The Telegram (St. John's)

Long time coming

Winning Timberwolv­es eager for litmus test versus champion Warriors

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

The last time the Minnesota Timberwolv­es won five straight games, five head coaches and nearly nine long years ago, Al Jefferson was the centerpiec­e of the team. Kevin Love was a rookie, still coming off the bench. Fifteen different players started at least one game.

Karl-anthony Towns had just turned 13. President George W. Bush was still in the White House.

The woebegone Wolves have waited a long time for this. They will play at Golden State tonight, just one-half game behind the defending NBA champion Warriors for the best record in the Western Conference. Forget for a moment that the regular season is merely 12 per cent complete. For the first time in, well, 13 years or so the Wolves will be a legitimate participan­t in a marquee national game on ESPN rather than a token opponent.

“You want to see where you are and how you measure up,” coach Tom Thibodeau said. “Everyone in the league is chasing them.”

These Wolves (7-3) have produced the franchise’s best 10-game start to the schedule since a 9-1 record in 2001 when Kevin Garnett was 25, Terrell Brandon was the point guard and Anthony Peeler was the first player the off the bench.

With only three players who’ve been on the roster longer than three years, there

aren’t as many scars in the locker room as all that franchise futility would suggest. The last few seasons have been frustratin­g enough, though.

“It’s something that’s changing around here, and

I’m glad to be a part of it,” said Shabazz Muhammad, who with fellow reserve Gorgui Dieng has the longest tenure in their fifth year.

The 2008-09 team finished 24-58, so the early January success

was clearly not a harbinger.

The Wolves have lost 461 games between the end of that streak and now, so even three solid weeks to start a season is an accomplish­ment. Thibodeau was hired to take them much further than that, of course.

The hard-driving, no-nonsense coach sure won’t be satisfied with this team’s progress anytime soon, and neither will these players, from 17-year veteran Jamal Crawford to Towns, who’s still only 21.

“We just want to keep doing more of what we’re doing,” Crawford said after practice on Tuesday.

That’s continuing to better the defence, for one.

The Wolves have held three consecutiv­e opponents under 100 points, with newcomers Jimmy Butler, Jeff Teague, Taj Gibson and Crawford beginning to pick up the tendencies of their returning teammates and the young core of Towns and Andrew Wiggins starting to learn the principles of helping and switching under the defensive-minded Thibodeau. Chemistry is just as important when they’re guarding the basket as it is when they have the ball.

“It’s still a work in progress,’ Thibodeau said, ”but I think we are moving in the right direction.“

The depth, and the versatilit­y of that depth, is another area of vast improvemen­t. The second team, which Thibodeau has played together as a unit for several stretches at a time, includes Tyus Jones, Crawford, Muhammad, Nemanja Bjelica and Dieng. When they are in, there has not been a drop-off at all from the star-studded starting lineup.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Minnesota Timberwolv­es center Karl-anthony Towns dunks against the Dallas Mavericks during an NBA game on Nov. 4 in Minneapoli­s.
AP PHOTO Minnesota Timberwolv­es center Karl-anthony Towns dunks against the Dallas Mavericks during an NBA game on Nov. 4 in Minneapoli­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada