After coming to Minnesota via trade, Nickeil Alexander-Walker didn't play in the three games he was with the team before the All-Star break.
But since then, the Wolves haven't had guard Jaylen Nowell because of a left knee injury and it has helped open a slot in the rotation for Alexander-Walker, who has taken the opportunity and run with it.
Over the past six games, Alexander-Walker hasn't played fewer than 17 minutes. His best performance came in Saturday's win over the Kings, when he scored 16 points.
Alexander-Walker has claimed his minutes thanks in part to his defensive effort while providing a little bit of shooting pop off the bench, a sort of hybrid between the defensive-minded Austin Rivers and the scoring of Nowell, who missed his sixth consecutive game Tuesday.
"My love for the game, all my favorite players talk about their love for the game and how they've respected the game. I just want to bring that to basketball and at the end of the day," Alexander-Walker said last week. "It's my job. I got to play hard, got to do my best and try to make an impact and help the team win."
He has done that on both ends of the floor with the Wolves. Coach Chris Finch was familiar with Alexander-Walker stemming back to the guard's rookie season in New Orleans, where Finch was an assistant at the time. Finch has compared Alexander-Walker to a utility infielder in baseball.
"He can do a little bit of everything for us — make a spot three, close out, play point guard when we need him to," Finch said. "When we got him we thought we were going to be able to use him. We didn't think of him as just a throw-in to the deal as a guy that fits the way we want to play. It took us a couple games to figure out where to fit him in."
Finch has appreciated how Alexander-Walker defends and pushes the pace on offense.