Sam Mitchell tried philosophy. After a difficult loss, maybe that's the best option.
So Mitchell, the Wolves' interim coach, smiled and shook his head when talking about his disappointed young team.
"If one of them learns something tonight, about execution, spacing, about timing or waiting on screens, it was worth it," he said. "So I can take that.''
He had little choice after the Wolves, up three with a minute left after Zach LaVine calmly hit a 19-foot jump shot, let the game get away in a 110-106 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers at Target Center.
In early March 2012 the Timberwolves beat the Clippers in Los Angeles. It hasn't happened since. Monday's loss — the Wolves' fourth consecutive overall — was the 14th straight against the Clippers. It is the second-longest active winning streak by one team over another in the NBA.
Few were as painful as this one. And at least one of those young players, LaVine, sounded a little tired of the idea of lessons learned.
"I'd rather not learn something and get the win," LaVine said, only half-joking. "I mean, you can always learn at practice.''