Current:Home > StocksWolves reach conference finals brimming with talent and tenacity in quest for first NBA championship -VitalWealth Strategies
Wolves reach conference finals brimming with talent and tenacity in quest for first NBA championship
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:34:28
DENVER (AP) — The Minnesota Timberwolves reached the Western Conference finals brimming with talent, trust and tenacity after staging the biggest Game 7 comeback since the NBA began tracking play-by-play data 28 years ago.
The Wolves trailed the Denver Nuggets by 15 points at halftime Sunday night and by 20 points just over a minute into the third quarter.
With the crowd rocking Ball Arena, the Timberwolves didn’t flinch. They doubled down on their dogged defense and roared back for the most monumental victory in the franchise’s 35-year history.
They did it behind a terrific transition game and an unwavering superstar in Anthony Edwards for a stunning 98-90 victory over the reigning NBA champions.
The Wolves will face the Dallas Mavericks beginning Wednesday night at Target Center.
“The fans have been waiting for this moment, and this team has brought them this moment,” said Karl-Anthony Towns, adding that it certainly wasn’t lost on him that Sunday marked Minnesota all-time great Kevin Garnett’s 48th birthday.
“Shoutout to KG, happy birthday, KG,” Towns said. “Here’s your present from all of us.”
Garnett led Minnesota to its first conference finals 20 years ago. The Wolves lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games in 2004 and Garnett never made it back to the postseason before leaving for Boston, where he won an NBA title in 2008.
The Wolves would miss the playoffs 16 times in the next 17 years, making it only in 2018, when they lost in the first round to Houston.
Things began to turn around for the Timberwolves when they drafted Edwards No. 1 overall in 2020. They made it back to the postseason party the following year, losing to Memphis in Round 1.
After hiring head coach Chris Finch off Michael Malone’s staff in Denver, the Timberwolves hired away the Nuggets’ roster architect Tim Connelly, who built the Wolves explicitly to unseat his former team in Denver.
Connelly’s first major move was a bold get of Rudy Gobert that was as risky as it was unconventional — he sent five players and five picks to Utah for the star defender — but going big was no small part of this breakthrough season for the Timberwolves.
“I think when Tim Connelly made that trade, everybody was laughing at him like, ‘What is he doing?’ But he made a great team,” Nuggets center Nikola Jokic said as this series began.
Jokic and the defending NBA champions knew that well before losing their semifinal series in such humbling fashion to a team, like theirs, that was assembled largely at Connelly’s direction.
As Jokic noted Sunday night, Connelly’s deep, versatile roster can adapt to any style, meet any challenge and, as Sunday night showed, overcome the longest of odds.
The Timberwolves’ resolve was hardened a year ago when they lurched into the playoffs with a short-handed team that was quickly dispatched by Denver in five games in Round 1.
Fueled by that disappointment, the Wolves won 56 games this year, produced the league’s top defense and led the Western Conference for most of the season before finishing a game behind Oklahoma City and Denver for the No. 3 seed.
The Wolves made sure seeding didn’t matter.
After their four-game dispatch of the Phoenix Suns that marked their first playoff sweep in franchise history, the Wolves were unfazed by the Nuggets’ 20-5 record in the playoffs over the last two years or by their Western Conference-best 36-8 record at home this season.
The Wolves won three times in four games at Ball Arena. They took Games 1 and 2 in Denver before losing three in a row. Facing elimination, they recovered with a 115-70 demolition of the Nuggets in Game 6, the biggest win over a defending champion in NBA history.
And they followed up that win with an epic Game 7 comeback.
“The series was wild and this game was just a microcosm of the entire series,” Finch said.
Towns and Jaden McDaniels each scored 23 points in the clincher. Edwards finished with 16 points, eight rebounds and seven assists with most of his contributions coming in Minnesota’s surgical 60-37 second half that knocked out the Nuggets, who got 35 points from Jamal Murray and 34 from Jokic.
Up next are the fifth-seeded Mavericks, who reached their second conference championship in three years. They lost to eventual champion Golden State in five games in 2022, but that was before Luka Doncic had Kyrie Irving as his sidekick.
The Wolves won all three of their games against Dallas in the regular season, winning by a combined 60 points.
“Honestly, I think for us we’re just so happy for this moment, that we can’t even think about the next moment,” Towns said.
“I’m thinking about it,” Edwards playfully interrupted.
“I will say for us, if we continue to play Timberwolves basketball, it will fix a lot of problems that we may have with that team and what they do best,” Towns suggested. “So as long as we play Timberwolves’ brand of basketball, I like our chances.”
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA
veryGood! (257)
Related
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Salma Paralluelo's extra-time goal puts Spain into World Cup semifinals for first time
- Bruce Springsteen honors Robbie Robertson of The Band at Chicago show
- 'No real warning': As Maui fire death toll rises to 55, questions surface over alerts. Live updates
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Missing Arizona man found wounded with 2 dead bodies, but his father remains missing
- Police detain 18 people for storming pitch at Club América-Nashville SC Leagues Cup match
- UPS union negotiated a historic contract. Now workers have the final say
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Another Threshold candle recall? Target recalls 2.2 million products over burn and laceration risks
Ranking
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Video shows suspects steal $300,000 worth of designer goods in 'flash mob burglary'
- Katharine McPhee Misses David Foster Tour Shows Due to Horrible Family Tragedy
- 'Full circle': Why some high school seniors are going back to school with kindergarten backpacks
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Ex-NFL player Buster Skrine arrested for $100k in fraud charges in Canada
- Stock market today: Asian stocks decline after US inflation edges higher
- Arizona state fish, the Apache trout, is no longer considered endangered
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
'King Of The Hill' actor Johnny Hardwick, who voiced Dale Gribble, dies at 64
Hawaii's historic former capital Lahaina has been devastated by wildfires and its famous banyan tree has been burned
Horoscopes Today, August 10, 2023
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Celebrity hair, makeup and nail stylists: How the Hollywood strikes have affected glam squads
Cats in Cyprus treated with COVID medicine as virus kills thousands on island
Target recalls more than 2 million scented candles after reports of glass shattering during use