Film session is the time for every team to analyze and own up to its mistakes.
At Timberwolves' film session on Friday, coach Chris Finch wanted to own up to one he — and many national pundits — said he made during a 21-0 Grizzlies run in the second half of Game 3: not calling a timeout.
"Of course I look at all these things and in hindsight, I should've called a timeout, and that's on me," Finch said.
Finch said he told the team as much on Friday, even if he's not entirely convinced timeouts stop runs. He called two timeouts during a 15-0 Memphis run at the end of the second quarter and they did nothing to slow down the Grizzlies.
The Grizzlies rallied to win Game 3 on Thursday night at Target Center to take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Western Conference playoff series entering Saturday night's Game 4.
"Do timeouts really stop runs? I don't know," Finch said. "But we still have to execute, we've still got to put the ball in the basket, we've still got to get stops. But yeah, for sure, it's a regretful mistake, I've got to own that. I told the team in film."
Another disruption
For the third time this postseason and the second time at Target Center, there was an interruption caused by a protester at a Wolves game. And this time, it involved multiple protesters.
Early in the third quarter, a woman seated in the second row, directly behind Becky Taylor — wife of Wolves owner Glen Taylor, who was seated to Becky Taylor's left — got up from her seat and stepped on the floor, where she was quickly tackled by a security guard and removed.