This time last year, the Timberwolves headed into All-Star break jubilant, dancing off the Target Center floor after they trailed Utah by 18 points but won on Luke Ridnour's floating runner at the final horn.
On Wednesday they trudged into a long weekend rest as losers for the 16th time in 19 games, 97-93 to the very same Jazz.
This time, they once again fought back valiantly late in the game from a double-digit deficit but never got close enough this time for a winning buzzer-beater or a departing dance.
Have you heard this one before?
"I thought we were going to pull it off," Wolves forward Derrick Williams said after delivering a 24-point, 16-rebound double-double that almost got his team back to even but not quite. "I thought we were going to get this game. I think we all did. Just have to believe and have a little faith."
The Wolves jumped to an early 20-10 lead against Utah, which beat Oklahoma City in an emotional victory at home Tuesday, then energized the Jazz by allowing a 14-0 second-quarter run and surrendered a 30-12 run that ended the third quarter and began the fourth.
All of which left them trailing by 15 points with less than seven minutes remaining before they twice got within a basket in the game's final 20 seconds thanks to a big run of their own.
This late comebacks that almost get there once were commendable. Now they're just getting repetitive.