The last time these two teams played, the Timberwolves surfed the energy and emotion of Kevin Love's sudden, surprise season debut to an early 17-point lead before they eventually lost to Denver three weeks ago at Target Center.
This time in the same place, they were the team that stayed patient -- perhaps to a fault -- and persevered for a 108-105 victory over a road-weary Nuggets team that refused to go quietly into the night until the final five seconds.
The Wolves overcame Kevin Love's 3-for-17 shooting performance; his day began with him explaining to reporters at a morning shootaround his incendiary comments published by Yahoo!Sports the day before and ended with a few hometown fans heckling him after he was pulled from the game for three minutes down the stretch.
They also overcame a 5-seconds violation on an inbounds pass after calling a timeout with 34 seconds left -- "That was a three-second call," Love said -- just when the Nuggets quickly had slashed an 11-point deficit with two minutes left down to just 103-100.
"I didn't draw it up that way," Wolves coach Rick Adelman said.
He managed a smirk afterward because his team survived that mistake when three of his players -- most notably all-everything defender Andrei Kirilenko -- converged on Nuggets point guard Ty Lawson and forced a turnover that Kirilenko turned into a slam dunk at the other end for a 105-100 lead with 21 seconds left.
"He's everywhere," starting center Nikola Pekovic said of Kirilenko's defensive presence, which produced four steals and a blocked shot Wednesday. "Trust me, it helps a lot."
The Nuggets ended a five-game road trip Wednesday one night after they had played at Detroit, while the Wolves had four days' rest and practice since Friday's victory over Cleveland.