Andrew Wiggins was on his way to having an almost-invisible Game 3.
Prior to being substituted at the 4:27 mark of the 4th quarter, Wiggins had a measly 6 points on 5 shots. The flashes of his renewed rim aggression were there, finding pockets of marginal opportunism to play off of the pull of his more threatening teammates.
Defensively, he did all he could. He took assignments on the ball, navigated screens to near perfection, and even capably contested a drive as the help-side low man on a Will Barton drive, with Jordan Poole “ICE”-ing (denying middle penetration) and funneling Barton toward expected backline help (i.