The Commercial Appeal

Timberwolv­es star finding joy again

- Jeff Zillgitt

The feeling, that’s what matters. Karl-anthony Towns can’t recall the date. He can’t remember the month. Early in the season. Late October, maybe November.

But the feeling, that he knows. “There was this one morning I walked into the practice facility,” Towns explained. “I’m usually one of the first ones there before trainers and anyone gets there. I walked in and found myself smiling in the weight room, happy to be here, happy to be in the gym this early, happy to see everybody come to work and get to practice.

“That’s a different feeling than I’ve had in a long time.”

That feeling is important, especially for Towns whose past two seasons have been marked by immeasurab­le loss. His mom, Jacqueline Cruz, and six other family members died from COVID-19 in 2020.

“I’ve seen a lot of coffins in the last seven months,” Towns said before the start of the 2020-21 season.

His relationsh­ip with basketball — so often celebrated with his mom watching — was fractured.

Grief has no timeline.

We are shaped by our losses.

The hope is that light breaks through the darkness.

“This season brought me closer to basketball,” Towns said. “Me and basketball essentiall­y had a disconnect in the relationsh­ip even though I was performing at a high level. It wasn’t the same, and this year, I’ve grown closer to basketball.”

That is apparent on the court where Towns averaged 24.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 1.1 blocks and one steal and shot 52.9% from the field, 41% on 3-pointers and 82.2% on free throws.

It might not be Towns’ best statistica­l season but couple it with everything he’s gone through in the past two years — including getting hit by a car and getting COVID — and Minnesota’s successful season, it might be his best overall season. He is headed for his second ALLNBA selection.

Minnesota emerged this season as

more than just a feisty young team centered around Towns, D’angelo Russell and Anthony Edwards.

“He enjoys his teammates and has great support from them,” Timberwolv­es coach Chris Finch said. “He feels very much a part of this. We have a young and very close team and he feels very much a part of that fabric, and maybe in years past, he felt like an outsider on his own team, which is a tough place to be. He believes heavily in his teammates and coaching staff. Great players need hope. They need to have hope that what they’re surrounded by is good enough to help them win at the highest level.”

These Timberwolv­es have a different demeanor — a confidence that walks right up to the line of arrogance.

Timberwolv­es guard Patrick Beverley knew the reputation the Timberwolv­es had before he arrived. He called prior Timberwolv­es teams “swagless.”

“This year is very different,” Beverley said. “We know exactly who we are.

We’re not backing down from anybody — humbly, though, not arrogant. We’re comfortabl­e in our skins. We’re not running from smoke or ducking action. We want to show the league this is a team that’s going to be talked about for the next couple of years for sure.”

Edwards, the second-year guard, added swag and talent. His confidence overflows, and his 30-point performanc­e in a 109-104 play-in game victory against the Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday helped the Timberwolv­es reach the playoffs for just the second time since 2004. This was also the Timberwolv­es’ second-best season since 2004, and Towns’ play was a big part of that.

“This difference this year more than any other year is he’s driving winning and probably his efficiency is higher,” Finch said. “He’s having one of the most efficient offensive seasons he’s ever had and across the league with top players, I would imagine his efficiency is right up there. I also believe it’s just more than offensive. Defensivel­y, he’s made a strong impact for us. He’s also rounding out his game. He does it all. He’s not a one- or two-dimensiona­l player. He’s a five-tool player.”

The Timberwolv­es scored 116.9 points per 100 possession­s with Towns, who scored NBA season-high 60 points against San Antonio, on the court this season. It is the highest offensive rating for Towns in his seven seasons. And that’s with an increased defensive focus on Towns from opponents — doubleteam­s, triple-teams, denying him the ball.

That’s what the Clippers did in the play-in game, and Towns scored just 11 points on 3-of-11 shooting. But Edwards and Russell (29 points) came through.

“He’s done a great job of not fighting the game,” Finch said. “Whatever the defense is doing, he’s using it to create open shots for his teammates. When he touches the ball, it almost always leads to a good look for himself or his teammates just because of the gravity he has on the court. We’ve seen a lot of different looks with him. …

“He’s done a good job of adjusting to those things on the fly. He feels way more comfortabl­e and doesn’t get as unsettled by it. He has a lot more poise and understand­s, ‘This is how I’m going to benefit the team tonight.’ ”

Of course, the Timberwolv­es need more offensive production from Towns in their first-round series against the second-seeded Memphis Grizzlies that begins on Saturday.

Winning is important but never as important as having joy in life. The victory on Tuesday coincides with the anniversar­y of his mom’s death two years ago.

“Just shows you the kind of person he is, and how myself and wife – may she rest in peace – built that into him,” Karl Towns Sr. said. “Despite adversity, he can still be that guy. To me, that means more than anything. It’s not about his game. It’s about showing he’s matured as a man. ‘Dad, I’m OK.’ I just wanted to make sure he’s OK physically and mentally and that to me is more important than the game. He’s been able to fight, stay strong and just prosper. And I’m so happy.”

 ?? DARREN ABATE/AP ?? Karl-anthony Towns is doused by teammate D'angelo Russell, rear, after his 60-point game against the Spurs last month.
DARREN ABATE/AP Karl-anthony Towns is doused by teammate D'angelo Russell, rear, after his 60-point game against the Spurs last month.

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