“Aspiration” is a funny word.
In one context, it’s the kind of corporate-sounding buzzword you might associate with some fake environmental company allegedly planting trees while secretly funneling money to star players to circumvent the NBA salary cap. But in medical terms, aspiration is something much less glamorous. It’s what happens when your saliva or vomit goes down the wrong pipe and ends up in your lungs instead of your stomach. It can lead to pneumonia. In severe cases, it can even be fatal.
And if you were watching the Minnesota Timberwolves Wednesday night inside the Intuit Dome, it felt like a pretty fitting metaphor. Because for the second straight game in Los Angeles, the Wolves essentially choked and flatlined.
Coming off two games where they couldn’t defend anyone and couldn’t buy a shot, Minnesota desperately needed a reset to stabilize a team that suddenly looked nothing like the group that had climbed its way into the Western Conference’s third seed just a week earlier. Instead, they ran straight into Kawhi Leonard, who looked like the Terminator if the Terminator could also hit midrange jumpers with robotic precision.
By the time the smoke cleared, the Wolves had given up 153 points, suffered a third straight loss, and fallen all the way back to the sixth seed in the Western Conference. For those of you who happen to be gluttons for punishment, let’s walk through how this thing spiraled out of control.
First Quarter: Turnovers and Kawhi’s Heater
The game started in about the worst way imaginable. In the first three minutes, the Wolves turned the ball over five times. That stretch helped spark a 12–0 Clippers run, and before anyone had even settled into their seats the Wolves were staring at a 12–2 deficit.
A Jaden McDaniels dunk and an Anthony Edwards three-pointer helped steady things briefly, trimming the score to a more respectable 18–9 halfway through the quarter. But the early damage had already been done.
Then Kawhi Leonard decided to get involved. Actually, “get involved” is underselling it. Kawhi essentially launched his own personal scoring rampage. At one point he outscored the Wolves by himself, scoring 14 points to Minnesota’s 12, pushing the Clippers lead to 28–12.
By the time the first quarter ended, Kawhi had piled up 18 points on 8-of-10 shooting, and the Clippers were comfortably ahead 38–27. At that pace, Los Angeles was tracking toward a score in the 150s, which (spoiler alert), turned out to be exactly where they ended up.
The Wolves had survived the first quarter, but it already felt like they were chasing the game.
Second Quarter: Edwards Fights Back, But Turnovers Strike Again
For a brief moment in the second quarter, Minnesota looked like it might stabilize. The Wolves actually started generating some stops, something that had been painfully absent over the previous nine quarters of basketball. Edwards knocked down another three, bringing his personal total to 10 points, and suddenly the score was 45–43.
Momentum shift, right?
Not quite.
The Wolves hit the bonus just five minutes into the quarter, repeatedly sending the Clippers to the free-throw line. That parade to the stripe helped stretch the lead back to 51–43, forcing Chris Finch to call a timeout.
To Minnesota’s credit, they responded. A quick five-point burst from McDaniels cut the deficit to 60–57, and suddenly the game felt competitive again.
But then the Wolves remembered they were playing Kawhi Leonard and that turnovers were their favorite hobby of the night. Another sloppy stretch led to an 8–0 Clippers run, and by halftime Minnesota found itself trailing 74–65.
The halftime stat that told the whole story? 15 turnovers, which Los Angeles had turned into 21 points.
The game still had the feel of a star duel brewing. Kawhi had 28 points at halftime, while Edwards had already piled up 23 of his own, but Minnesota’s sloppiness kept preventing any sustained push.
Third Quarter: Hanging Around… Barely
Coming out of halftime, the Wolves at least avoided getting immediately blown off the floor. For a while the teams traded buckets, keeping the margin within reach.
Then Kawhi and company stepped on the gas again. Back-to-back threes from Kawhi Leonard and Darius Garland pushed the Clippers lead to 95–76, threatening to turn the game into a full-blown rout.
To their credit, the Wolves finally showed some fight. Minnesota answered with a 9–0 run, trimming the deficit to 95–85 and at least giving the appearance that a comeback might be brewing.
By the end of the third quarter, the Wolves were still technically within striking distance, trailing 109–98.
And the reason they were still breathing was simple: Anthony Edwards.
Ant had taken control offensively by attacking the rim, getting to the free throw line, and picking his spots from deep. While the rest of Minnesota’s offense sputtered, Edwards kept dragging them back into the game possession by possession. It felt like one more run might make things interesting.
But that hope lasted about two minutes.
Fourth Quarter: The Clippers Slam the Door
Whatever oxygen remained in the Wolves’ balloon disappeared immediately at the start of the fourth. The Clippers came out firing, stretching the lead to 120–100 in a matter of moments. Just like that, the faint comeback hopes vanished.
From there it turned into a full avalanche.
Los Angeles ripped off another 17–6 run, pushing the lead beyond 30 and effectively ending the competitive portion of the night. With roughly half the quarter still to play, Chris Finch emptied the bench, sending out Joe Ingles and the young reserves to finish out the inevitable.
By the final buzzer, the Clippers had hung 153 points on Minnesota in an absolute demolition.
The Final Numbers
The box score told a pretty straightforward story.
- Kawhi Leonard: 45 points
- Clippers points: 153
- Wolves turnovers: 15 in the first half alone
Edwards fought hard and delivered a 36-point performance, but the rest of the Wolves never provided the support needed to make it matter. Meanwhile, Kawhi played one of those terrifyingly efficient superstar games where every shot seems automatic and every defensive mistake gets punished.
A Team That Suddenly Looks Lost
After the game, Chris Finch didn’t offer any grand explanations for what’s happening to his team. He simply noted that the Wolves currently feel like they’re “worlds apart from where they were a week ago.”
That’s probably the most honest assessment. Just days ago Minnesota looked like a team climbing toward the top of the Western Conference standings.
Now they look like a group stuck in quicksand.
The three-game skid has allowed Houston, Los Angeles, and Denver to leapfrog Minnesota in the standings. The Wolves now find themselves right back where they started, clinging to the sixth seed in the West.
What Comes Next
The road trip isn’t over. Next stop: Golden State on Friday, where Minnesota will try to snap the losing streak before things get even worse.
Because if the Wolves learned anything in Los Angeles this week, it’s that in the Western Conference standings, you don’t just slide down the ladder.
Sometimes you fall off it completely.