{"id":231380,"date":"2010-01-07T04:42:26","date_gmt":"2010-01-07T04:42:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/vip.local\/2010\/01\/07\/wolves-101-warriors-107\/"},"modified":"2010-01-07T04:42:26","modified_gmt":"2010-01-07T04:42:26","slug":"wolves-101-warriors-107","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thesportsdaily.com\/news\/wolves-101-warriors-107\/","title":{"rendered":"Wolves 101, Warriors 107"},"content":{"rendered":"
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By the time the teams went to the locker room for halftime, Minnesota had made 14 errors with the ball, leading to 19 Golden State points. No, it wasn’t exactly a 47-point pace, but considering the Warriors had committed only four turnovers of their own, leading to just four Minnesota points, they were just as damaging.<\/em><\/div>\n On a night in which the Wolves (7-29) were hoping to atone for their 41-point loss at Golden State on Nov. 9, Rambis saw disorganization in his team \u2014 defensive mistakes, players in the wrong spots on the floor on offense and even the wrong players bringing the ball upcourt at times.<\/em> But Flynn overlooked his teammates calling for the ball, streaked for the basket, and rose for a dunk.<\/em>
Most of those issues occurred in the first half. The Wolves trailed by 17 at halftime and by 19 early in the third quarter. Only a gut-check rally \u2014 trimming Golden State’s lead to three with 2:36 left in the fourth quarter \u2014 prevented the game from being a total failure for the Wolves. <\/em><\/div>\n
And missed.<\/em>
“Oh, man,” Flynn said after what he called “probably” the worst game of his young career, and the Wolves’ fifth loss in a row. “That’s how it is.”
<\/em><\/div>\n