
By MATT BECKER, STATS Writer
Since
winning their season opener 3 1/2 weeks ago, the Minnesota Timberwolves
have yet to notch their second victory of the season.
The Portland Trail Blazers have been responsible for two of the defeats on that lengthy losing streak.
Trying
to bounce back from a disappointing defeat, the Trail Blazers seek
their third victory over the Timberwolves in two weeks when the
Northwest Division clubs meet Saturday night at the Rose Garden. Tipoff is scheduled for 7 pm.
Minnesota's
season started in solid fashion with a 95-93 win over New Jersey on
Oct. 28, but the team has dropped 11 in a row since.
The
Timberwolves (1-11) suffered some narrow losses to Phoenix, the Los
Angeles Clippers and Boston at the beginning of the skid, but the
scores have rarely been close lately.
Minnesota, in the midst
of its longest losing streak since a 13-game slide from Nov. 29-Dec.
23, is coming off Wednesday's 97-84 loss to Houston, its seventh
straight defeat by at least 10 points.
"We haven't came close
in any of the games since the fourth or fifth game,'' Timberwolves
forward Ryan Gomes said. "After that, every other game has been
double-digit losses. We want to get off this losing streak, but it's
going to have to come from within.''
Two of the losses during Minnesota's skid have come against the Trail Blazers, and neither was close.
Portland (9-5) defeated the Timberwolves 116-93 on Nov. 8 and won 107-84 at Minnesota three days later.
The
victory at the Target Center on Nov. 11 was the Blazers' 10th straight
over the Timberwolves since a 94-93 loss on March 25, 2007. Portland
has also won the won the last eight meetings at the Rose Garden since
an 84-74 defeat on Dec. 7, 2005.
In the two meetings this
season, the Blazers have enjoyed a balanced scoring attack with
LaMarcus Aldridge (15.0), Andre Miller (15.0), Greg Oden (14.5), Travis
Outlaw (14.0), Martell Webster (12.0) and Rudy Fernandez (10.0) all
averaging in double figures.
Portland's offense struggled to
get in gear in Friday's 108-94 loss to Golden State, though. The
Blazers turned the ball over 23 times and made only 4 of 19 shots from
3-point range in their second defeat in nine games.
"Everything we talked about doing, we didn't do,'' coach Nate McMillan said.
Greg
Oden's foul trouble in the second half impacted Portland's
effectiveness on both sides of the floor. The Blazers yielded their
second-most points of the season after holding their six previous
opponents to 85 points or fewer in regulation.
While
Portland's defense wasn't particularly sharp against the high-powered
Warriors, it has done a solid job of shutting down Minnesota leading
scorer Al Jefferson, limiting him to an average of 13.0 points.
Jefferson,
who is averaging 15.6 points on the season, returned to the court for
the Timberwolves on Wednesday after missing the previous two contests
due to the death of his grandmother. The 6-foot-10 forward made his
first eight shots and finished with 20 points and 10 rebounds. He also
suffered an inadvertent kick to the head by Houston's Carl Landry in
the fourth quarter but remained in the game.
"We're going to
have to fight, frustrated or not,'' Jefferson said. "We're getting paid
a lot of money to do our job. We can't do it half the time. We have to
do it for 48 minutes.''
The Blazers and Timberwolves won't meet again until Feb. 27 in Minnesota.