Normally a game between two teams stuck at the bottom of the Western Conference wouldn't get much attention. But this one is different.
The Timberwolves' game Sunday night with the Los Angeles Lakers at Target Center will start with Lakers star Kobe Bryant needing just nine points to pass Michael Jordan and move into third place on the league's all-time scoring list.
Which is why, after Saturday's practice, Wolves coach Flip Saunders joked about how the team planned to defend Bryant. "We're going to go with the triangle-and-two," he said. "Three guys on Kobe, two guys on everybody else."
After having his 2012-13 season ended by a torn Achilles' tendon, Bryant returned to action in December of the following season. But, after playing a handful of games, a knee injury ended that season. This season, with the Lakers battling age and injuries, Bryant is averaging 24.5 points per game — right about his career average — through 23 games. But the Lakers (7-16) have won just two more games than the Wolves (5-17).
But Bryant's legendary intensity has not waned one bit. On Thursday, practicing with his team for the first time this month — he is usually kept out of such scrimmages to keep him fresh — Bryant ripped into his teammates, calling them "soft like Charmin." Much of the rest of his message was fairly profane.
But it appeared to work. Friday in San Antonio the Lakers beat the Spurs in overtime.
"Look, we can all criticize my style of leadership all day long," he told reporters after the game. "You can sit there and [say] it's uncomfortable, it's whatever, but I've been doing that since high school.''
Admirers now foes
Which, by the way, was a long time ago.