Not long after the Timberwolves' furious comeback had ended frustratingly short, everyone was talking about how the game against the Golden State Warriors ended.
Ricky Rubio wanted to talk about how it began.
"We have to learn about these games," he said. "That it has to be 48 minutes."
Wednesday at Target Center, a day after two more trades had been made with an eye toward the future, the Wolves showed a couple of things. First, that the future could bring promise. But also that some lessons are being learned too slowly. Down 14 points with just under eight minutes left, the Wolves rallied tie the score twice before falling 94-91 to perhaps the best team in the league.
So it might have been tempting to revel in this moral victory. But Rubio wasn't having it. Neither was coach Flip Saunders, who said he saw a tired team on the floor, one very much needing the All-Star break.
But it was no excuse.
Wednesday the Wolves did a lot of good things. The defense was strong; Warriors star guard Stephen Curry scored 25 points, but he needed 23 shots to do it. Klay Thompson was held to 5-for-14 shooting.
But the Wolves were undone by an unproductive bench, not enough stout play inside and a slow start.