For all the points that were scored by the Timberwolves on Saturday night at Target Center (and there were a lot — a season high, scored in a variety of ways), here was what coach Chris Finch was happiest about after a 123-95 victory over Utah:
Identity.
For the fourth time in this young season, the Wolves held a team under 100 points. For the second time in as many games, the Wolves brought the intensity needed to, as Finch has asked for, stack good performances. Perhaps for the first time since Finch got here, he has a pretty good idea of what the identity of his team is.
Defense.
"You're not going to win much unless you guard," Finch said. He's been with teams that tried to outscore opponents, but that's not something you can count on. Defense is.
"Last year I don't think we really found an identity. We did some good things; we reinvented ourselves a couple times. Coming into this year, it had to be defense. If we're going to play big, we have to do things big teams do: play physically and play good defense."
OK, there was offense, too. Anthony Edwards scored 31 points. But it was Karl-Anthony Towns (25 points) who really got things going, scoring 10 points in a 15-2 run that broke open a game that was tied in the third quarter. His two three-pointers to start the run loosened up the Jazz defense.
"I'm just happy to see that those shots came when we needed 'em the most," said Towns, who scored 15 of his team's 37 third-quarter points. "They impacted winning today."