Minnesota Timberwolves at Cleveland Cavaliers
Date: January 10th, 2026
Time: 12:00 PM CST
Location: Rocket Arena
Television Coverage: Prime Video, FanDuel Sports Network - North
Radio Coverage: Wolves App, iHeart Radio
The Minnesota Timberwolves are 4–0 in 2026, and it finally feels like that stat means something.
Thursday night’s win over Cleveland at Target Center wasn’t just another box-score entry. It was the clearest signal yet that this Wolves team has found a version of itself it had been searching for all season. For the fourth straight game, Minnesota dictated terms: strong team defense, relentless intensity, domination in the paint, and the increasingly important skill of building large leads and protecting them.
That’s winning basketball.
The opening quarter told the story. No sluggish start. No casual possessions. No “let’s feel it out.” The Wolves pounced on Cleveland immediately, racing to a double-digit lead while flying around on both ends of the floor. The ball was popping, shots were falling, and the energy in the building felt confident, sharp, and urgent.
Eventually Cleveland stabilized and even grabbed the lead in the second quarter. When Rudy Gobert was forced to the bench because of foul trouble and a dust-up that produced double technicals, Minnesota’s defense slipped, just as it has all season when Rudy leaves the floor. But when Gobert returned, order was restored. The Wolves locked back in physically, crushed the Cavs on the interior, and exploded to a 20+ point lead in the third quarter.
Eventually, Cleveland’s late push forced Minnesota into its first true clutch situation of 2026. The response? Defensive stops. Timely buckets. No panic. Door closed.
That’s growth.
And this wasn’t some hollow victory against a wounded roster. Cleveland is a quality opponent. Minnesota spent the first part of this season going 0–7 against teams with winning records. That narrative is officially over. As the schedule stiffens, the Wolves are responding.
The numbers underline it: Edwards, Randle, McDaniels, and DiVincenzo combined for 101 points.
Minnesota’s offense overwhelmed Cleveland, but the game was decided by the Wolves’ physical control of the floor.
Now comes the real test.
Saturday’s rematch in Cleveland is where good stretches become real statements, or vanish.
Minnesota sits fourth in the West, just half a game behind Denver and 1.5 games behind San Antonio. A road win keeps the climb alive. A loss drags them back into the six-seed chaos they’ve spent weeks escaping.
This game matters.
Keys to the Game
1. Keep the Defense Angry
This 2026 Wolves run exists because the defense has been playing like it’s personally offended by the other team’s existence. That has to continue in Cleveland. On Thursday night, Minnesota did exactly what good teams do: they made Cleveland work for everything. Rudy Gobert turned the paint into a restricted airspace. The wings stayed attached. Donovan Mitchell still got buckets, but he never once hijacked the entire game. That’s the standard.
Now here’s the problem: road games make that standard harder. The whistles change. The crowd gets loud. Momentum swings faster. Minnesota cannot assume the offense will bail them out again. If this turns into another 120-point concession stand, the Wolves are playing with fire. They need to ratchet up the defensive edge, the urgency, and the physicality they showed Thursday.
2. Don’t Waste the Good Shots You’re Creating
McDaniels went 11-for-14. Gobert went 5-for-5. No one in the building expects that to happen again, but the way those shots happened? That absolutely should. Those were the product of the Wolves actually running offense instead of standing around watching somebody cook. The ball moved. Spacing was right. The open man got rewarded.
When Minnesota plays like that, they’re a nightmare to guard. When they don’t, the offense turns into late-clock survival mode. The choice seems pretty obvious.
3. The Bench Has to Show Up Like It Knows Sunday Exists
Here’s where the grown-up planning comes in. This is the second night of a back-to-back and the third game in four nights. San Antonio is waiting Sunday. That means Thursday’s “starters do everything” approach probably won’t survive Saturday.
Naz Reid, Jaylen Clark, Bones Hyland — this is your moment. If the starters regress even slightly, somebody off that bench has to pick up the slack. Finch may need to go deeper too and look to Rob Dillingham, Joan Beringer, because if Ant and Randle are dragging into Sunday, this whole weekend gets way more complicated.
4. Don’t Let Cleveland Drag You Into a Street Fight
Thursday already had dust-ups, double techs, and the type of energy that leads to bad decisions. Cleveland has a tendency to get under Minnesota’ skin, and the Wolves cannot fall for it. This game is about poise. It’s not time for techs or “money signs”. Let Cleveland swing emotionally. The Wolves need to stay surgical.
5. If You Get a Lead, End the Game
The Wolves have this unfortunate habit of building huge leads and then letting teams wander back into relevance. That can’t happen here. If Minnesota goes up 15, they need to make it 20. Because if they go up 20 in the 4th, hopefully Johnny Juzang and Joe Ingles can start warming up and spare some miles on the starter’s legs.
This is not just about winning. It’s about winning clean, preserving energy, and setting up Sunday.
Conclusion
This is the hinge point of the season.
Minnesota finally escaped the six seed. They now sit fourth, staring directly at Denver and San Antonio. One bad night in Cleveland and the Wolves are back in traffic. Handle business, though, and they walk into Sunday with real momentum and start taking their shot at the No. 2 seed.
This Cleveland game is where we find out if the 2026 Wolves are just riding a good vibe, or if they’ve actually become the team they’ve been threatening to be all year.
Saturday isn’t a weekend game.
It’s a work day.