The Timberwolves bade farewell to their overtime lockout summer and, on the day after Christmas, greeted the future with Monday night's season-opening 104-100 loss to Oklahoma City at Target Center.
The result was the same as 65 others last season, but the palpable buzz in the building, from opening tap to last-second gasp, was only one reason why this felt, in All-Star forward Kevin Love's words, "completely different" from so many other nights just a year ago.
For starters, a standing-room-only audience announced at 19,406 fans -- the Wolves' largest opening-night crowd since 2007, just months after Kevin Garnett was traded away -- came to wish new coach Rick Adelman and rookies Ricky Rubio and Derrick Williams welcome.
For another, the Wolves finished the game with a unit on the floor -- Rubio and the newly signed J.J. Barea in the backcourt, Love, Williams and Michael Beasley up front -- that slugged with the Western Conference finalist Thunder toe-to-toe until the final three seconds.
That's when, with Oklahoma City leading 102-100, Beasley took the ball hard to the basket for what would have been a tying score over Kendrick Perkins, only to come away with nothing, although Beasley's facial expressions and body language indicated he was expecting a foul call that never came.
"If the ref ain't called it, then I didn't get fouled," Beasley said afterward.
The Wolves brought themselves back from a 12-point, third-quarter deficit with Rubio leading them, orchestrating both the fast break with precise bounce passes to cutting teammates and his team's comeback by playing the game's final 15 minutes.
Rubio, Williams and Barea played the entire fourth quarter, a quarter in which the Wolves trailed by as many as six points and led by a point three times but ultimately had no final answer for the Thunder's All-Star tag team of Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook.