In a game gone small, Timberwolves interim coach Sam Mitchell is playing the contrarian.
While playing two point guards in the same lineup becomes more common in the NBA, Mitchell has turned to reigning Rookie of the Year Andrew Wiggins — all 6-8 of him — to start at shooting guard and be Ricky Rubio's backcourt partner after an experiment to nurture Zach LaVine at that spot lasted but three preseason games.
While coaches such as Phoenix's Jeff Hornacek and Dallas' Rick Carlisle have taken to playing two point guards in recent years, Mitchell likes Wiggins' move from small forward to shooting guard precisely because of his size and the benefits Mitchell believes it presents on both ends of the court.
"You know the NBA," Mitchell said. "You've got to [create] some matchup problems when you go out there. I like Andrew at the 2 [shooting guard]. I think it gives him an advantage because of his size."
Mitchell started the preseason schedule starting LaVine there because he believed the athleticism and shooting ability of the second-year combo guard from UCLA made him the team's future at the position. But LaVine has struggled to make a shot in six preseason games, and his presence in the starting lineup with Wiggins at small forward and rookie center Karl-Anthony Towns convinced Mitchell that lineup was too small — or not physically developed enough yet — to survive against fully grown men in the NBA.
"We were giving up size at three positions every night," Mitchell said. "I just didn't feel comfortable with that."
So he has changed course after publicly pronouncing LaVine his team's starting shooting guard of the future. Instead, he has moved Wiggins from forward to guard and started 35-year-old veteran Tayshaun Prince at small forward the past three games.
"I had some great ideas in my mind before we started training camp, and we're doing some things differently than what I had initially thought," Mitchell said. "At the end of the day, it's how it looks on the floor. You have all these great ideas, and you think things are going to work in your head and on paper. But when you actually start seeing guys play and see different combinations play, then you have to make adjustments. That's what the preseason is for, just learning. We're learning about our players every practice and every game."