Aside from letting out nearly a season's worth of frustration with his rant about officiating in Wednesday's loss to Phoenix, Rudy Gobert also had a little gamesmanship in his words.
The Timberwolves' center was undoubtedly trying to influence how referees are going to officiate the Wolves in the final five games of the regular season, a stretch in which the Wolves' place in the standings could swing wildly from as high as fourth or out of the play-in tournament altogether.
That stretch starts Friday night when the Los Angeles Lakers — and NBA career scoring leader LeBron James — come to town.
Gobert took aim at a talking point fans like to spout on social media and in the comments sections of articles: that the league officiates the Timberwolves, a franchise down in the NBA pecking order, differently from other marquee names and teams.
"It's not fair. It's really not fair," Gobert said after Wednesday's game. "Every night. I've been in this league for 10 years and I try to always give the benefit of the doubt, but it's hard for me to think they're not trying to help them win tonight. It's hard for me to think they didn't try to help the Warriors win the other night or Sacramento Kings the other night. It's just so obvious. As a basketball player that's been in this league for so long, it's disrespectful."
But Gobert also had in mind some particular players he said the league would like to see in the playoffs over those on the Wolves, and he mentioned the Lakers, who are a half-game behind the seventh-place Wolves in the Western Conference playoff race.
"We understand that we're not the biggest of the markets and we're a team that – I think you want to see KD [Kevin Durant] in the playoffs, Steph [Stephen Curry] in the playoffs, you want to see LeBron in the playoffs. Timberwolves are not there yet."
Gobert's words finally laid bare some of the simmering frustration the team has had with officiating. Perhaps now that Gobert and coach Chris Finch, who was critical of the foul differential (24-16) in Wednesday's loss to Phoenix, aired it all out for the public to hear, the Wolves can move on and not get in their own heads about it during a game.