MEMPHIS – After Ja Morant's winning layup fell through with one second remaining in the Timberwolves' 111-109 Game 5 loss, a soft-spoken coach Chris Finch didn't pin his team's loss on its defense on that play.
He didn't pin it on the Wolves' inconsistent late half-court execution on offense, which led to yet another Memphis comeback win in this series despite a 13-point fourth-quarter Wolves lead.
"Honestly, that had nothing to do with it," Finch said. "They had like, I don't know, how many offensive rebounds in the fourth?"
The media in front of Finch told him that Brandon Clarke had seven offensive rebounds for the Grizzlies – in the fourth quarter.
"Clarke had seven alone?" Finch said. "That's the game. They had 18 [offensive rebounds] for the game. They had 12 second-chance points in the fourth quarter. That was it. That's the game."
Once again, the Wolves were left to pick up the pieces from a game they led for most of the night, of a game they should have won and a game they have no one but themselves to blame for losing. They now trail the best-of-seven first-round Western Conference playoff series three games to two.
Sloppy play permeated the night. The Grizzlies and Wolves combined for 39 turnovers, with the Wolves committing 23. Memphis shot 67% from the free-throw line and 25% from three-point range.
Game 5 was going to be won not by the team who did the most to win it, but by the team that did the least to lose it. The Wolves had Memphis beat there.