In this compressed, post-lockout NBA season, where games come fast and furious, practice time is rare. So you have to make the most of the ones you get.
Which brings us to the Timberwolves. After four consecutive losses filled with turnovers and choppy offensive execution, coach Rick Adelman and his staff spent Tuesday tweaking the team's attack. Talk about results: a 102-90 victory over the struggling Charlotte Bobcats on Wednesday at Target Center. The Wolves:
• Moved the ball wonderfully, finishing with a season-high 26 assists on 43 made field goals, with only 13 turnovers.
• Made more than half of their shots (43-for-85, .506) for the first time in nine games.
• Proved once again what can happen when an experienced coach talks and his team listens.
"You can't go out and do any contact," Adelman said after the Wolves (14-16) had handed Charlotte (3-26) its 16th loss in a row. "You have to do a mental practice, and that's what we did [Tuesday]. We did a walkthrough, we talked about it, showed 'em."
Adelman's message was clear. The Wolves were dependent on pick-and-roll plays, and teams were figuring out ways to stop it. So the team needed to tweak things, get into the pick-and-roll after moving the ball from one side to another. Get some flow to the offense and run multiple pick-and-rolls if necessary until the open shot presented itself.
And then make it.