhaps entertained the big crowd more when he spectacularly missed a dunk. Harden had 23 points and 10 assists on a night when Wolves coach Flip Saunders sent teenager Wiggins out on his own to defend the bearded one.