March 11, Timberwolves info

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Wolves dealing with crowded house

By Terry Brown
NBA Insider

Thursday, March 11
Updated: March 11
11:37 AM ET
The Timberwolves have lost at home to an Eastern Conference team this week. They've lost at home to a Western Conference team. In the last six games, they've also lost on the road to an Eastern Conference team and, after Wednesday night, have lost on the road to a Western Conference team.
And there seems to be only one thing in common.
Too many Timberwolves may be spoiling the pot.
When Minnesota began the year, the Wolves were without their starting point guard and small forward from the previous season, and it took them awhile to adjust to the absences of Troy Hudson and Wally Szczerbiak. They actually went 9-8 through the month of November until their replacements, Sam Cassell and Latrell Sprewell, finally worked their way into the system.
But boy when they did ...
From December to January and on through Feb. 20, the Timberwolves went 31-7 and jumped to the top of the Midwest Division. Kevin Garnett became the front-runner for the MVP award. Cassell became an all-star for the first time. And Sprewell, well, made everyone from Golden State to New York regret ever parting company with him.


Troy Hudson
Point Guard
Minnesota Timberwolves


But then, on Feb. 17, Hudson returned from his injury. On Feb. 19, Szczerbiak returned from his injury. And on Feb. 20, new center Michael Olowokandi returned from his injury.
And from Feb. 20 through Wednesday night, the team has gone 5-5.
"They were more aggressive. That was the bottom line," Sprewell said in the Pioneer Press after the Blazers defeated the Timberwolves Wednesday night, 92-79. "They were attacking us."
"They did everything they wanted after the first eight minutes," Cassell said. "Me being the point guard, I have to do a better job on Damon [Stoudemire]. The three-point shots he made were unbelievable. I thought I had good defense on him."
"They played well," Garnett said in the Star Tribune. "I can't really say anything else. We'll see them again Sunday."
Well, not only will the Timberwolves see the Blazers again, seven of their next eight games will be against playoff contenders and six of their next 10 games will be on the road.
To make matters worse, their lead in the Midwest division has shrunk to two games over the San Antonio Spurs. They're only 2½ games from falling to the fourth seed in the Western Conference. They're only four games from losing home-court advantage in the first round. And not to throw any salt in the wound, but for a franchise that has yet to ever win in the first round, that would make a world of difference.
Currently, the Wolves are the second seed and would host Houston in the first round. One drop in the standings and they're facing the Grizzlies. On more drop, and they've got the Lakers or the Mavericks. Another drop after that, only four games as mentioned before, and they're on the road against the Lakers or Mavs.
But also as mentioned before, it hasn't really mattered who the Timberwolves have played lately.
After losing to a Sixer team sans Allen Iverson, they beat the Mavs by 24 points in their very next game. But soon after that, they lost to the Celtics, a 29-37 team, at home.
No, it isn't the Sixers or the Mavs or the Celtics. A look at the statistics shows that it's the Timberwolves.


Wally Szczerbiak
Small Forward
Minnesota Timberwolves


From his February return to Wednesday night, Szczerbiak has averaged only 6.9 points per game on 40 percent shooting from the field and 30 percent from long range. Last year, he scored 17.6 points per game and has shot 50 percent from the field for his career and 41 percent from long range.
Since his February return, Olowokandi has averaged 6.9 points per game and 6.9 rebounds on 29.7 percent shooting. Kandi averaged 12.3 points per game last year and 9.1 rebounds while shooting 43 percent from the field for this career.
Since his return in February, Hudson has averaged a decent 10.3 points per game off the bench. But he scored 14.2 per game last year, and in Wednesday night's game, he played only 14 minutes and scored no points. He didn't even take a shot.
And it gets worse.
The rotation is showing no signs of finding any consistency.
On Feb. 24, Hudson played 18 minutes. On Feb. 25, he played 38 minutes. On Feb. 27, he was back down to 17 minutes.
On Feb. 24, Szczerbiak played 18 minutes. On the 25th, he was up to 23 minutes. He missed the next game and was back down to 18 minutes by Feb. 29.
Also on Feb. 24, Olowokandi played 16 minutes. On Feb. 25, he played 30 minutes and on Feb. 27 he played 32 minutes. But on Feb. 29, he was back down to 16 minutes.
And that was just in February before going 2-3 in March so far.
And it's affecting more than just the returning players.
Since Feb. 20, Sprewell is averaging 13.8 points per game after averaging 18 before that date. Cassell is also down to 17.3 after averaging 21. Of course, one would expect individual scoring to go down once more scorers returned to the lineup. But the Timberwolves never expected this.
The Timberwolves have lost four of their last six games and we can't help but remember that between Dec. 1 and Feb. 20, when the team went 31-7, Szczerbiak, Hudson and Olowokandi played a total of only nine games combined.






:)
 

elindholm

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Olowokandi's contribution is negative. The Wolves were better without him this season, just like the Clippers were better without him last season.
 

George O'Brien

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Sounds a lot like what the Suns have gone through when injured players came back. The entire team chemistry changes and it takes a while, especially when the injuried player is not at mid season conditioning.
 
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