Imperial Valley Press

Butler shoots Timberwolv­es past James, Lakers 124-120

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL AP Sports Writer

MINNEAPOLI­S — After a lethargic loss in their last game, the Minnesota Timberwolv­es came to life.

LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers served as their spark plug.

Jimmy Butler hit five of Minnesota’s eight 3-pointers in the fourth quarter to finish with 32 points on 12-for-20 shooting and help the Timberwolv­es hang on to beat the Lakers 124-120 on Monday.

“They were playing fast, which made us play with a lot of energy, so I guess their energy kind of helped ours,” Butler said.

Karl-Anthony Towns pitched in 25 points, a season-high 16 rebounds and four blocks for the Timberwolv­es (3-4), who played some clutch defense just in time to fend o a late push from James. The four-time MVP had 10 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter after missing his first five shots of the night, but the Lakers (2-5) went back to Los Angeles with another uneven performanc­e.

“We’ve got to get better. We know that. We talk about patience, but we can’t have reoccurren­ce of doing the same things over and over and over again and expecting a di erent result,” said James, who added 10 rebounds and seven assists on the 15th anniversar­y of his profession­al debut. “That’s insanity.”

Brandon Ingram came back strong from his four-game suspension with 24 points for the Lakers. Kyle Kuzma, after scoring 11 points in the first five minutes, had only eight more over the rest of the night. The Lakers let the Wolves grab a season-high 20 o ensive rebounds and committed 18 turnovers.

Anthony Tolliver was perfect on four shots from the floor for the Timberwolv­es, including a 3-pointer to start the fourth quarter for a 96-94 lead. Butler’s back-to-back swishes from behind the arc pushed the lead to 114-107. He added one more, his fifth in as many attempts in the final period, to make it 122117. That preceded a corner miss with 16.3 seconds left by James, who had a costly turnover with 1:43 remaining when he lost the ball at the top of the key and let it drift into the backcourt.

“We’ve got to get better at the little things. One of those things is paying attention to details, following game plans. The game plan tonight: Keep them o the free throw line, and defensive rebounding,” Lakers coach Luke Walton said. “They hurt us with both of those.”

BETTER EFFORT

Rookie Josh Okogie, starting at shooting guard for the Wolves in place of the injured Andrew Wiggins, had a career-high 17 points. The defensive-minded Okogie was one of the catalysts for a team that lost at home to Milwaukee by 30 points on Friday night.

“Shots are going to fall. Shots aren’t going to fall. But we have to have that energy every single night, and that’s what’s going to get us through those humps,” said Okogie, who added four rebounds, three assists and three steals in 30 minutes.

Wolves coach Tom Thibodeau remained noncommitt­al on keeping Okogie as part of the rotation when Wiggins is back.

“He makes things happen,” Thibodeau said.

“He’s not perfect, but he’s learning, he’s eager and every day he comes in with a great attitude, and I like that he’s taking advantage of when he does play.”

INGRAM IS IN

The Lakers went with a new starting lineup to maximize their length, sliding the 6-foot-9 Ingram back to the shooting guard spot and flanking James with the sharpshoot­ing Kuzma at power forward.

They entered the night with a league-leading 22 percent of their points coming on fast breaks, but the Wolves outscored them 21-15 in transition. Ingram was 9 for 18 from the floor.

“I didn’t feel tired out there,” Ingram said. “That was surprising.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/JIM MONE ?? Los Angeles Lakers’ Brandon Ingram, left, drives around Minnesota Timberwolv­es’ Taj Gibson as Gibson reaches for the ball in the first half of an NBA basketball game on Monday, in Minneapoli­s.
AP PHOTO/JIM MONE Los Angeles Lakers’ Brandon Ingram, left, drives around Minnesota Timberwolv­es’ Taj Gibson as Gibson reaches for the ball in the first half of an NBA basketball game on Monday, in Minneapoli­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States