The NBA rescheduled Saturday’s game between the Golden State Warriors and Minnesota Timberwolves to Sunday, because 24 hours is Adam Silver’s preferred hiatus after a federal agent commits murder. Once that happened, Coach Steve Kerr was going to rest his veterans on the unexpected back-to-back. While the shorthanded Warriors fought hard, the talent gap, quick turnaround, and mere presence of Naz Reid in an opposing jersey led to a 108-83 loss.
First, the positives. The Warriors backups still played really solid defense, holding the Timberwolves to 108 points, 12.5 less than what they’re averaging in January. Will Richard had six steals and the team racked up 14. Gui Santos had 11 points and 10 rebounds and the team was only -5 in his 26 minutes. Pat Spencer scored 10 points, dished six assists and grabbed five rebounds, and was only -10. Even Moses Moody and Brandin Podziemski were good on the defensive end of the court, helping force Julius Randle into six turnovers.
But Rudy Gobert crushed them on the boards, collecting 17 rebounds. Reid crushed them from the perimeter, with 15 points, seven rebounds, and three triples. And old friend Donte DiVincenzo hit five threes, delivered eight assists, and even blocked three shots. Gobert blocked two shots, but the Warriors eventually began running away from him, like Greg Bovino fleeing Minneapolis for a cozy retirement.
The Warriors managed to hold it together without four veterans resting for approximately one-and-a-half quarters. Richard got a steal and a score to tie the game and it looked like this rag-tag crew of Warriors just might pull off the upset.
If you’re wondering how the rest of the game went, it’s important to note that the above clip was the final one posted by @NBCSWarriors and it happened with over 60% of the game yet to play. It was also the last highlight posted by the official Warriors account on X, the everything app, because the social media team may have also been load managing tonight.
With 6:30 to go in the second quarter, Gary Payton II made a layup to give the shorthanded Warriors a 34-32 lead. On their next possession, Forever Warrior Donte DiVincenzo blocked Richard, and on the next, GPII committed an offensive foul, and followed it up by committing a defensive foul.
Gui Santos came in and immediately scored with 4:22 to go, then the offense ground to a halt. The Warriors missed seven of their next eight shots, culminating in an emphatic rejection by Rudy Gobert in the final seconds of the half. For the first 18 minutes, the game was tied 34-34. For the next six, Minnesota outscored the Warriors, 19-4.
It was a similar story in the first quarter, when the Warriors scored only two points in the last four minutes. It’s not really the players’ fault — you can’t expect a ton of offense against a strong Timberwolves defense, particularly when it’s a lineup of Spencer-Payton-Richard-Hield-Jackson-Davis.
Quinten Post acquitted himself well in 16 first-half minutes, scoring eight points and sinking two of the team’s four threes. He wasn’t quite as good in the second half but still finished with a team-leading 13 points. Yes, 13 points.
You know who had to be furious about that stat line? Post’s new arch-enemy, Joe Ingles, who once nearly blinded Duke coach Jon Scheyer during a Summer League game, while playing for the Summer Dubs.
For all you Dutch basketball enthusiasts, 6-foot-9 Nederlander Malevy Leons notched six points, his first of the season for the Dubs. He also had four rebounds, an assist, and a steal, making King Wilhelm-Alexander and Queen Maxima incredibly proud. Joe Ingles did not seem upset with him after the game.
Payton fouled out in 12 minutes, which is not good but weirdly impressive, like when a small dog eats an entire wheel of cheese. His night ended when he committed a loose ball foul going for a rebound, then fouled Gobert as he grabbed another offensive board, though GPII didn’t stop him from dunking anyway.
This game was the least-interesting thing happening in Minnesota this week and Steve Kerr may as well have been putting his team on a general strike. The Warriors reserves played with a lot of heart and might have even pulled off a win against a worse team than the Timberwolves. But even without the injured Anthony Edwards, the Wolves have seven starter-caliber players, and that’s a tough matchup for the back of the Warriors’ bench.
The road trip concludes Wednesday in Salt Lake City, where the pretending-not-to-tank Utah Jazz await. Unfortunately for the Warriors, they’re resting Lauri Markkanen and Keyonte George on Tuesday against the Los Angeles Clippers, so they might face a full-strength Jazz unit — but don’t underestimate team president Danny Ainge’s ability to put his team in contention for lottery balls.
Don’t be surprised if Jusuf Nurkic’s mysterious illness, possibly caused by him scaring Ainge with a triple-double this week, lingers through Wednesday. Also possible: Cody Williams gets a hangnail, Kyle Filipowski has an allergic reaction to postum, or Svi Mykhailiuk injures his hand trying to spell his own last name. January basketball: It’s DNP-tastic!