The Timberwolves have to be kicking themselves for losing four games this season to Phoenix and Memphis, the two worst teams in the NBA. If the Wolves had won only one of those games, they would be facing Portland, which lost the first three games of its playoff series to New Orleans, instead of Houston, the best team in the NBA.
And after getting blown out in Houston 102-82 on Wednesday, the Timberwolves will host their first playoff game in 5,075 days on Saturday in what will essentially be a do-or-die contest.
No team in NBA history has ever come back from a 3-0 deficit in a seven-game playoff series, and the Wolves trail Houston 2-0. And even that deficit might be insurmountable as teams with 2-0 leads have won the series 273 out of 292 times.
What was so baffling about the Wolves' loss on Wednesday, after being competitive in Game 1, was that they held likely league MVP James Harden to 2-for-18 shooting, held the Rockets to their third-worst shooting night of the season (36.5 percent), and had a 23-18 lead after the first quarter.
But Houston outscored the Wolves 84-59 the rest of the way and the game was basically over at halftime.
Still, the bright spot for the Wolves going into Game 3 is they were drastically better at home than on the road this season. Their 30-11 home record was tied for the fifth best in the NBA while their 17-24 road mark ranked 16th.
After Game 2, the Wolves are left with a lot of questions. For the second consecutive game, All-Star center Karl-Anthony Towns was nowhere to be found and finished with five points, the second-lowest total of his career.
Towns played well against Houston during the regular season, averaging 23.8 points on 56.9 percent shooting. He had games of 22, 35, 18 and 20 points. That he has only 13 points in two playoff games is baffling. He's averaging 6.5 points on 27.8 percent shooting.