
This week in the Star Tribune, we ran a series that I helped curate on some significant "what-if" moments in Minnesota sports history. The premise was simple: take a landmark event or moment and imagine what might have have happened if that moment was changed.
As part of that series, I asked for reader feedback on other what-if moments to explore — which I will do in the coming weeks. The feedback was copious, which is good! (And also means there are a lot of regrets, but that's another matter).
Multiple readers — including Joe Nelson in an email sent last night — asked this what-if: What would have happened if Sam Cassell hadn't been injured with the Wolves during the 2004 playoffs?
As luck would have it, this week I also did a lengthy oral history on that Wolves season and specifically Game 7 of the 2004 Western Conference semifinals against the Kings. I had a chance to talk to multiple players along the way and held back a few quotes about the subject of Cassell's hip injury, the impact during the Lakers series (the Western Conference finals, which the Wolves lost in six games) and what might have been.
There is a lot of fertile ground here. Let's get to it:
*First off, in my memory Cassell didn't play at all against the Lakers. The record actually shows Cassell appeared in four games during that series — including two in which he logged at least 26 minutes (the other two were 5 minutes or less). He had 16 points and 8 assists in a Game 1 loss; barely played in a Game 2 win; had 18 points in a Game 3 loss; barely played in a Game 4 loss; and didn't play at all in a Game 5 win or a Game 6 loss.
*That said, he was clearly hobbled even when he did play — the result of what was later said to be a torn hip.
Game 1 was a tone-setter.It was 67-67 late in the third quarter. Cassell missed a three-pointer, and not long after that he left the game while the Lakers went on a big, game-defining run. He didn't play at all in the fourth quarter, and the Wolves lost by nine.