MIAMI – Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert had a sly smile on his face as he talked about why the team has had slow starts of late.
"Maybe we got to punch each other before the game or something like that," Gobert said. "Just to be ready to be physical."
Seemingly not lost on Gobert was that he was the one who took a swing at teammate Kyle Anderson during last season's regular-season finale, a moment that encapsulated a frustrating season that never really got off the ground for the Wolves.
But as Monday's 112-108 victory over the Heat showed, the distance between last season and this one is like the chasm between the December weather in South Beach and Minnesota.
The 20-5 Wolves took down the NBA's self-proclaimed toughest team on its home floor with a full Heat roster minus only point guard Kyle Lowry. The words "Heat culture" were everywhere in the Kaseya Center — on the floor and on Miami's jerseys. That phrase is synonymous with a type of toughness the Heat proclaim to have that others in the NBA don't, and they have two recent Eastern Conference titles to back that up.
But the Wolves went toe-to-toe and bucket-for-bucket down the stretch with the Heat and came out victorious. When Miami started hitting shots in the final minutes, the Wolves always had an answer.
"It was an incredible fourth quarter," coach Chris Finch said. "The shotmaking was at a high level by both teams."
Anthony Edwards, who finished with 32 points, had eight in the final minutes, and that included a fadeaway bank shot to put the Wolves up 109-106 with 26.1 seconds to play. That came after Tyler Herro (a team-high 25 points) cut the lead to one and the crowd was on its feet.