Although Timberwolves head coach Chris Finch initially insisted that he was not going to make any changes to his starting lineup, according to Chris Hine of The Star Tribune.
“You guys ask me this question all the time,” Finch said. “If I felt that the magic bullet was changing the starting lineup, I would’ve done that already. I don’t think I’m being particularly stubborn. There’s a chain reaction to everything you do. There are other combinations and things that go on on the floor that are just as important if not more so than the starting lineup.”
Finch’s initial preferred first comprised guards Mike Conley and Anthony Edwards, forwards Jaden McDaniels and Julius Randle, and center Rudy Gobert. Per Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic, Finch defended the group’s struggles in the opening frame against the Pistons — and, well, the rest of the time, too. In the eventual 119-105 Detroit win, the Pistons managed to overcome a 53-point effort out of Edwards.
“In fact, our starters didn’t get us off to a poor start tonight, except they had some low energy,” Finch said. “I didn’t like their defense, particularly… But I thought that, offensively, they looked OK.”
Apparently they didn’t look OK enough, as Finch opted to swap in reserve combo guard Donte DiVincenzo for Conley ahead of a 108-106 victory over the Clippers on Monday, writes Krawczynski in a separate piece.
“I just read all the papers, and what everybody was telling me and said, ‘You know what, s–t, I should change the starting lineup,’” Finch joked.
There’s more out of the Northwest Division:
- The Timberwolves continue to seek out a new identity for the 2024/25 season, writes Vincent Goodwill of Yahoo Sports. “Every game matters, especially in the West,” Gobert said. “We have confidence in who we are and who we can be as a team, but it has to show on the court. We have to focus on the things we can control, and everything else will follow.” Goodwill writes that the club’s on-court dynamic ahead of the Clippers clash was looking remarkably shaky, and that they team has struggled to mesh with new additions Randle and DiVincenzo. Although Randle’s shooting from long range has improved significantly from his last season with New York, Goodwill notes that he has been a defensive liability.
- Trail Blazers rookie center Donovan Clingan has impressed defensively, but remains very raw on the other end, notes Sean Highkin of The Rose Garden Report in a fresh reader mailbag. Highkin projects that Clingan will be a long-term pro thanks to his already high-level defense, but notes he has a ways to go as a scorer. Highkin also predicts a long-term futures for general manager Joe Cronin and head coach Chauncey Billups and unpacks the upside of his squad’s young core.
- As the Jazz‘s youth movement begins to find its footing, Utah has started winning occasional games — which could prove detrimental to the club’s clear goal of maximizing its draft position this summer, observes Tony Jones of The Athletic. Utah is 9-25 on the year, and currently has only the fifth-best lottery odds. “The messaging doesn’t change,” head coach Will Hardy told Jones. “The players deserve all of the credit. They have dug in, and they have bought into the little things that it takes to win. This has become a cohesive group that’s committed to helping each other.