The Timberwolves are truly gelling this season, and it all starts with their defense, writes Dan Devine of Yahoo Sports.
After a very bumpy 2022/23 season, Minnesota has looked like an altogether different team thus far in 2023/24. At 20-5, the club is currently the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference alone, three games ahead of the second-seeded Thunder.
Devine writes that the Timberwolves currently pace the NBA in points permitted per possession, and also boast the one of best defenses of the young century.
The Wolves’ length and size helps them stand apart on that end, thanks to its fearsome frontcourt tandem of Rudy Gobert and Karl-Anthony Towns, plus its size on the wing with All-Star shooting guard Anthony Edwards and small forward Jaden McDaniels.
There’s more out of the Northwest:
- Following a 127-109 defeat of the Pacers, Indiana head coach Rick Carlisle was struck by the Timberwolves’ sheer ability, per Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic. “This is one of the best teams on the planet,” Carlisle reflected postgame. “These guys have really got it going here. The building is alive, the environment is way different than it used to be.”
- Jazz combo guard Collin Sexton remains a critical energy player for Utah this season, writes Sarah Todd of The Deseret News. His enthusiasm appears to be a big part of his charm, according to Jazz head coach Will Hardy. “I love Collin to death,” Hardy said. “His intensity, his passion, his want to win, his energy is infectious… Collin’s a very endearing person.” Through 26 contests, mostly as a reserve, Sexton is averaging 14.3 PPG on .474/.333/.884 shooting splits, along with 3.3 APG and 2.7 RPG.
- Second-year Thunder forward Jalen Williams has carved out a significant role on Oklahoma City’s new “big three,” alongside All-Star point guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Rookie of the Year frontrunner Chet Holmgren, writes Joel Lorenzi of The Oklahoman. Williams is finding his voice as a supplemental passer, as well, and figuring out how best to work in tandem with Gilgeous-Alexander and Holmgren. “I think the biggest thing for me is just realizing what spots I’m in on a consistent basis and trying to rep those out continuously over this past summer,” Williams said. “And even now I feel like I also treat games like the most live reps you can get.”