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On the Ball

The Three Pointer: Sick and Twisted

Regular Season Game #3, Home Game # 2: Orlando 111, Minnesota 100

1. Not Enough Talent

The title of this trey is more than a tad melodramatic for what in many respects was the most mundane of the Wolves' three losses thus far this season. "Sick" refers to the flu bug that made Theo Ratliff a game time scratch; "twisted" is what happened to Rashad McCants' ankle late in the first quarter, sending him to the sidelines for the rest of the game.

Minus their best defender and most formidable counter to Orlando's monster wunderkind Dwight Howard, then losing their principal perimeter scorer after he'd sunk all four of his shots in 10:41 of play and actually seemed to be playing in the flow of the offense, preordained defeat this evening. Because even under the best of circumstances the Wolves don't have enough talent to beat most opponents on skill alone.

What happens instead is that players take on tasks and roles that are slightly beyond their ken. Take Greg Buckner for example. He's a consummate pro, a smart guy with a good work ethic and a fairly solid, well rounded game; a reliable 7th or 8th man on a playoff team. But Theo's sickness lands Buckner in tonight's starting lineup as Al Jefferson gets bumped from power forward to center to replace Theo against Howard; Ryan Gomes moves from small forward to power forward to guard Rashard Lewis, and Buckner slots in for Gomes. Then McCants's ankle tweak adds more playing time for Buckner, who ultimately logs 39:17 on the court. His final numbers look good: 18 points (on 7-13 FG), three rebounds and three assists.

But, with no disrespect intended toward Buckner, who has already exceeded my expectations, no team makes the playoffs having him average 13 shots (second most tonight behind Al Jefferson's 20) and nearly forty minutes played per game (a team high). He is a spine-stiffening defensive specialist, a role player called upon for toughness and stability for significant but limited doses that ideally add up to about 15-25 minutes per contest.

Inconsistency is another byproduct of players assuming roles and burdens that are slightly larger than their perfect fit. Two of the most inept Timberwolves during the club's first pair of losses--Marko Jaric and Corey Brewer--had by far their best games of the season. I'll be shocked if Jaric puts up another 10 assist/1 turnover game the rest of his days in a Wolves uniform, and if Brewer nails a pair of contested three-pointers and pulls down as many as six rebounds in the same game again between now and the end of the calendar year, it will be a pleasant surprise. Meanwhile, Ryan Gomes and Bassy Telfair had by far their wrost games of the season thus far, further complicating the team's player rotations and substitution patterms when everyone on the roster is relatively healthy. For Gomes, it evaporated some of his aura as Mr. Consistency. For Telfair it reignites questions about his viability in this league--he had an egregious, killer turnover with a minute to go and the Wolves down 6, and had another tough night shooting (1-5 FG). On a more talented and experienced ballclub, the roles are more clearly defined and players have the luxury of growing into (otherwise known as earning) them; or they get a longer grace period before they're at risk of losing them.

 

2. Wittman Improved

The litany of reasons why Coach Randy Wittman didn't have a good year last season go beyond his terrible 12-30 record (after his fired predecessor went 20-20) and have been amply discussed on this site. Promises were made by the Wolves braintrust that we'd see an improved Wittman (and thus a better ballclub) once he had the team under his control right from training camp. Yes, Witt essentially had nowhere to go but up, but there are tangible signs of a more assured and effective performance this year. For three straight games the Wolves have jumped out to large first quarter leads, for example, indicating that Wittman has his team prepared to play at the opening tip.

The coach's postgame press briefing offered other hopeful signs. Although the Wolves were once again on the short end of a free throw disparity, 44-25, Wittman appropriately blamed his team for not penetrating to the hoop and drawing fouls on offense, and too often trying for the steal or the big play instead sticking to fundamental, foot-moving defense at the other end of the floor. He pointedly noted that Orlando was in the penalty with eight minutes to play in the final period.

When he subbed in Buckner and Jefferson for Gomes and Smith with 10:44 to play in that stanza and the Wolves down 14, 76-90, I thought: He is going with veterans (Jaric, Antoine Walker and Corey Brewer were also on the floor), he must really want this game. But as Wittman explained after the game, it went beyond experience. "We tried to get the floor spread with Antoine [going small at the power forward], create plays; not settle for jump shots but get to the line," he says. The result was a 14-2 run that put the Wolves back in the game.

 

3.Hit and Run

Wittman was tough on Al Jefferson too, claiming that Jefferson was being too indecisive and not immediately aggressive the first three quarters. But I saw the "indecisive" up-fakes, a Jeff trademark fans already can embrace, as a game-long weapon in his arsenal. Any time your big man can ring up 25 points (11-20 FG) and 10 rebounds in 35:11 against a highly skilled intimidator like Dwight Howard, it is a very good night's work--especially sans McCants for three quarters.

On the flipside, this was by far the Wolves' worst defensive effort thus far this season. Playing without starting point guard Jameer Nelson, the Magic shot 56 percent from the field (18-32) and compiled a 13/2 assist to turnover ratio in the second and third quarters, a testimonial to the lack of defensive pressure provided by the Wolves. This was in sharp contrast to the 4/5 A/TO the Magic posted in the first period. I think McCants's injury played a role in that too.

Rashad Lewis temporarily silenced his many naysayers and earned a piece of that fat contract he signed during the off-season by canning three tough treys in two minutes of crunchtime, expanding Orlando's lead from 92-90 to 101-95 with less than four minutes to play.

23 Reader Comments

Shawn (not verified)07:36am
Nov 7
Jefferson was amazing, but I thought Lewis' ridiculous 7-9 from 3 point land and Rashad's injury were the key factors in the game. I'd have liked to see more Richard on Howard for defensive help. Richard was solid vs. Oden in college and has the beef/attitude to put up a fight. Please no more minutes for Walker. He sure looks done to me, and he looked done all of last year in Miami as well. Good to see Brewer get in the flow and contribute. He did a nice job of running at shooters and causing them to miss. Some good rebounds too. If/when McCants and Foye get back and are playing 35 MPG, I think this team has the chance to start winning these games. Buck becomes a good limited minutes guy, Telfair/Jaric play a more minor role, etc.
Anonymous (not verified)08:34am
Nov 7
Did everybody see that Britt is getting some references on ESPN? I fear that he might be snapped away to some larger site where he is forced to write about the Knicks or something. Stay with us Britt. Never let go! http://myespn.go.com/blogs/truehoop/0-28-268/Kevin-McHale-s-Smashmouth-Vision.html
Timby (not verified)11:57pm
Nov 7
Britt will be staying put as he has an additional new gig covering public affairs with MinnPost.com, an online news magazine, which kicks off tomorrow (you're welcome for the plug, Britt.) He's a many of many talents and sources for his writing.
Anonymous (not verified)12:46am
Nov 9
Walker was the reason we got back in the game. Did you even watch this? Walker being your scape goat is a joke. He played 22 minutes and had a plus 7. Only Walker, Doleac (who played 2 minutes) and Jaric had plus stats. Stop the Walker bashing because it is just stupid and in this case completely wrong. Walker shot horribly but he was the guy playing defense, getting the defensive rebounds and passing to ball to Jefferson for easy shots. He was the reason we got back in this game. If we want to ever win again Walker needs to play.
David Brauer (not verified)12:37pm
Nov 9
Walker and Jaric worked surprisingly well on defense one Bassy - who really can't fight through a pick - got out of their. They both played intelligently and, from what I could tell, were flawless on their switches.
Nate (not verified)08:32am
Nov 7
Marko was crazy last night! Hitting 3-pointers and everything. It actally reminded me of the first 18-20 games of the Casey era, when the Wolves were 12 and 6 at one point and were winning all those close games. Marko was hitting big shots then as well and I remember thinking, maybe this Cassell trade isn't so bad after all. Boy, was I wrong. I too, will be suprised if Marko has another 10 assist, 1 turnover night. I also notice that the man has so much trouble finishing his layups (evidence his fourth quarter miss in the closing minutes). It's too bad McCants got hurt. He was looking very smooth and natural. I think Brewer will figure it out sooner rather than later on the defensive end. I'm not too sure about offense though. His putback during the fourth quarter run was insane and him running down the court all pumped up was a good thing to see. Another 2 or 3 losses and we start debating when the first win will come rather than how many total wins.
Nate (not verified)08:34am
Nov 7
By the way, Britt, in between loudly declared lovefests for virtually every wolves player ("I love this guy!") Jim Peterson also complimented your wolves writing and mentioned the Rake. You can't buy publicity like that. (well, you actually can, but anyway)
Britt Robson09:17am
Nov 7
No one will ever accuse me of having a small ego, and all this cross talk about who's giving me kudos keeps it well fed. But I do sincerely believe that the key to this site is the depth and quality of the conversation and must reluctantly confess that things are more compelling around here when we're dissecting hoops instead of the upward arc of this blog or my career. Smart basketball people tell me they learn as much or more from the commenters as they do from me. The game-related insights you've thrown up today confirm that wisdom. Let's keep it that way and talk about basketball instead of Britt Robson.
Patrick (not verified)09:43am
Nov 7
Sadly, I missed last night's game, but based on the recap and the boxscore...the Wolves continue to please with their ability to stay in games. Given how little these guys have played together, how young they are, and how many of them are playing for contracts, we can only expect things will get better as the season progresses. Sure, we can nitpick individual performances, but the Wolves were playing most of the game without three starters. Orlando is a pretty decent team, and we stuck with them. Frankly, I don't even care about getting the win, as long as we see hard work and improvement. We'll appreciate these early season losses come lottery time. I am starting to sound like a broken record, but I just see a lot of reasons to be positive.
Geoff (not verified)09:46am
Nov 7
not to dump (too much) on Britt's former employers, but the "Balls" blog on the City Pages cain't hold a torch to this ish. I'm sure the writer is nice enough, but his work is cholk ablock full of hoops generalities and personality quirks (Marko's post-game outfit). Bottom line is it can't hold a candle to this awesome forum, something I check daily during the T'wolves season. Just curious, is this a pretty common thing to have for each city with an NBA team? Also, I live overseas and prolly won't see a game until next year. Are the foul calls costing us games, and is it just no respect refs? Am I wrong in thinking we're playing stronger than expected? And Britt, please don't blow up and abandon this forum!
Elo (not verified)10:03am
Nov 7
Brit - Why does Craig Smith only get 15 min last night while a very inept Walker gets 21 min? I really thought Smith would be getting close to 30 min a game this year. He's shooting over 60% from the field & rebounding well in his limited role. Walker is shooting 25% from the field and looks like he has lost more than a couple steps over the years. He has trouble finishing in traffic & can't hit a three.
Andy B (not verified)10:26am
Nov 7
I also would like to see Smith get minutes over Walker, Elo. But, there are a couple answers to your question. Smith was a surprise performer last year as a rookie 2nd round pick. He was a strong finisher who complemented KG well by playing close to the basket. We have a different team this year. In the middle is Big Al instead of KG. The complimentary players to Big Al are players who can spread out the floor and not clog up the middle where he operates. I don't see a long-term role for Walker on the team, but with McCants going down there are not many other players on the roster who are even a threat to shoot the Three. Defensive players still have to respect that Walker is a threat out there and they can't afford to give him a clean look at the basket. This creates the Space Big Al needs. Having Smith on the Floor instead of Walker would not have the same affect. Defensive players can afford to lay off of him if he is not on the block, and if hes on the block, they can rotate quickly to double on Al when the ball goes to him.
A.K. Agikamik (not verified)10:36am
Nov 7
Andy - Spot-on analysis with respect to Smith and his role. This season he's a fill-in, not a complement.
Elo (not verified)10:38am
Nov 7
Well when Theo is out & Big Al is playing center it seems even more strange Smith didn't get more minutes. There would be plenty of room for Al & Smith to work the paint together while having the other 3 spread the floor. Those two playing the high/low post game would be excellent. Also slashing to the paint when Big Al gets doubled is a great way to score some easy points which is something Craiggers does well. I really don't believe anybody fears Walker on the perimeter anymore.
antonymous (not verified)11:03am
Nov 7
Craig didn't get as many minutes because the Magic play a lineup with Lewis at the 4, so we matched and put Gomes at that spot to guard him. Smith just can't take Lewis, Turkoglu, or Garrity out to the 3-point line they way Buckner, Brewer, and Marko can. I'd like to see Craig with more minutes as well, but I agree with the sentiment that Craig is a better compliment to last year's team than this one. I'm not worried about him - he'll carve out a niche soon
A.K. Agikamik (not verified)10:11am
Nov 7
Not Enough Talent I don't know if there are three teams in the League who could be down a starting PG (Foye) , their go-to scorer (McCants) and their strongest inside defensive presence (Ratliff) and not suffer a lot. The Spurs could probably get by ok I suppose. Moments before Rashad was out I remarked to a nearby fan how confident and patient he looked, particularly driving the lane. I hope he and Theo are back by Friday. Wittman Improved I hope your instincts are right on this one. Witt and Shaddy probably have the most to prove this season and the most at stake. The NBA may be a "player's league" but the Wolves are, for better or worse, a coach's team. Last night was a real challenge and I think Wittman answered the call pretty well. I'm not privy to inside stuff, but the information coming out from Wittman, Hoiberg and even McHale has a much greater whiff of credibility and thoughtfulness than last season. My sense is that there was a lot of non-productive BS to hide last season that manifest itself in silence (McHale), conflicting and fast-changing double talk (Wittman) and PR song-and-dance (Hoiberg). With the team's fresh start and clear direction there is greater transparancy and many fewer landmines to worry about. That's good news for everybody. Hit and Run I agree the Wolves D was weak. There seemed to be two main issues on the perimeter D worth mentioning. One was the ease with which the Magic created mismatches on the pick and roll. Three or four times I recall thinking "uh oh" seeing a bigger, slower Wolf give up an uncontested mid-range fade away jumper to one of the Magic's little guys. The other was the impunity with which the Magic made the extra quick pass to an undefended outside shooter. Lewis was the beneficiary of some nice team ball movement with which the Wolves perimieter guys could not keep up.
antonymous (not verified)10:50am
Nov 7
Got to see my first game of the season in person last night - scored myself some free nosebleeds, but walking up to the Target Center, I did another first - bought tickets from some dude on the street. Best decision I've ever made - 4 rows up and about 50 feet off center court in exchange for the cash I brought for a beer and a hotdog. I've never sat so close, it was amazing...highly recommended for any readers who are as broke as I am. Clearly the tix were so cheap because the scalper had inside info: NO THEO. I really wanted to see him go up against Dwight, but it was not meant to be. This really would have been a different game with Theo in - Al was having difficulty creating space with those low picks set by Gomes and Smith. Of course, Jameer Nelson would have made it a completely different game as well, so no complaints. Second, I'll be the first to admit that I'm a McCants hater, but with extended minutes, this Kool Aid keeps tasting better and better. In the first quarter, he looked great - aggressive, threatening, probing. He's most dangerous when he faces up from 18 feet away - it takes away from his ability to feed Al (due to defensive strong-side collapse), but if shooters can get open on the weakside (and McCants can find them), he'll be even more effective. I hope he's alright - he laid there for awhile, then headed straight to the locker room, but not noticably limping. Any updates? Telfair can make our offense move like no PG we've ever had (in recent memory - his cousin doesn't count), but he cannot shoot, finish at the rim, or defend the pick-and-roll. He can also get complacent and telegraph passes (that rally-killing turnover sucked the life out of the Garnett Center). When a guy has had the same knocks about his game for 3 years, it tells me that he's either unable to face his flaws, or unwilling to put the hard work in to correct them. Basketball improvement can be gradually incremental, and I'll admit that he's exceeded my expectations so far (and that he's still young), but there are no more excuses at this level. When Foye comes back, we could be looking at 2 completely different teams - Foye pounds the ball into the ground and is deliberate (favoring guys who can get their own post position, like Al), while Bassy moves it around the perimeter, forcing defenses to shift and creating more passing angles. Plus we really need the depth right now if McCants's injury keeps him out - I don't want Brewer out there for 30 minutes again. It's only game 3 and I'm feeling like a broken record - we didn't create turnovers, didn't create FTs, protected the ball better than expected, and got torched by quick guard play. I agree with Britt that Gomes didn't look on top of his game (not in sync on O + didn't close out quickly on D), but at least he got to the line.
Casper (not verified)01:40pm
Nov 7
Another good read Britt. Buckner is being used much too often, I agree. But you have to admit his aggressiveness is nice to see when we've all been used to Hassell's laid back play for the past four seasons. Wish you would've mentioned Richard getting his first NBA minutes. He looked completely lost on offense when he was in the game, but was solid on the defensive end and sealed his man (most of the time Howard) from getting offensive rebounds. Better than Jefferson in fact. I think Richard next to Jefferson and Smith is the way to go. Never have Richard and Ratliff on the floor at the same time, and only have Jefferson and Smith on the floor at the same time for brief stints. That way there's a balanced frontcourt. Walker is incredibly frustrating to watch. Not only because he's missed all but one of the outside shots he's taken and shoots at a high rate, but because he "fought" Jefferson for position down low on multiple occasions (Walker, as a vet, should know better). By the way, doesn't it seem Walker is always taking the buzzer beaters? Can't wait for Foye to get back... As far as the PG situation, who knows. Telfair is a good playmaker, but has lapses and really can't shoot. Jaric had a good game, but how often can he be a good +/- guy like he was last night? Again, can't wait for Foye to get back... Keep it up.
Wim (not verified)04:48am
Nov 9
Good article; you're right on every part
Andy B (not verified)07:59am
Nov 9
This weekend is what fans like myself live for. I don't have season tickets. I get to the Target Center when I call a sports station or someone offers me tickets at a reduced price, tyopically about 3-5 times per year. I am too cheap and have too many things to do once I am home to pay for a time sucking investment in Cable television - much less NBA league pass. My evenings are full, so when I can only occasionally get away to meet a friend at a sports bar to watch the Wolves at a sports bar and when they are on 45, I can usually only steal a possession or two from Candyland, Chutes and Ladders or some other kids board game to watch the Wolves. But, a west coast trip means the kids are in bed and I can pull out a beer or two from the fridge and sit down a watch the whole game from beginning till end. That is, unless, my wife notices I am actually awake and having a beer past 10:00 pm in which case she unlikely to miss the opportunity to put on her sexiest lingerie and a bathrobe, then walk downstairs and open it just as Jefferson is about to receive a nice feed from Brewer, and is setting up Bynum for an easy bucket. Damn, what's a husband to do? Oh Well, there's always Saturday night at Sacremento to look forward to on 45 as well..
A.K. Agikamik (not verified)09:54am
Nov 9
Britt - Has the blog been changed from On the Ball to Having a Ball? Dear Andy B - My advise to the lovelorn would be to initiate rather than react. Don't make your move early, as you will miss the Wolves quick start. My suggestion would be a move from the den to the bedroom with about two minutes left in the second. If things go according to plan, you'll be back in front of the game by the beginning of the third! Now back to our regularly scheduled programming.
Patrick (not verified)01:29pm
Nov 9
A little tip for the unaware.... You can sit in the good lower level seats for $20-30 (i.e. less than 25% of face) if you go to games during the week and try scalping within 10-15 minutes of start. I did it about 5 times last year, and I can only imagine that scalping has gotten easier this year. I too am a cheap ass!
Britt Robson03:23pm
Nov 10
FYI-- I'll have another trey up on both the Lakers and Sac games in the early afternoon tomorrow.

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