Nets keep Wolves winless on the road with 119-110 win
NEW YORK (AP) Brook Lopez scored 26 points, and the Brooklyn Nets kept the Minnesota Timberwolves winless on the road with a 119-110 victory Tuesday night.
The Nets shot 55.3 percent from the field and had eight players with at least nine points, a surprisingly easy offensive performance against a young Wolves team that clearly hasn't yet grasped Tom Thibodeau's defensive schemes.
Trevor Booker added 15 points and Sean Kilpatrick had 14 for the Nets.
Andrew Wiggins scored a career-high 36 points for the Wolves, making a career-best six 3-pointers. Karl-Anthony Towns had 21 points, but scoring wasn't the problem for Minnesota.
The Wolves are 0-4 on the road and just 1-5 overall.
It was close most of the way, neither team having much luck stopping the other, and the Nets' lead was just two after Wiggins' jumper with 56 seconds left. Bojan Bogdanovic then made a 3-pointer with 37 seconds to go for a 115-110 lead, and Isaiah Whitehead and Bogdanovic closed it out with free throws.
Without injured point guards Jeremy Lin (strained left hamstring) and Greivis Vasquez (sore right ankle), the Nets got a scare in the first quarter when starter Whitehead had to leave the game after he fell onto the court and Gorgui Dieng accidentally stepped on his face. But he was able to return shortly after.
It was tied at 33 after one quarter, with the Nets shooting nearly 65 percent, and they didn't cool off much in the second, when they hit 60 percent to bring a 66-65 lead to the locker room despite 19 points from Towns.
TIP-INS
Timberwolves: The Timberwolves lost for just the fifth time in the last 15 meetings. ... Wiggins' previous career-bests were 35 points and four 3-pointers.
Nets: Randy Foye made his Nets debut after beginning the season with a strained right hamstring, scoring three points. ... Bogdanovic and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson each had 13 points.
EAST MEETS WEST
The Nets were playing their first Western Conference opponent in their seventh game, the longest they had gone into a season since moving to Brooklyn in 2012. The Wolves were playing their first East team.
SKILLED KILPATRICK
The Timberwolves once signed Kilpatrick in part because they were so short-handed they needed another player just to meet NBA rules of having eight in uniform, and he was playing in the NBA Development League close enough to arrive on time. Now he's a key contributor for the Nets, entering the game as the NBA's highest-scoring reserve with 17 points per game.
''He's still the guy that would get in a car and go to any game at any place,'' Nets coach Kenny Atkinson said. ''That guy, he's just a competitor. He's grinded through some tough times to get where he is and then he just keeps blossoming and we're giving him a lot of responsibility and he's answering the bell.''
UP NEXT
Timberwolves: Visit Magic on Wednesday to complete three-game trip. The Wolves have lost eight straight in Orlando.
Nets: Visit Knicks on Wednesday, the first matchup this season between New York's teams. It's a short journey for the opener of a five-game trip.