SAN FRANCISCO — The Warriors were already beaten-up heading into their matchup with the Timberwolves, and by the close of the first quarter, they had lost Draymond Green and Al Horford, too.
Slowing down Anthony Edwards turned from a difficult task to an impossible one for the undersized and undermanned Warriors in a 127-117 loss that got out of hand early.
Edwards feasted for 42 points, including a dozen at the foul line. Rudy Gobert sank eight of 10 free-throw attempts to finish with 18 as Golden State struggled to handle Minnesota’s size, speed and physicality, falling behind by as many as 25 points early in the second half.
The uncompetitive loss — and the worsening injury issues — spoiled what could have been a positive turn on the health front as Kristaps Porzingis suited up for the third time in four games. Making his first start, the 7-foot-3 center trailed only Brandin Podziemski (25) with 20 points and offered some of their only resistance against the Timberwolves’ onslaught in the paint.
The spot in the starting five was only available after Green was ruled out about an hour before tipoff. Horford, Seth Curry and Quinten Post also left the game and didn’t return.
“We’re going through it, for sure,” coach Steve Kerr said. “But you saw how hard the guys played. … Can’t ask anything more of our players right now. We’re about as beaten-up as any team I can ever remember.”
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What it means
One team was going to snap out of a skid, and it turned out to be the Timberwolves. Minnesota cruised to its first win in four games, while the Warriors’ losing streak reached a season-long four games.
Turning point
When Horford was ruled out for the remainder of the game late in the first quarter.
The veteran 6-foot-8 big man started alongside Porzingis, and it looked at first as if the Warriors would be able to counter the size of Timberwolves’ four starters at 6-foot-9 or taller.
That went out the window as soon as Horford’s right calf tightened up during his first stint on the court. With Porzingis still limited to 19 minutes, the Warriors ended up asking 6-foot-7 Gui Santos to play center for much of the fourth quarter after Post exited with a sprained left ankle.
“My only goal was just trying to take Rudy out of the way so that somebody else could grab the rebound,” Santos said. “But then you look and there’s two more guys that are really tall that are trying to fight for the rebound. It’s tough when you lose all that size.”
Minnesota bullied its way to a 52-40 edge in the paint, 23 points on 26 attempts from the foul line and 55 rebounds to the Warriors’ 45.
MVP: Anthony Edwards
Ant was unstoppable at all three levels. He facilitated easy early buckets for Gobert and Julius Randle before taking over himself, getting to the rim just as easily as he would cross over and step back beyond the arc.
Edwards finished a perfect 12-for-12 from the foul line and 13-of-22 from the field. He finished four times in the paint, found the bottom of the net five times from the mid-range and connected on four 3-pointers.
“As a defense, I think league-wide, you would be OK giving up the majority of the shots that he took,” said Podziemski, calling him a top-five player in the NBA. “Him and Shae (Gilgous-Alexander) and Kawhi (Leonard) are kind of on that level where the shots you would give up to anybody else, you probably don’t want to give up to them, and he hit a bunch of those.”
The Warriors entered halftime down by 21, 69-48, as Minnesota outscored them 38-20 in the second quarter. But they used a run of their own late in the third quarter and into the fourth to cut the deficit to single digits, 112-104 with 7:01 to play.
Edwards immediately put a stop to things with consecutive 3-pointers. Golden State wouldn’t get any closer than 10 points the rest of the way.
Stat of the game: 65.4%
Whether it was Edwards or anyone else, the Timberwolves got whatever they wanted inside the arc against a Warriors team that played long stretches of the game with only Post or Porzingis as their only player on the court taller than 6-foot-5.
Minnesota converted 34 of its 52 two-point field goals for a success rate of 65.4%. That opened things up from beyond the perimeter, where the Timberwolves also outshot the Warriors (40% to 31.3%)
All in all, Golden State clearly felt the absences pile up.
Up next
The Warriors head to the East Coast to begin a six-game road trip Sunday against the Knicks at Madison Square Garden. Steph Curry (knee) will miss at least the first portion of the trip, and coach Steve Kerr said before the game he wasn’t sure if Curry would travel with the team.