Making his weekly appearance with Paul Allen on KFXN-100.3 on Tuesday, Chris Finch had the sound of a confident coach.
Fresh off a pair of weekend wins in Miami and Washington D.C., Finch noted he was pleased with where the Timberwolves were at, and insinuated he felt more strong play was to come.
Which hasn’t been a guarantee at any point this season. The first third of Minnesota’s campaign was hallmarked by inconsistency. One day’s result did nothing to predict what was to come.
But the coach’s confidence has been proven correct, as Minnesota has largely looked impressive in home victories over Miami and the Cavaliers on Tuesday and Thursday, which ran the team’s winning streak to four heading into Saturday’s matinee in Cleveland.
Finch saw the way Minnesota played Sunday in Washington on the second half of a back to back – in which they delivered 48 minutes of committed basketball.
They were connected and focused. There was no fighting the game. The performance was uncommon, and a signal there was more to come.
Not only are the Wolves winning, they’re doing so in convincing fashion via the brand of basketball they strive to play – a pace-filled offense that moves the ball and makes good, quick decisions and a tenacious, disciplined defense that’s aggressive and smart.
“I just think we’re focused as a group,” Wolves forward Julius Randle said on the floor after the home win over Cleveland. “We’re maturing every single game, every single day, trusting and believing in each other every single night, and it’s fun when we play like this, so connected.”
The NBA season is flush with ebbs and flows. You aren’t going to play well 82 times out of 82. But Minnesota’s performances over the season’s first two and a half months consistently oscillated between awesome and awful.
So how did Minnesota finally get here?
“A lot of kicking and screaming,” Finch joked.
The coach has pleaded with his team throughout the season to play this way. He noted the Wolves have “seen it inside ourselves,” but only in glimpses. They’d beat the Thunder one week, then get manhandled by the Nets the next as apparent interest waxed and waned.
Until New Year’s Eve, when, as Donte DiVincenzo aptly put it: “We got our (butt) whooped.”
By 24 points to a Hawks team that’s otherwise struggled mightily over the past six weeks. When the Atlanta outcome was determined and starters were subbed out in the fourth quarter, Anthony Edwards tossed a towel and walked into the tunnel.
Finch said the losses to Atlanta and Brooklyn were “revealing.”
“I think they were quite embarrassing for us,” Finch said.
It may have been exactly what a team full of prideful players needed.
“We didn’t get too low after the Atlanta game,” DiVincenzo said. ‘We responded to coaching, we responded to film and we responded to each other.”
Edwards grew tired of showing up on film for all the wrong reasons – not boxing out his man, not chasing down loose balls, taking a contested shot when Rudy Gobert was open in the pocket.
He’s played his most complete basketball over Minnesota’s last four games.
“Just keeping everybody happy on the team,” he said. “Ultimately, that’s good.”
Everyone else has followed suit. The extra passes are being made on offense. The extra rotations are being made on defense. The extra efforts are being made all around the floor.
“We just made a commitment to playing our best basketball,” Finch said. “We challenged them and we said, ‘We’re never going to know how good we can really be until we just play better basketball every single night, with a little bit more focus.’”
If this is it – the results are really good. Over the last week, Minnesota is:
-Third in offensive rating
-Eighth in defensive rating
-Second in net rating
-First in true shooting percentage
-Second in rebounding percentage
-Fourth in pace
The Wolves had four players score 22-plus points in Thursday’s win over Cleveland, as Edwards – who became the third-youngest player to cross the 10,000 career point threshold in the win – and Randle both flirted with triple doubles.
“I think ultimately we know that we’re at our best when we play like that,” Randle said. “We’ve had moments in the season where we have and we’ve had moments where we haven’t. It’s more about finding consistency in that play style.
“We’re starting to realize how good we can be, and it’s up to us to come out and prove it every night.”
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