Wolf ends the warriors of the second consecutive session final

Minneapolis – After his thriving defending champion last year, Minnesota Timberwolves coach Chris Finch sent an order to start the season after three wins after three playoff wins.

"From day one, the challenge we challenged our guys was very simple," Finch said after defeating the Golden State Warriors in Game 5 on Wednesday. "It's a question: 'Are you a Western Conference Finals team or you just made it to the Western Conference Finals team?' And there's only one way to prove it: go out and do it again."

ESPN Research said they had a huge victory against the Warriors, hitting the goal with a 62.8% shooting percentage in the team, the third best shooting percentage for any team in the tandem game of the ESPN Cloces era. In the past 25 playoffs, 72 points from any team have also been ranked third in the playoffs.

Now, they will try to continue soaring to higher heights to reach last season’s location, by defeating defending champion Denver Nuggets in seven games, only to lose 4-1 to the Dallas Mavericks, who lost to the team’s first final with the ruins of the first final.

Wolfs center Rudy Gobert said after another strong ending (9-9 hits 8 points, 8 rebounds) "After last year's victory, I feel like you've praised you." Wolfs center Rudy Gobert said shutting down his efforts with the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round, which was a sudden person, and that's why it was so. But, we know this.

When Gobert answered, Wolves' 23-year-old superstar Anthony Edwards sat on the right side of the post-match podium, showing another star covering his age. Edwards scored 22 points, senior playoff assists, six rebounds and three blocks.

"I think the death of the ant made us start and make our appearance very early," Finch said. "As he said before the game and when the practice started yesterday- you will need everyone and be ready."

Both Gobert and Edwards contributed comprehensively. Julius Randle continued his excellent playoff run with 29 points, eight rebounds and five assists in 18. 18-year veteran Mike Conley scored 16 points on 5 of 7 shots and beat the Warriors with eight assists and six rebounds in the second round after losing to Golden in the semifinals of the game with Memphis Grizzlies. In 41 minutes, Jaden McDaniels had 14 points and 4 steals; Donte Divincenzo scored his best playoff game in the Wolves, recording 13 points on a 7-7 shooting percentage, with six assists and 4 steals on the bench.

While it felt like a big night in the building, Edwards joined Kevin Garnett as the only other Timberwolves player with at least 1,000 professional playoff points, Minnesota won the series at home for the first time since Garnett played 21 years ago, but the team has been focusing on moving forward.

"No satisfaction," Edwards said. "We're just here. We haven't (completed) anything yet."

Not satisfied, but maybe better than a year ago, as they have to take at least three days off before the finals start. The earliest start was Sunday at Oklahoma City, if the Thunder, which rose 3-2, beat the Nuggets in Game 6 on Thursday.

McDaniels talked about a better position this year. " "Seven games made us drag a little. ”

Minnesota (Sixth Seed) will be the weakest in the road in Game 1 and 2, whether Denver No. 4 or Oklahoma City's NBA overall seed advance.

Divincenzo said that wolf is very good.

"Our mentality is that no one expects us to beat the Lakers, no one expects us to beat the Warriors," Divincenzo said. "So our expectations are just united and we know no one will choose us, and we're good about it."

Although Finch challenged his team in training camp to prove they deserved the challenge in the last four NBA games, Edwards didn't hesitate to tell 37-year-old Conley they would win the championship together in Minnesota.

"What you know about him, he believes in everything he says, whatever it is," Conley said. "At that moment last year, I believed in him, and I believe we will have another chance, and this is not the end of the road."