Chase Budinger, tired and sore, was dressing slowly after the Timberwolves' 99-86 loss to the Memphis Grizzlies on Saturday night at Target Center.
"That second half, we kind of just hit a wall, offensively," he said.
Actually, the Wolves kind of hit a wall, period. Maybe it was the rugged front line of Grizzlies center Marc Gasol and forward Zach Randolph, extra tough on a night when Wolves center Nikola Pekovic was out because of a sprained left ankle. Maybe it was the collective weight of playing a seventh game in 10 nights.
Whatever it was, that wall was solid, unyielding.
After building a 50-45 halftime lead, the Wolves' offense went haywire, the execution breaking down, the shots clanking off the rim, possession after possession ending with a turnover. Strong defense kept the Wolves in the game through three quarters. But in the fourth the Grizzlies turned the defensive screw one more time.
Minnesota shot 10-for-30 in the second half, getting outscored 54-36. The Wolves went the first 7:34 of the third quarter without a basket and were outscored 16-2 to start the fourth.
The Wolves also turned the ball over 17 times to just 10 for the Grizzlies. And Minnesota missed 11 free throws, hitting just 23 of 34.
After Friday's encouraging victory over Oklahoma City, the Wolves were looking for consecutive victories for the first time since Dec. 15. Now they'll have to wait a little longer.