Doncic’s late-game dagger kills Wolves’ chance of evening series
The Dallas Mavericks have a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals, and they made it hurt for the Minnesota Timberwolves.
With Luka DonÄiÄ leading the way, the Mavericks took Game 2 in a 109-108 heartbreaker for the Timberwolves. Game 3 is scheduled for 8 p.m. ET on Sunday in Dallas (TNT).
DonÄiÄ had 32 points on 10-of-23 shooting, 13 assists, 10 rebounds and, of course, the game-winner. Down 108-106 with four seconds remaining, DonÄiÄ made a stepback 3-pointer over Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert to take the air out of a Target Center that had once been enjoying an 18-point lead.
Luka DonÄiÄ did it all for the Mavericks. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)
DonÄiÄ made sure to let Gobert know what happened right after. In Slovenian, of course.
The Timberwolves had a chance to respond and even got the ball in the hands of Naz Reid, their hottest shooter of the night, but his would-be game-winner clanked out. Reid finished with a team-leading 23 points on 8-of-13 shooting (7-of-9 from 3-point range).
Minnesota was in control until early in the fourth quarter, when an 8-0 run erased the lead and left the two teams in a dogfight. The fourth quarter saw 11 different lead changes, with DonÄiÄ and Kyrie Irving exchanging haymakers with Reid and Anthony Edwards.
Irving made his first 3-pointer of the series in the fourth, then made three more the rest of the game. He could have been the goat due to three of four missed free throws in the same quarter, but made up for it with some incredible plays.
It was a brutal night for Minnesota, which thought it had a series-tying win in hand, then had to fight it out in the fourth quarter. It managed to eke out a five-point lead with a minute and a half remaining, but that was just the runway for DonÄiÄ to again take off.
And then, of course, there were the refs.
Challenge controversy looms large after Mavericks benefit from clear foul by Kyrie IrvingLess than a minute before DonÄiÄ made his shot, the Timberwolves had the ball up 108-106 with a chance to force Dallas into a foul-to-win situation. What happened next was a slow-motion disaster.
Jaden McDaniels caught an errant ball at the baseline, only for Irving to try to slap it out of his hands. Irving succeeded in dislodging the ball, but the officials called it off the Mavericks. Dallas head coach Jason Kidd challenged the call.
Replay showed Kidd had a point. The ball was clearly off McDaniels. However, it also showed that Irving clearly hacked McDaniels’ forearm to the point that he didn’t make contact with the ball at all. Unfortunately for the Timberwolves, the officials could only look at who last touched the ball. Whether a foul was committed was not reviewable because the officials did not call a foul on the play.
The officials gave the ball to the Mavericks with 47 seconds left. DonÄiÄ missed the ensuing 3-point attempt, but the turnover was a massive blow to Minnesota.
Not taking away from the game, because that Luka game winner is an all-timer, but manā¦ The NBA has to 100% fix this
On the review they CLEARLY see McDaniels was fouled, causing the ball to go off him. They canāt call a foul though & give Dallas the ball. That has to change. pic.twitter.com/jf8AaUH5pu
ā Josh Reynolds (@JoshReynolds24) May 25, 2024
It was a classic situation where rules hamstrung a well-meaning challenge system. It’s a compelling argument to slacken the rules this offseason, but that will be little consolation to the Timberwolves.
Target Center fans also had a sour taste in their mouths on what might have been the wildest play of the game, when Daniel Gafford blocked a Mike Conley 3-pointer, caught a full-court pass from DonÄiÄ and somehow made a lay-up with his body almost horizontal.
Subsequent replay showed Gafford got away with a clear push in the back of Conley.
It’s always tricky to note this kind of stuff because there are always going to be calls officials miss, it’s just that these calls are unavoidable when discussing how bad this night was for Minnesota. Especially when its top player is in a clear slump.
Anthony Edwards struggling at suboptimal time for TimberwolvesFew, if any, players have seen their profiles rise as much as Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards this season, but his past few playoff games are starting to take the shape of a major slump.
Since Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals, Edwards has shot 5-of-15, 8-of-17, 6-of-24, 6-of-16 and, now, 5-of-17. That adds up to a 33.7% field-goal percentage across five games.
Granted, the Timberwolves won two of those games, and Edwards has done plenty to add value on the court in other areas (he’s averaging 7 assists per game in the same span), but you can’t talk as much trash as he’s done this playoffs and then turn into one of your team’s offensive liabilities.
Figuring out how to jump-start Edwards will be one of Minnesota’s top priorities for Game 3, though the bigger question will be how it cools down DonÄiÄ.