If this indeed was Kevin Garnett's last game at Target Center, what memory should be taken away?
Perhaps the impromptu standing ovation the announced 15,551 fans gave the 37-year-old in the first quarter of Friday's game after a montage of his spectacular time with the Timberwolves was played on the scoreboard, after which Garnett rose, waved and tapped his chest.
Or this: Early in the third quarter of a game already gone sideways for the beat-up Brooklyn Nets, when Garnett more than tapped Kevin Love's chest with his forearm, drawing a flagrant foul and a technical and igniting a Wolves run that sealed this one-sided 111-81 victory?
Garnett had never lost to his former team since leaving Minnesota. He was 7-0 while with Boston, with whom he won a title. He was 4-0 at Target Center. Two seasons ago Garnett came to town with the Celtics, outplayed Love, then did a little crowing on the way out of town.
Times change.
This time Garnett is on a Brooklyn team missing three starters and a top reserve to injury. This time the Wolves (8-6) were the younger, healthier and more athletic team. And it was Love who, after scoring 17 points with 16 rebounds, was talking about what it felt like to win, breaking a two-game losing streak.
"I joked with [Kevin Martin] tonight that I'm glad I didn't have to guard him in his prime," Love said of Garnett, who had eight points and eight rebounds. "Cause he was something else. He's a Hall of Fame player. He's the Big Ticket.''
But Garnett was big-time frustrated after this one, the Nets' most one-sided loss this season and the Wolves' biggest victory. Brooklyn (3-9), without Brook Lopez, Deron Williams, Andrei Kirilenko and Jason Terry, lost for the fourth consecutive game.