Kelenna Azubuike scored a season-high 31 points and Anthony Randolph added 23 to help the Golden State Warriors beat the struggling Minnesota Timberwolves 146-105 on Monday night. Stephen Jackson, whose agent publicly criticized Golden State coach Don Nelson a day earlier, had 10 points and a career-high 15 assists while Monte Ellis had 18 points with 10 rebounds to lead the Warriors to their most lopsided win in more than a year. Jonny Flynn had 20 points, six assists and five rebounds while Al Jefferson added 18 points to lead Minnesota, which lost its seventh straight. The Timberwolves, who haven't won since beating New Jersey by two points in the season-opener, committed 28 turnovers. Six players scored in double figures for Golden State (2-4), which was coming off consecutive losses to the Clippers and Kings. Running Nelson's high-tempo offense to near-perfection, the Warriors scored 33 points in the first quarter and 41 in the second. The 74 points were the most by Golden State in a first half this season and the most by the team since April 8, 2008 when the Warriors scored 77 against Sacramento. Ellis and Azubuike did most of the damage in the first half. The duo combined for 26 points in the first quarter, with Ellis adding three steals and two assists as the Warriors scored repeatedly on easy transition buckets. Of their first 14 baskets, eight were layups and two came on dunks. The Timberwolves, who went into the game averaging only 91.3 points a game, couldn't keep up. Minnesota coach Kurt Rambis tried changing his lineup in an effort to shake the Timberwolves (1-7) out of their slump but it didn't help much. They fell behind by 19 at halftime and trailed by as much as 45 on the way to their seventh straight loss. Azubuike did all of his scoring in the first three quarters then spent the final 12 minutes on the bench when Nelson emptied his bench. The third-year guard shot 13 of 19 from the floor, slicing through Minnesota's defense without much resistance while coming within two points of his career best of 33 points set Nov. 2, 2007. Golden State got a big boost from Randolph, who helped fill the scoring and rebounding gap left by the absence of centers Andris Biedrins (back) and Rony Turiaf (knee), neither of whom suited up. Continued... |