These aren’t your 2023-24 Minnesota Timberwolves.
Last year’s Wolves dominated teams defensively and sucked the life out of foes through that style of play. A couple five-minute stretches of endless stops and steals led to transition baskets on the other end, and usually led to curtains on the contest at some point.
These Wolves rely more on offense. They’ll score alongside you, hoping for segments of shot-making that you can’t match, and they’ll beat you that way.
Such was the case Thursday in Chicago.
Chicago exploded offensively Thursday. The Bulls shot 42% from 3-point range. The Bulls ran a layup lane through the paint for large segments of the game — and Minnesota won 135-119.
Anthony Edwards scored 13 of his 33 points in the fourth quarter, and Rudy Gobert added 11 in the fourth quarter as Minnesota scored 41 points in the first 10 minutes of the final frame before the regulars were pulled with the game well in hand.
“We picked up our energy throughout the game,” Gobert said in his postgame, television interview. “I love the way we were moving the ball in the fourth.”
While this Wolves team is not the same team that was dominant defensively — almost historically so — a year ago, they are well-equipped to take advantage of sub-par defensive teams like Chicago. Minnesota buried 16 3-pointers while scoring 66 points in the paint. All five starters scored 14-plus points.
Julius Randle had 22 points and 10 rebounds. Edwards had eight rebounds and six assists. Gobert finished with 21 points and nine boards and Mike Conley recorded 14 points and 11 assists in what was one of the most impressive evenings for the starting lineup as a unit to date.
The Wolves are now sixth in the NBA in offense at 1.17 points per possession, and 15th in total defense. It’s a complete reverse from where the team was a year prior, when it was below average offensively.
The Wolves are now one of the premier 3-point shooting teams in the NBA and one of the more dynamic offensive teams with the number of ways in which they can dismantle the opposing defense.
The Bulls (3-6) — who were on a back-to-back and without Zach LaVine and Lonzo Ball — started the game red hot, hitting six of their first seven 3-point attempts. But Chicago went ice cold in the fourth, missing a number of good looks.
Chicago scored just six points over a span that stretched nearly six minutes in the fourth.
That’s the bet Minnesota (5-3) can now make that it couldn’t in the past: It can hit shots at a more sustained rate than you can.