Chris Finch didn't have spreadsheets that projected points per possession or shot values when he was coaching and making personnel decisions for a team in Bree, Belgium, more than 15 years ago.
He only had Bree's budget, and the numbers told him he couldn't afford to sign any good — or even average — 7-foot centers, especially not when he was competing with bigger-budget clubs in other countries.
"We just didn't have the money to pay them," Finch said.
What Finch did next proved to be the most fortuitous decision of his coaching career: "Why don't we just be different?"
As in, why bother playing with a traditional 7-foot center, especially if he couldn't afford a decent one?
"Why don't we just play with smaller undersized bigs and a lot of shooting, run up and down and see if that works?" Finch said.
It did. And although Finch didn't know it at the time, his style of play predated a similar wave that was coming to America.
That decision led to success in Belgium, and it sent Finch down a path that 17 years later would bring him to Minnesota as the Timberwolves' coach on Feb. 21. The challenge is steep. He's 8-18 through 26 games as the Wolves have the NBA's second-worst record (15-42).