Minnesota Timberwolves Hot Shooting Leads to High Scoring Nights and More Wins

Jeffrey Farek
2 min readFeb 10, 2018

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Michael Hebert

https://zonecoverage.com/2017/timberwolves/11-17-recap-timberwolves-come-back-versus-mavericks-win-third-straight/

The Minnesota Timberwolves are improving in the last couple of games before the All-Star break, and a large part of that is shooting efficiency .

After winning three of their last six games scoring over 100 points each game, the Timberwolves are shooting 48.0 percent from the field for the season . Currently, that mark is good enough for a tie for fourth in the league.

The recent success comes as no surprise. Since guard Jimmy Butler returned to action on Jan. 27 following a knee injury, the 48.1 percent field-goal shooter has provided a boost to Minnesota.

He scored 21 points in his first game back in a 111–97 win over the Brooklyn Nets. He followed that up by averaging 28.4 points per game over the next five games, including a 30-point performance in a 118–107 win over the New Orleans Pelicans last Saturday.

While Butler leads the charge in scoring, Karl Anthony-Towns is also a big factor averaging 19.9 points per game and shooting a better field goal range of 54.2 percent.

Minnesota is in fourth place in the Western Conference and only 1.5 games back from the third-place San Antonio Spurs.

If Minnesota wants to put themselves in a favorable position in the playoffs this season, they need to continue to be a top five team in the league in field goal percentage.

An obvious direct result in better shooting is more points, and the Timberwolves have had no problem in that area. They are tied for fifth in the league in that department at 109.5 points per game.

If Minnesota can keep up with the improved shooting and continue to score at a high rate, they can possibly find themselves in a good position in the postseason.

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