Here in his ninth NBA season — playing for his fifth coach, failing three times to advance — former No. 1 overall draft pick Karl-Anthony Towns finally has reached the NBA playoffs’ second round.
He and his teammates are there facing the defending champions in a Western Conference semifinals best-of-seven series that starts Saturday in Denver.
“It’s only just right,” Towns said Thursday. “Do it the Minnesota way: Take the toughest path to get to a championship.”
It’s a long time coming.
The Wolves had a losing record and missed the playoffs in five of his first six NBA seasons. Tom Thibodeau coached them to a first-round playoff exit in 2018 and Chris Finch has done so the last two seasons against Denver and Memphis.
“I’m extremely happy, I couldn’t be happier for us. I couldn’t be happier for this organization,” Towns said. “Selfishily, just personally, I’m just happy that I’ve finally got to that second round.”
This time, the Wolves won a playoff series for the first time in 20 years by sweeping a Phoenix team loaded with scorers Kevin Durant, Bradley Beal and Devin Booker that had swept them in three regular season games this year.
“We played a tremendous, explosive, highly offensive team in Phoenix, who is really good and had our number all year,” Towns said. “And we found a way to win.”