The Oklahoman

Wolves get tough play-in foe in Clippers

- Dave Campbell

MINNEAPOLI­S – For all the strides the Minnesota Timberwolv­es made this season on both ends of the floor, proving themselves as a team on the rise with plenty of untapped potential, their entry into the NBA playoffs has still yet to be secured. Paul George and the Los Angeles Clippers present a significant roadblock.

“He takes them to a whole other level,” Timberwolv­es coach Chris Finch said.

The confident team that reached the Western Conference finals last year – and beat the Wolves three times in November when George was healthy – has the seven-time All-Star back in the lineup after a three-month absence with an elbow injury.

The Clippers visit the Wolves on Tuesday night in a play-in game for the No. 7 seed and a first-round date with Memphis. The loser must turn around and beat the San Antonio-New Orleans winner to get the No. 8 seed and a matchup with league-leading Phoenix, or else begin their offseason with the rest of the lottery-bound teams.

“We stop Paul George, we win the game,” said Anthony Edwards, who will likely have the primary responsibi­lity of guarding the 12-year veteran wing.

George had 76 points, 25 rebounds, 18 assists and four steals over those three earlier victories by 11, 20 and 27 points.

Minnesota won by 18 in the last matchup in January when George was out.

The Clippers, who finished four games behind the Wolves, have measurably more postseason experience to counteract the home-court advantage.

“I don’t really believe in that,” LA coach Tyronn Lue said. “One game, anyone can get hot or we could have a bad shooting night. We can’t ease into the game. We’ve got to be ready to go from the jump.”

The Clippers recently welcomed back another integral player, Norman Powell, from a broken foot that sidelined him for 22 games shortly after he was acquired in a trade with Portland.

“We’re in a good place,” Lue said. “Got to continue playing the right way.”

The Wolves only have Karl-Anthony Towns left from their 2017-18 team that lost in the first round to Houston, the only appearance in the playoffs since 2004 for the long-woebegone franchise. The fans have begun to come back and make the arena loud again, with Towns, Edwards and the rest of the roster giving them reasons to repeat their visits.

“This is a great sports town,” said Finch, who signed a multi-year contract extension on Monday. “If you play hard and you play the right way and you do the right things, they’ll support you.”

Well-versed

The addition of defensive ace and emotional leader Patrick Beverley this season has given the Wolves a big boost, and he’s convenient­ly the most knowledgea­ble person in the organizati­on about the ins and outs of the Clippers. Beverley spent the previous four seasons with LA. Two trades – the first one to Memphis – sent him to Minnesota.

“He talks a lot of trash, but he can back it all up,” Towns said. “So shoutout to him, what he’s done, what he’s brought this team.”

Rough stuff

The Clippers were able to disrupt Towns and his flow with the offense in their matchups this season, one of the first opponents to find success by sending a smaller forward – in their case, Nicolas Batum – to defend the All-Star center with a physical approach to the post.

 ?? WOSIKA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Timberwolv­es head coach Chris Finch, left, and guard Anthony Edwards discuss a play against the Bulls during the second quarter Sunday at the Target Center in Minneapoli­s. NICK
WOSIKA/USA TODAY SPORTS Timberwolv­es head coach Chris Finch, left, and guard Anthony Edwards discuss a play against the Bulls during the second quarter Sunday at the Target Center in Minneapoli­s. NICK

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