Timberwolves takeaways from Thunder's 118-103 Game 2 victory
Published in Basketball
OKLAHOMA CITY — In the fourth quarter of the Timberwolves’ 118-103 loss to the Thunder, Jaden McDaniels of the Wolves got tangled up with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.
As the whistle blew for a foul on McDaniels, he shoved Gilgeous-Alexander to the ground, drawing a flagrant foul.
It typified the frustration the Wolves had all night Thursday, whether it was with their inability to stop Gilgeous-Alexander, the officiating or themselves as they are now down 2-0 in the best-of-seven NBA Western Conference finals.
Gilgeous-Alexander, named the league MVP on Wednesday, finished with 38 points — 13 of those at the free-throw line.
The Wolves fell behind by 22 after three quarters and though they cut into the Thunder lead in the fourth, it was too much to come all the way back.
Anthony Edwards scored 32 points for the Wolves while McDaniels had 22.
The Thunder limited Julius Randle to just six points.
Turning point
The Wolves did an OK job fending off a Thunder run early in the third quarter, but eventually the floodgates of bad Wolves decisions and transition buckets for Oklahoma City opened.
The Thunder went on a 14-2 run as the Wolves again looked helpless on the offensive end. Randle couldn’t get anything going with the way the Thunder were defending him. He had more turnovers (four) than made field goals (two) through three quarters. He spent the duration of one Wolves timeout discussing things with the officials.
The Wolves shot just 6 for 20 in the third, were 0 for 6 from 3-point range and committed five turnovers, all of which were killers. The Thunder scored 12 points off those turnovers. Gilgeous-Alexander had 11 in the quarter. The Thunder closed on another 10-2 spurt to lead 93-71 after three.
How the rest happened
After Game 1, Wolves guard Donte DiVincenzo said he felt the Wolves didn’t do a good job making the Thunder take the kind of shots the Wolves wanted them to take in the second half of Game 1.
The Thunder appeared to pick up where they left off early in the game, as they opened the night 10 for 15 and led 21-13.
McDaniels kept the Wolves in it early with a pair of 3s as they tried to find their own offensive rhythm, which was harder to come by. The Wolves opened 10 for 28 in the first, but they were 5 for 11 from 3-point range and had just two turnovers. That helped them stay within 29-25 after one.
The Thunder kept finding enough open holes in the Wolves’ defense, whether they went zone or man, to maintain a small lead in the second. But Gilgeous-Alexander got going at the end of the quarter, as he scored the Thunder’s last 11 points entering the half. That included two after the Wolves gave up the chance at the last shot on an offensive foul from DiVincenzo, and the Thunder led 58-50 at the half.
Game MVP
The MVP of the game received his MVP trophy from Commissioner Adam Silver before the game began, then he went out and played like it. Gilgeous-Alexander couldn’t be stopped, as he went 12 for 21. When the Wolves forced the ball out of his hands, his teammates made them pay.
What it means
The Wolves have found out they need to play near perfection if they are going to win just one game in this series. Their margin of error is almost non-existent, and the possibility of a sweep is very real.
Up next
Game 3 is Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Target Center and will be televised on ABC.
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