Wolves Fans Can
Celebrate Losing Team
There may not be many certainties in
sports but count on the Timberwolves finishing the season with a robust
losing streak. The Wolves, 14-54, have lost 10 consecutive games, and
16 of their last 17.
To the naïve this is bad news, but to many
Wolves fans the losing streak is celebrated. The
Timberwolves have the worst record in the Western Conference having lost
six more games than
their nearest “competitor,” the Golden State Warriors, 18-48. The
disrespected New Jersey Nets have the NBA’s sorriest record at 7-60 and
are a team that probably could make a deep run in the NCAA tournament.
Of course neither the Nets nor the Wolves
basketball decision makers are much interested these days in whether you
or I respect their teams. The more pathetic the records, the greater
the odds of winning the NBA draft lottery and choosing No. 1 in the
league draft this June.
The Wolves, who never have lucked into the
No. 1 pick, could be more fortunate this year. Presumably that will
result in Kentucky point guard John Wall, 19, joining up with the
Timberwolves, already a young team with six players 24 or younger.
Wall will make the Wolves better but this
is a franchise that collectively has to improve defensively. A lot.
The Wolves rank second to last among NBA teams in defensive points per game at 107.4.
Last night they gave up a franchise record 152 points in a 152-114 loss
to Phoenix.
Coach Kurt Rambis knows the
Wolves need to make personnel changes to better that defense. The
acquisition of 7-foot, 24-year-old journeyman center
Darko Milicic in February was an example, according to the
Wolves’ first year coach. Unlike undersized power forwards Kevin
Love and Al Jefferson, Milicic can guard opposing centers
one-on-one.
Milicic has shown enough since coming here
from the New York Knicks to make the Wolves hope he doesn’t make good on
previously announced plans to play basketball in Europe next season.
His career numbers per game support the journeyman label: 5.4 points,
4.0 rebounds, but Rambis contends it often takes young players,
particularly big guys, time to mature and fulfill their potential as NBA
players. With the Wolves Milicic, who is playing part-time and
averaging about 22 minutes per game, has on occasion been one of the
team’s best players such as last week against the Denver Nuggets when he
had seven first quarter rebounds. In 11 games with the Wolves
Milicic is averaging 5 points per game and 5.5 rebounds.
Milicic’s basketball IQ is welcome on a
team that needs more smarts. He might set a timely screen, throw an
unselfish pass or make a subtle defensive adjustment to help his
teammates.
Rambis was asked last week if there was
any player, past or present who Milicic reminds him of. “I am not
saying that he relates to him or even resembles him but we were going
through a practice the other day and he was catching the basketball and
he was just throwing passes all over the place, picking out his
teammates,” Rambis said. “Corey Brewer yelled out, ‘Arvydas
Sabonis,’ which was surprising on two counts. That Corey actually
knew who he (Sabonis) was. But also just his (Milicic’s) understanding of the
game, and somebody of that size and capability who can put the ball on
the floor. He can pass; can shoot the basketball from the outside, play
with his back to the basket. …”
Sabonis, 7-4, was a legendary European
center known for his gifted passing who came to the NBA past his prime.
Milicic will never be a Sabonis but if he plays effectively in the
Wolves’ 14 remaining regular season games, he will create some optimism
about the franchise’s future. If Milicic is not so good, he helps in
the drive to finish last in the Western Conference and luck into lottery
bliss.