That's Better: Timberwolves roll past short-handed Bucks 129-105

After a blown lead in Chicago Tuesday, there was no let up from the Wolves in Thursday's game
Minnesota Timberwolves, Anthony Edwards, Milwaukee Bucks, NBA Basketball
Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves shoots over Jae Crowder #99 of the Milwaukee Bucks during the first half of a game at Fiserv Forum on February 08, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Photo credit (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Anthony Edwards had 26 points and nine assists and the Minnesota Timberwolves shot 21 of 41 from 3-point range to trounce the slumping Milwaukee Bucks 129-105 on Thursday night.

“It feels great to make some shots, take some shots and make some shots,” Edwards said. “It was a better feeling to see my teammates make a lot of shots and take confident shots and keep shooting them, keep shooting open shots and playing their game.”

Karl-Anthony Towns scored 19 points, Mike Conley added 18, Naz Reid 17 and Rudy Gobert 16 as the Timberwolves spoiled the home debut of new Bucks coach Doc Rivers, whose No. 31 Marquette jersey hangs from the Fiserv Forum rafters.

Rivers opened his Milwaukee coaching tenure with a five-game trip during which the Bucks went 1-4.

The Bucks were operating at far less than full strength.

Damian Lillard missed a second straight game and Khris Middleton also was out because of their sprained ankles, though Brook Lopez returned after missing three games as his wife gave birth to their child.

“This was going to be a tough one if we were not injured, coming back from the trip we just came back from,” Rivers said.

Both teams had short benches after making deals before Thursday’s trade deadline.

Minnesota dealt Troy Brown, Shake Milton and a second-round pick to the Detroit Pistons for Monte Morris. Neither newly acquired Buck Patrick Beverley nor Morris was available for Thursday night’s game.

Without Lillard or Payne, the Bucks had no pure point guards.

With the game out of reach late in the third quarter, the Bucks also opted to rest Giannis Antetokounmpo for the last 16 minutes to give him as much rest as possible before they play again Friday.

Minnesota pulled ahead for good with 10 minutes left in the second quarter and led 63-53 at the half.

The Timberwolves extended their edge to 91-64 late in the third as Reid capped a 17-3 run by dunking and drawing a foul for a 3-point play. The Timberwolves eventually led by as many as 28.

It was a far cry from Tuesday's huge letdown in the second half in Chicago when the Bull erased a 22-point deficit and won in overtime.

“I thought that we made it a point tonight — KAT, Rudy, all the guys on the court — just communicating with each other, being loud, and it allowed our defense to kind of swarm and be all over the place,” Conley said. “When all those things are working together, we can have pretty good nights.”

UP NEXT

Timberwolves: Visit the Los Angeles Clippers on Monday.

Featured Image Photo Credit: (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)