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In Game 6 of their Western Conference Semifinals series against the San Antonio Spurs, the Minnesota Timberwolves season came to a thudding end as they were blown out for a third time in the series, 139-109.

In retrospect, the Timberwolves were likely dead on arrival coming into the series. The Spurs showed they were the better team. They did so in the regular season when they won 13 more games, and again during this playoff series when Victor Wembanyama proved to be a perfect counter for many of the Timberwolves’ offensive strengths.

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The injuries to Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo in the previous round made the already tall task of upsetting the Spurs even more unlikely. In some ways, the Timberwolves did well to drag the series to a sixth game despite being outscored by a total of 97 points.

Losing to this Spurs team, by itself, should not be met with ridicule, but regardless of the factors working against them, the Timberwolves’ performance in this series was indicative of a team not well enough equipped to win four straight playoff rounds.

The Spurs are the ultimate bad matchup. That might be true for every team in the NBA, but it is certainly true for the Timberwolves, whose frontcourt lacked the shooting and offensive playmaking to pull Wembanyama away from the rim.

The truth about the NBA Playoffs is that pretty much every team will eventually come up against a team that is a bad matchup for them. Many good and even great teams have been taken out by a team that just had their number (the Denver Nuggets being a good example).

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Championship-caliber teams, though, find a solution to every different problem thrown their way. When an opponent pokes at a weakness, they systematically find either a counter to what the other team is doing or a way to mitigate that vulnerability.

The ability to read and react to every different type of situation isn’t something that can be found during the Playoffs; it’s a skill that is cultivated during the regular season so that it becomes ingrained into the DNA of the team.

The Timberwolves never gave themselves the chance to build the necessary habits needed to win four straight playoff series. By their own admission, they did not take the regular season seriously and waited for things to change once the postseason rolled around.

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