The Timberwolves could have taken the easy way out Tuesday in Houston. They could have rested any number of their top players, such as Karl-Anthony Towns, D'Angelo Russell and Anthony Edwards.
The Wolves were playing on a back-to-back with travel, and perhaps they could have used that as an excuse to rest players, a process some refer to as "tanking," in order to improve their draft lottery odds.
All currently healthy Wolves outside of Malik Beasley were available to play. No one rested as the Wolves beat Houston 114-107.
As coach Chris Finch made clear before the game, the Wolves have been too injured and need to figure out what they have around Towns and Russell more than they need a few extra percentage points to keep their pick in the top three of the lottery or else surrender it to Golden State.
"We told the team and certainly our core, key guys that we weren't going to go into the stretch run here with the mentality of resting anybody unnecessarily because we're trying to establish chemistry, establish identity, establish a rhythm," Finch said. "Take into the offseason a body of work that we can really assess and that's more important than anything else for us right now."
If anyone was worried the Wolves would suddenly morph into one of the best teams in the NBA after beating Utah twice, the Wolves alleviated those fears with an inconsistent game despite the win, which gave them their first three-game winning streak of the season. Finch wasn't complaining about that.
"Tough run of games here, we could've easily had a schedule loss here," Finch said. "But I was proud of the way we found a way to win."
The Wolves, who won their 999th game as a franchise, overcame a five-point fourth-quarter deficit and won without Towns available for the final 2 minutes, 21 seconds after he fouled out. The score was tied 102-102 at the time and the Wolves would score the next eight points.