The Minnesota Timberwolves look lost.

After another ugly performance—this one a 24-point loss to the Atlanta Hawks on New Year’s Eve—the questions surrounding Minnesota are growing louder and more uncomfortable. A team with championship aspirations continues to come out flat, unfocused, and unprepared. And now a conversation once considered preposterous is gaining steam:

Is it time for the Timberwolves to move on from head coach Chris Finch?

Lackluster Efforts

Against Atlanta, the Wolves sleepwalked through the first half, showing little urgency or cohesion while digging themselves into a 21-point halftime deficit they couldn’t overcome. It was a familiar script. Minnesota has repeatedly opened games this season lacking intensity, only to spend the rest of the night chasing a deficit they created.

As the uneven performances pile up, frustration has shifted from impatience to accountability. At some point, responsibility lands at the top.

Finch is the most successful coach in franchise history, a steward of the Timberwolves’ rise from irrelevance to perennial playoff team. However, coaching tenures in the NBA are often judged less by past success than by present control. Increasingly, Minnesota looks like a team searching for direction.

That’s where Micah Nori enters the discussion.

A Capable Replacement

The Timberwolves’ lead assistant—well-known locally for his candid, humorous interviews—has quietly built a strong reputation around the league. He has also passed every real-world test thrown his way.

Two seasons ago, when Finch was injured during the playoffs, Nori stepped in and helped guide Minnesota to its first Western Conference finals appearance in two decades. More recently, after Finch was ejected early in a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Nori took over and pushed the right buttons, particularly with rotations and lineup adjustments, in a win over the defending champions.

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#Timberwolves assistant coach Micah Nori’s halftime #interviews are hilarious 😂 (h/t NBA_Reddit, r_timberwolves/X) #nba #basketball #funny #tedlasso

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This sort of move, to fire a head coach during the regular season and elevate the lead assistant, is not without precedent. Just last season, the Denver Nuggets fired NBA champion head coach Mike Malone and elevated David Adelman, the team’s lead assistant. That move was made with just a handful of games left in the regular season.

In Minnesota’s case, making a change with roughly half the season remaining would give the organization time to evaluate Nori as head coach and to adjust the roster before the postseason pressure ramps up. Finch, for all his success, is not yet a championship coach, and may never be. And if this core is going to make a real run, urgency matters.

What’s most alarming isn’t just the blowout losses, but how the Wolves look even in their wins. The execution is inconsistent. The energy fluctuates. The focus comes and goes. While roster construction plays a role, sustained issues with preparation and effort ultimately reflect on the head coach.

Losing the Locker Room? 

That Finch may be losing the locker room—at least in part—can’t be dismissed. Anthony Edwardsleaving the bench in the fourth quarter and declining to speak to the media after the Hawks’ loss was notable. The franchise star rarely ducks these opportunities, and moments like that often signal more profound frustration. Edwards showed his dismay just a few days earlier, following a loss to the Brooklyn Nets, saying in part, “Man, I don’t know. The same answers every time. We’ve got to change something. I don’t know what it is.”

In an interview after the Hawks’ loss, Rudy Gobert, when asked about how the team is playing, responded, “Not like a team that wants to win a championship. That’s for sure.” Another sign that frustrations inside the locker room are beginning to boil over. 

Nori, meanwhile, has been mentioned in coaching rumors for a couple of years now, a sign that NBA decision-makers view him as head-coaching material. If Minnesota promoted him and the same issues persisted, the franchise would still have options. Proven coaches, like Mike Malone and Ty Lue, could be available in the offseason.

Don’t Squander Edwards’ Career

Edwards is 24 years old and is inarguably a top-10 player in the league—arguably top five. Championship windows close faster than teams expect, and with every passing season, there is one less chance to capitalize on a generational talent.

Finch deserves respect for what he’s built. But the NBA is a league of relentless timelines, and right now the Timberwolves look like a team drifting rather than charging forward.

So the question isn’t reckless. It’s fair.

Is it time for Minnesota to make a change?