Chris Finch was hired to coach the Timberwolves in the middle of a pandemic season. The person who hired him, President of Basketball Operations Gersson Rosas, was fired shortly before training camp started in September, and executive vice president Sachin Gupta took charge of the front office.
The Wolves start the 2021-22 season Wednesday night against Houston at Target Center. As he continued to sort through change, the 51-year-old Finch sat down last week in New York to talk about his vision for improving a team that has made the playoffs only once since 2004.
This has been edited for brevity and clarity.
Q: Sachin said you're the ideal partner. What was your relationship like dating to your time in Houston [when Finch was an assistant and Gupta was a front-office adviser]?
Finch: Houston was a very unique environment for me because I went into the Houston organization, which was just full of guys like Sachin and just really smart people who love the sport of basketball. No egos, just easy to work with, just generating ideas out of thin air about how to look at the game differently, improve it.
I remember the first project that Sach and I ever did together. We were studying corner threes and I was looking for places on the floor where the passes came to generate the best corner threes. Some of it made sense just looking at the game, but he mapped it out. He gridified the half court and had all different color zones about the best way to create open corner threes from where you were passing on the floor.
Q: Do you still bounce ideas off each other like that now?
Finch: For sure. Probably not as experimental. It's more just, hey, I've been thinking about this. Could've been lineup combinations or it could be the way we prepare. Right now we're kind of rethinking about internal reporting. How we view our guys in performance. We call them accountability reports.