Wolves Updates 2/14 Part 2

Written by SG on .

 
From The Onion: Timberwolves Beat Writer Running Out Of Ways To Say 'Defeated By' 
Rob Brittson, a Twin Cities sportswriter assigned to the Timberwolves beat, has had his stock of defeat-oriented phrases almost exhausted by Minnesota recording the NBA's second-worst record, Brittson told his fellow reporters Wednesday. "Well, Nets 92, T-Wolves 88—there goes 'Hunted To Extinction,'" said Brittson, crossing the phrase off a list that once included "Roadkill," "Defanged," "Wolf's Bane," and even "Pelted!" before the dismal season began to take its toll...
 
 
 
 
Stephen Litel/Hoopsworld asked some of the Wolves who aside from Gerald Green they thought could win the Slam Dunk contest:
"Well, since I can't pick Gerald, I'm going to have to go with Rudy Gay," said Jefferson. "Dwight Howard doesn't have a chance to win it because, regardless of what he does, he's still 6-11. He could jump over the backboard and he's still not going to win."
 
    
 
 
Green has promised some special stuff, and after watching him put together some absurd dunks in Minnesota's practice facility with the help of Rashad McCants and others, it's hard to imagine Green not executing at least one crazy dunk.
 
Example A: Last week, Mr. Green converted the most difficult and ridiculous dunk this pair of eyes has ever seen. First, he lined up on the baseline at the 3-point line. After surveying the ceiling, Green threw the ball off a column at least 40 feet in the air, sprinted to the middle of the floor as the ball bounced off diagonally, rose into the air, caught the ball with one hand and drove it through the hoop. Absolutely amazing.
 
 
 
 
The signs of progress came from nowhere after a what appeared to be a hopeless 5-34 start. Now, just as quickly, the young Timberwolves are back in the tank. They have lost five in a row heading into the All-Star break, the latest a 25-point thumping at the hands of the Los Angeles Lakers that showed just how much work is yet to be done.
 
"Try to forget the last couple games," guard Marko Jaric said when asked about what he planned on doing during with his time off. "Try to reset our minds. Try to comeback and win, simply."
 
  
 
 
"Each year it seems to get longer and longer (until the All-Star Break). They call it the halfway point but we're almost 60 percent through... The break will do us good. It comes at a good time for us. We just need to get that spark back after this break. We didn't have the belief that we could win this game tonight."  

Wolves Updates 2/14

Written by SG on .

 
From 10,000 Takes: The Whit(t)man's Sampler: Minnesota Timberwolves Edition 
 
 
 
Britt Robson/On The Ball on the losses to the Nets and Raptors:
Whatever you think of him--and my bar graph on the guy rises and falls like an amusement park ride--McCants get his own shot better than anyone on the squad, leads the team not only in three-pointers made but three point percentage (40.9%), and, after falling in love with the long bomb earlier in the season, mixes that trey threat in with deft drives to the hoop. He is the only Timberwolves player who can burn an opponent for a bushel of points in a big hurry should they decide to play Ring Around the Rosey on Jefferson and dare Minnesota to beat them elsewhere.
 
  
 
Wolves guard Marko Jaric when asked if he thinks much about the trade deadline: "I do, yes. I definitely wish to play on a contender in the playoffs and try to compete for a championship. But you know what? For me right now, it's not fair, being a starting guard on this team to think about being somewhere else. So, as long as I'm here, my head is going to be here and I'm going to be 100 percent for this team and for these guys." 
    
 
 
Although it is difficult to truly gauge Foye's development at this point, the initial numbers do not impress. After missing the first 43 games of the season, Foye has averaged 7.1 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.6 assists while shooting 34% from the field in his seven games entering Wednesday's matchup with Los Angeles. 
 
  
 
Jaric has big plans for the NBA all-star break this weekend. He's headed to the Bahamas, presumably with his supermodel girlfriend Adriana Lima.
"I'm going to have company," Jaric said with a smile. "It's going to be two of us."
 
Also from Alonzo:
Wittman said center Theo Ratliff is still "a couple weeks away" from playing in games. Ratliff is on his way back from right knee surgery.
 
  
 
Scott Boeck/USA Todayon the Slam Dunk contest: 
Green, who will try to become the first back-to-back winner since Richardson, is the tallest player to win the contest since Kenny "Sky" Walker, 6-8, won it in 1989.
 
 
 
Kelli Wright/The Demopolis Times on the Theo Ratliff Center.  
 
 
 
Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor will spend the NBA all-star weekend in New Orleans helping test kids' hearing and donating 200 hearing aids to needy youngsters.
 
The Timberwolves' game against ex-Wolf Kevin Garnett and the Boston Celtics last Friday evening had a 1.4 rating on KSTC-TV, meaning a viewership of about 20,000 households, although the Wolves-Celtics game also was on ESPN.
 
 

 
 

Wolves 92, Lakers 117

Written by SG on .

Al Jefferson had 19 points and nine rebounds for the Timberwolves, who lost their fifth straight game after winning five of seven in a stretch that suggested they were slowly turning around their season of post-Kevin Garnett development.
 
"They just outworked us and played harder than us,'' said Randy Foye, who had a season-high 18 points. "A team like us, we can't take off any nights on defense.'' 
 
 
 
Wolves record: 10-41
 
 
Timberwolves Today postgame podcast 
 
Canis Hoopus game recap 
 
 
 
Weary and now 1-11 in the second half of back-to-back games, the Wolves played as poorly as early in the season. Indiscriminate with the basketball, they committed 11 of their 16 turnovers by halftime and surrendered 99 points by third quarter's end.
 
 
Led by 29 points from Kobe Bryant (who re-aggravated a finger injury) and a triple-double from Lamar Odom, L.A. dispatched a Wolves team that didn't have the guns to fire back on this evening. Al Jefferson managed 19 points and nine rebounds in 31 minutes, while Randy Foye had a season-high 18 points in a season-high 29 minutes off the bench.
 
 
 
The Wolves' defense hasn't been nearly as effective as it was a month ago. Consider this week: Sunday's 105-82 blowout loss at home to Toronto, Tuesday's 92-88 loss at New Jersey during which the Wolves shot just 36 percent, and then Wednesday's embarrassing effort.
 
 
Wolves guard Rashad McCants scored six points against the Lakers after missing Tuesday's loss at New Jersey because of a sprained right ankle.
 
 
 
The crowd in the Target Center seems to be cheering more for the Lakers than they are for the Timberwolves, chanting "MVP" for Bryant when he shoots free throws. I've also overheard fans yelling at Kobe to "Take it to him" when Corey Brewer is guarding him. 
 
 
 
4 Consecutive days off for the Wolves at the All-Star break.   

 

Lakers Sgt. Slaughter Wolves

on .

LAKERS OVER WOLVES 117-92

If there is one lasting image I have from my visit to Target Center tonight, it's this:

Coby Karl had a double-clutch dunk during the course of an NBA game.*

lakers_karl_basketball.jpg

Please read that again.  It is likely that sentence will never be written a second time.  Now soak it in.  The guy in the picture above did a double-cluth, two-handed dunk in a game against our team.  I don't think Coby Carl is allowed to double-clutch dunk in NBA2K8 much less a pick-up game.  This is the equivalent of Adam Kennedy hitting 3 home runs in one game. 

* UPDATE - Check out the NBA.com full play-by-play page.  Scroll to the bottom.  This is the exact play according to NBA.com:

Karl Alley Oop Dunk Shot: Made (2 PTS)
Assist: Farmar (3 AST)

Anyways, the Wolves lost tonight 117-92 and, as the old saying goes, the game wasn't that close.  Had the Lakers not utilized the daunting lineup of Farmar-Vujacic-Turiaf-Mbenga-Karl out on the floor for a significant portion of tonight's game (approximately 7 minutes), I think the Lakers had the potential to win by 40 points tonight.

Box Score

I did not enter tonight's game with a lot of hopes for a victory.  The Lakers, in an early entry for crime of the century (larceny), acquired Pao Gasol from the Grizzlies for 4 tins of Grizzly chewing tobacco and Kwame Brown.  This move not only makes the Lakers an instant contender for best team, it also makes an absolute matchup nightmare for the Wolves.  Can you imagine the matchup problems with Bynum back?  I actually think Gasol on Jefferson is the tougher matchup because of Gasol's length and defense.  However, beyond that position, did you feel comfortable with any of the following matchups for the starters:

Phil Jackson v. Randy Wittman

Fisher v. Telfair

Bryant v. Jaric

Radmonovic v. Turbo

Odom v. Gomes

Even with the Laker's reserves, a bench that is seriously deep in all the key spots, the Wolves just have a tough match up against this particular team.  Add in the fact that the Wolves just couldn't get the offense going for any consistent stretch during this game and you have the recipe for a slaughter.  There's really not much to add about this game, it was messy for the team on both ends and hard to watch if you're a Wolves fan.  On top of sloppy offense, the players failed to hustle to loose balls, which is something that always bothers me, and apparently bothers the 22,120 ESPN readers (see poll on right hand column).

The worry from my perspective, as someone who closely follows this team and goes to all the games, is that the team has had two uninspired performances following one of their better games of the season (albeit a loss, the Celtics game was very entertaining and a pleasure to attend).  If these past two games are a "hangover" from that defeat, then the young players have to adopt the short memory strategy that most successful teams and individuals have for both failures and triumphs.  Let's hope the break reinspires some of the pups.

Wolves Updates 2/13

Written by SG on .

When the Minnesota Timberwolves player Gerald Green goes to defend his slam dunk title at the All-Star game this weekend, teammate Rashad McCants will be with him. 
 
"Going to watch and help Gerald with the dunk contest ... I'm going to participate in the dunks, help him," said McCants. 
 
 
I think it’s a good field … and until someone dethrones Gerald, he’s the champion … I think it’s a bunch of good young guys. And to have the fans involved in the Sprite Slam Dunk competition, going on NBA.com and texting their vote, I think it will be a lot of fun. Hopefully the fans cast a fair vote, and everyone has an honest chance to win.
 
 
 
Brian Murphy/Pioneer Press on Randy Foye: 
Tuesday's game was his seventh after missing 43 with a stress reaction in his left knee. After scoring eight points and logging a season-high 27 minutes, 16 seconds against Toronto on Sunday, Foye scored seven points in 21:41 against the Nets.
 
His 4-for-10 shooting and three turnovers show he still is trying to regain his touch from last season, when Foye essentially ran the offense from the point as a rookie.
 
 
 
Previews for tonight's game against the Lakers:
 
 
 
The Lake Show plays Target Center tonight, having gone 4-1 since adding Pau Gasol in a trade with Memphis that cost LA a few bags of confetti and one of owner Jerry Buss' stained leisure suits. A victory tonight would make the Lakers 7-2 on their Grammy-avoiding road trip, which would be the NBA's best record in nine or more continuous road games since neutral-site road games were eliminated in 1975.
 
 
 
As a side note, the Nets had a chance to trade Richard for Al and Theo Ratliff back in Oct. 2006. I would have done that. Who knows what would have happened had the Nets done that. Maybe the Nets would have been in a better position to get Kevin Garnett? 
 
  
 
The photo of an unidentified youngster wearing a Timberwolves T-shirt and holding up a sign that read, "KG will always be a Wolf (No. 21) in Celtics clothing (No. 5)" in last Saturday's Pioneer Press and reprinted here was of Max Musselman, 9, son of late Timberwolves coach Bill. Max and his mom, Julie, live in Shorewood. 
 
 

Wolves 88, Nets 92

Written by SG on .

Tuesday's offensively inept 92-88 loss at the Izod Center was their fourth straight as the Wolves have to go back to the drawing board with no time for hand wringing.
 
Not with the streaking Los Angeles Lakers awaiting them tonight at Target Center and Minnesota wearing the albatross of a 1-10 record in the second of back-to-back games.
 
Poor shooting doomed the Wolves in the snowy Meadowlands as they shot a paltry 36.5 percent from the field, barely scraping above their season-worst 35-percent no-show against Portland on Jan. 2. 
 
 
 
Wolves record: 10-40
 
 
Mike Trudell/Timberwolves site has extensive notes on game as well as the team's Tuesday activites
 
Timberwolves Today postgame podcast
 
Wolves Watch game recap 
 
 
 
On Tuesday, the Nets used the same double-team strategy as before, but this time Jefferson, like his teammates, couldn’t find the bottom of the basket. This time, he made five of 18 shots and scored 16 points. But teammate Sebastian Telfair swam against the tide, reversing a recent shooting slump (8-for-17, for 24 points Tuesday) while keeping up his superlative assists-to-turnovers stats (seven assist, one turnover). 
 
 
 
Neither team showed much on either end of the court in the first 2 1/2 quarters. They combined for 92 points, shot in the 30 percent range and turned the ball over 16 times in the first half alone.
 
Minnesota made a couple of runs in the fourth quarter, getting within five points three times and eventually cutting the margin to 82-78 on a 3-point play by Telfair with 2:25 to play.
 
Also from Canavan:
Timberwolves backup G Rashad McCants missed the game. He sprained his right ankle against Toronto on Sunday 
 
 
 
Kidd finished with nine points, 10 rebounds, nine assists, and zero postgame quotes, but hardly anyone mentioned how close he came to his triple-double -- probably because the Nets were too busy fighting off the distinct possibility that they could be embarrassed by a 10-40 team in front of about 7,000 people at Izod Center.
 
 
  
34 Sebastian Telfair's differential (to the good) in assists and turnovers his last five games, 37-3.
 

Wolves Updates 2/12

Written by SG on .

Michael Grange/Globe and Mail on Al Jefferson: 
But the guy he really reminds me of is Kevin McHale, the former Celtics great and current Timberwolves general manager. All those fakes and the awkward angles of attack near the basket using his long arms to his advantage are very McHale, though he lacks him bosses’ defensive instincts. When you think of a straight out of high school guy the tendency is to expect some kind of uber-athlete like Amare Stoudamire. But Jefferson’s game is total throwback stuff: little spins and leans and hesitations complimented by great touch...
 
 
 
Myles Brown/SLAM Online on KG's appearance at the Target Center on Friday night:
As he exited the visiting locker room of the Target Center for the first time, flanked by cameramen, I saw his head hung awkwardly low for a man of such pride. Onlookers shouted deeply felt thanks and appreciation and he could barely look up. Not out of shame or frustration, but just as before, out of strength and humility. It was the look of a man trying to maintain composure as he headed towards half court. The spot where once again, he would be laid bare before our eyes. Kevin Garnett only did one thing on the basketball court Friday night and it was more than enough for everyone. 
 
 
   
Mike Trudell/Timberwolves site on the team's Monday morning practice:
Theo Ratliff continued to look good in five-on-five, full-court action; Gerald Green threw down two nasty dunks in a three-minute span; Sebastian Telfair is not slow; Rashad McCants did not practice due to an ankle tweak, and is listed as day-to-day. Furthermore, Telfair was the last man in the gym, honing a jump shot with assistant coaches as he hasn't been happy with his shooting in the last few games.
 
 
 
Guard Rashad McCants said he won't play tonight at New Jersey after spraining his right ankle during Sunday's game against Toronto. McCants, who did not practice Monday, traveled with the team but said he wasn't expecting a miracle.
 
Also from Alonzo:
Wittman said the Wolves would decide whether to recall rookie Chris Richard from the Development League after Thursday's Sioux Falls (S.D.) Skyforce game. That will be Richard's sixth D-League game.
 
 
 
Previews of tonight's game at New Jersey:
 
Click here for the forum's game thread
 
 
 
Green has mixed emotions about getting the chance to soar in front of the country. In fact, he finds it difficult to think about Saturday's competition when he's trying so hard in practice to earn more playing time.
 
"It's very difficult," he said. "Especially when I feel I should be playing. It's very difficult. But I have to go out there and do [the contest] for my fans and my family and my friends. They want to see me perform.
 
"Right now, honestly? That's the last of my worries, to tell you the truth, being the two-time dunk champ. That's fine, I would love to be there. But if I could trade that in for something else, I would." 
 
 
 
Former NBA star Latrell Sprewell's home is up for foreclosure and his yacht sold at auction to help pay off the $1.3 million he owes on the boat, according to court filings.
 
Sprewell, who once turned down a three-year, $21 million contract extension saying, "I've got my family to feed," has apparently fallen on tough times.
 
 
 
Bob Sansevere/Pioneer Press talks to Sebastian Telfair:
On whether teammate Al Jefferson will be regarded as one of the NBA's best players within the next five seasons: "If he stays at his steady pace and his growth in the game, yes. It's going to be up to us next year to get him into the All-Star Game...
 
    
 
Postgame quotes from Sunday's loss to the Raptors.  
 

Wolves Updates 2/11

Written by SG on .

Bob Sansevere/Pioneer Press talks to Mark Madsen:
My teammates would be surprised to know that I like to cook. I like to make bread. I make one kind of bread. Whole wheat. I do it by hand. I grind the wheat. I have a grinder. I have 500 pounds of wheat in my basement that's vacuum-sealed. So, anytime I want bread I just go and take a little bit of wheat and grind it. I made 18 loaves one time in four hours. I freeze them and give a few away. You could go to a grocery store and pay two or three bucks. Or, you can make your own. I haven't actually done the math on the cash savings.
 
 
 
-The Wolves began Sunday averaging 14,426 fans a game, which ranked 23rd in the NBA. That is down 1,572 fans from last season's average of 15,998, which ranked 24th.
 
-Wolves guard Rashad McCants sprained his right ankle in the first half Sunday and did not return. He is listed as day to day.
 
 
 
Hardwood Paroxysm on the team's tribute to Garnett on Friday.
 
 
 
Wolves forward Chris Richard scored nine points and had 11 rebounds Sunday in his fourth game with the team's Sioux Falls NBA Development League affiliate, putting him at 10.8 points and 11.3 rebounds a game. He is expected to play two more games with the Skyforce this week before he rejoins the Wolves after the NBA All-Star Game break. 
 
 
 
FOR a couple months now I've been saying on NBATV how much I prefer watching the baby-toothed, ego-less Timberwolves (Al Jefferson, Ryan Gomes, Sebastian Telfair, Rashad McCants, Corey Brewer, Marko Jaric and, lately, Randy Foye) than Kevin Garnett's uninspired, friction-ravaged, selfish teams the last two seasons
 
Despite being worst in the West, the T'wolves, I submit, are infinitely more appealing and acceptable to their fans, as well. There's a lot of on-the-high-rise, coachable young talent in place. Their effort every game is indisputable. And there's hope on the horizon in place of players' passports painted black.
   
 
 
The word is Theo Ratliff, the veteran of the group coming over in the trade, is practicing daily after having knee surgery. He is expected back in a couple of weeks, and once he returns, his shot-blocking ability will make the Wolves much better.
 
  
 
When Minnesota was 4-35, there seemed to be little doubt that McHale made the most lopsided NBA trade since Red Auerbach landed McHale and Robert Parish by sending the draft rights to Joe Barry Carroll to Golden State.
 
Now the centerpiece of that deal with the Celtics, power forward Al Jefferson, is averaging 21.5 points and 12.2 rebounds. Whether Jefferson can turn them into winners is debatable, but it's no player the Bulls could send to Minnesota is capable of posting those big numbers.
 

Wolves 82, Raptors 105

Written by SG on .

Their 105-82 loss to Toronto on Sunday was decided by a lopsided second half in which the three-point-loving Raptors outscored the Wolves by 19 points, including a 26-14 third-quarter advantage.
 
But the home team, so energized since they transformed a 5-34 season start by winning five of their next seven games, seemed lifeless from the start, and lost their third consecutive game before a home audience announced at 13,785 fans.
 
 
 
Wittman wanted his team to focus on its perimeter defense against Toronto, a team loaded with shooters and the NBA's most accurate team from behind the three-point line.
 
Instead, the Wolves gave up 50.6 percent shooting. The Raptors had made just one three-pointer until Jose Calderon hit two big ones with less than a minute left in the first half.
 
  
 
Wolves record: 10-39 
 
 
Timberwolves Today postgame podcast 
 
 
National Post recap 
 
 
Quite simply, if this game is indeed a hangover from Friday, the Timberwolves took a huge step backwards. For the first time in roughly a month, they showed their immaturity and lack of focus on the defensive end of the court. There's just no excuse. 
 
  
 
From the AP recap:
Jefferson entered the game averaging 30.2 points and 15 rebounds in his last six games in Minneapolis. But Toronto threw multiple defenders at Minnesota's big man, and the Wolves offense sputtered two nights after taking league-leading Boston down to the final seconds. Jefferson and Marko Jaric were 13-for-22 from the floor, but the rest of the Wolves went 19-for-56.
 
``I didn't see this coming,'' Wolves coach Randy Wittman said. ``I thought our guys would respond after even a tough loss like that.''
  
 
 
Centre Al Jefferson led the Timberwolves with 18 points and guard Marko Jaric scored 11.
 
"They just had more energy than us," Jefferson said.
 
 
 
23 Margin of defeat, Wolves' worst since a 113-82 blowout loss at Houston on Jan. 11. 

A Third Quarter Collapse

Written by Anthony Hall on .

In the first quarter, it was Marko Jaric who gave the Wolves an offensive jolt.  Jaric was on-target from the perimeter in the opening period, and helped our squad keep the first quarter deficit to only four.  In the second quarter, it was Antoine Walker.  Shimmy came off the bench and knocked down a pair of threes, bringing the Wolves back into the game when it looked like Toronto was on the verge of pulling away.

In the third quarter, though, no one stepped up for the Wolves.  Seriously, I almost fell asleep several times during the third, as absolutely nothing was happening on the offensive end for us.  No one knocked down a big shot to catalyze a run, no one could buy a bucket from the perimeter--it was one of the more forgettable quarters I've seen the Wolves play in the past few months.

Looking back at the first half, though, the player that stands out most to me is Sebastian Telfair.  My most frequent complaint of the Wolves this season is that they've looked old and slow too often, even though they're one of the youngest teams in the league.  Well, in the opening two quarters, Telfair ensured that I wouldn't be able to make that complaint about him...he was everything a young point guard should be.  He pushed the tempo, made plays with his quickness, and did a good job of distributing the ball on the break.

I hardly noticed him in the second half, and his stat line looks pretty ugly (2-10 from the field, six points...although he did have eight assists), but nevertheless, he deserves some praise for his youthfulness (is that a word?) in the first half.

I was also quite impressed with Big Al in the opening half.  Teams are pretty much doubling him every time he touches the ball, and Al's taking advantage--he's definitely shown great improvement in passing out of double teams.

One problem: The Wolves don't have anyone who can knock down a shot from the perimeter on a consistent basis, and that's been their primary downfall as of late (earlier in the year, the major problem with the team was a lack of effort...they've been playing harder lately, but still, their desperate need for a perimeter shooter has reared its ugly head more and more often over the past month or so).  Our guards have been getting open looks as a result of the constant double teams on Jefferson, but their shots just haven't been falling.

Al was also impressive on the defensive end tonight.  Guarding Chris Bosh is obviously no easy task, considering Bosh's sweet jumper and his solid power game around the hoop, but Al did a nice job of guarding the big man.  Had a few blocks on Bosh, and limited him to 14 points.

But I'm being too positive...the Wolves did lose by 23, after all.  They lost it in the third quarter, but honestly, I don't know what I can say about that period that I haven't already said in this recap.  It was a void, 12 minutes of nothingness from the Wolves.  A black hole of a quarter.  The energy that helped them remain competitive during the opening two quarters vanished.  As I said, no one stepped up.  Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld famously pitched Seinfeld as a "show about nothing"...well, the third quarter of tonight's game was a "quarter about nothing."

Despite that disappointing quarter, though, the night wasn't a total waste...we had the chance to see a host of familiar faces.  Obviously, we got a glimpse of Sam Mitchell, one of my favorite Wolves of all time (I still have his bobblehead doll sitting on a shelf along with my Terrell Brandon and Crunch bobbleheads...and yes, I fully realize that I have a terrible bobblehead collection).  Also saw Darrick Martin, who's older than Jesus.

And then, of course, there's Rasho, who played five years with the Wolves...one of McHale's many failed big men.  I've seen people in nursing homes with more toughness than Rasho.  Finally, we saw Kris Humphries, who played just under nine minutes in tonight's game.

If you were watching the game with a young, impressionable basketball player, I hope you shielded his or her eyes during Humphries' playing time tonight.  Rarely have I seen a basketball player at any level who is as selfish as he is.  I mean, if Jerry Sloan couldn't turn this kid into a more complete player, I don't know who possibly could.

In his four seasons in the NBA, Humphries has played 2,797 minutes.  He has 111 assists.  I did the math, and he averages roughly one assist per 25 minutes...so, he could play a full game of 48 minutes and still struggle to reach the lofty mark of two assists.

Humphries was taken with the 14th overall pick of the 2004 draft by the Jazz.  Al Jefferson was selected with the 15th overall pick.  How'd that one work out, Utah?

Ah, but I shouldn't kid...the Wolves received a shellacking in the second half from Humphries' squad, after all.  I'm just glad I decided against using my voucher for a free ticket tonight...because after the monotonous second half, I would have somehow still felt ripped off, had I been in attendance.

Top Stories