Minnesota Timberwolves vs. San Antonio Spurs
Date: January 11th, 2026
Time: 6:00 PM CST
Location: Target Center
Television Coverage: FanDuel Sports Network - North
Radio Coverage: KFAN FM, Wolves App, iHeart Radio
The Wolves’ undefeated 2026 streak was always going to end the same way every fun streak ends: abruptly, inconveniently, and in the most irritating manner possible. Saturday afternoon in Cleveland was that exact experience in basketball form.
For a half, Minnesota was a team that had ripped off 18 solid quarters across the previous four-and-a-half games. Their play was connected, sharp, and purposeful. And for a fan base that has watched this team treat weekend matinee games like a suggested guideline rather than an actual obligation, the early signs were encouraging. The Wolves came out with real juice. They were moving the ball, getting clean, high-percentage looks, finding the open shooter, and they made their threes — 12 in the first half. That’s not just “good.” That’s “we might be back to being terrifying” good. For a while it felt like Minnesota had found the cheat code: defend like hell, rebound like it’s a personal vendetta, run just enough, and let the spacing do the rest.
Then the second half happened, and it turned into one of those classic Wolves experiences where you can literally feel the oxygen leaving the room.
Midway through the third quarter, Minnesota’s perimeter defense didn’t just slip, it evaporated, like it got raptured. Suddenly Darius Garland and Donovan Mitchell were carving them up like they had the Wolves’ defensive coverages printed on index cards. Mitchell caught fire from three. Garland was driving to the rim whenever he felt like it, getting quality looks around the basket, and generally operating like a guy who realized Minnesota had decided “containment” was optional. And here’s the part that really made it infuriating: the Wolves didn’t respond by tightening the screws, slowing the game down, and getting stops. They responded by turning the game into a track meet. They tried to race Cleveland. They tried to outscore the Cavaliers instead of defending them. Which is like trying to put out a kitchen fire by throwing paper towels at it. It only gets worse, and faster.
By the time the fourth quarter rolled around, it wasn’t just that the Wolves were losing. It was that they looked like a different team than the one that had started 2026 with that manic “new year, new us” energy. The Cavs’ lead kept climbing, Minnesota kept running, and the miles piled up, which is the exact thing you don’t want with San Antonio waiting on Sunday at Target Center.
If there’s any silver lining, it’s this: in late December, after that holiday stretch where the Wolves were sleepwalking through games like they’d eaten a full plate of ham and immediately laid down on the couch, 4–1 to start 2026 is something every Wolves fan would have signed for in blood. But the whole point of a stretch like this is that it’s supposed to lead somewhere. And what it leads to is Sunday.
Because this game? This is the game.
The Rockets, Lakers, and Nuggets have all stumbled, and Minnesota has used its January surge to claw back ground. The Western Conference has turned into a moving freeway pileup where one good week can change everything and one bad weekend will send you tumbling back into the pack. Right now, Minnesota can see daylight. There’s an actual path to grabbing the No. 2 seed over the course of the next week, and the Spurs are standing there like the final boss in a video game, waiting to see if you brought enough health packs.
Oklahoma City’s hot start has made the top seed feel like a fantasy. The two seed? The two seed is real. The two seed is sitting right there, begging to be grabbed, but Minnesota has to earn it. And earning it means beating San Antonio on your home floor, on the second night of a back-to-back, after your legs just got put through a full-speed treadmill session in Cleveland.
Which brings us to the keys, and this is a BIG game, so these keys aren’t “play hard” and “hit shots.” This is about whether the Wolves are actually ready to play like a top-tier contender instead of a team that occasionally cosplays as one.
Keys to the Game
1. Don’t Let the Non-Wemby Guys Kill You
Victor Wembanyama is a basketball glitch. He’s a seven-foot-four alien who moves like a wing and blocks shots like he’s swatting flies at a barbecue. If Wemby gets his, fine. That’s life. You can’t spend the whole night screaming at the sky because gravity exists.
But you can control the part that actually sinks you: letting the Spurs’ other guys turn into problems. You cannot repeat what happened in Cleveland where Garland and Mitchell were taking turns getting downhill whenever they wanted. Sunday, the Wolves’ perimeter defenders have to do their job. That starts with cutting off driving lanes and making life miserable for San Antonio’s guards and wings. Because the moment Minnesota lets players like Stephon Castle or Dylan Harper find rhythm, the whole defense collapses. Wemby doesn’t need help if you’re already giving up dribble penetration and scrambling. That’s how you end up in rotation hell, giving up open threes and layups in the same possession.
This has to be a “we’re not letting you breathe” perimeter defense game. Jaden McDaniels. Anthony Edwards. Jyalen Clark. DiVincenzo. Whoever is on the floor. It’s time to clamp.
2. Minnesota’s Bigs Need to Play Like Bigs
There’s no stopping Wemby. But Minnesota has the one thing most teams don’t: multiple big bodies they can throw at him. Rudy Gobert has been on a tear, and this is his first crack at his fellow Frenchman this season after Wemby missed the first Wolves-Spurs matchup. If Rudy is going to remind the world why Minnesota’s defense is different when he’s locked in, this is the stage.
But it can’t just be Rudy on an island. Julius Randle and Naz Reid have to help clean the glass and provide muscle. Wemby is too long, too springy, too disruptive to let him control rebounds and second chances. The Wolves need to treat the paint like it’s a contested property dispute. Box out. Hit. Rebound. Get those extra possessions. Make the Spurs feel every trip inside.
You’re not going to “solve” Wemby. You’re going to survive him. And surviving him starts with winning the physical battles everywhere else.
3. Keep the Ball Moving
Here’s the chess piece that makes this matchup different: Minnesota’s offense often revolves around Ant and Randle getting downhill, collapsing the defense, and either finishing or kicking out. That becomes harder when the rim is being protected by a seven-foot-four eraser who can contest from places he shouldn’t even physically be able to reach.
This is where the Wolves can’t fall back into “your turn, my turn” isolation basketball. ISO ball against the Spurs is exactly how you end up with rushed threes, late-clock heaves, and Wemby blocking something into the fifth row while looking bored.
The Wolves need to move the ball, shift the defense, make Wemby rotate, and create breakdowns that lead to real open shots, not “kind of open but Wemby is still nearby like a horror movie villain” shots. The ball has to pop. The offense has to have purpose. If Minnesota plays stagnant basketball, they are playing directly into San Antonio’s best defensive advantage.
4. Rise to the Occasion — This Is a Narrative Game
Let’s just say the quiet part out loud: Minnesota has not built the résumé of a true top contender yet. They’ve taken losses against the league’s top competition — 0–2 vs the Lakers, 0–3 vs the Nuggets, split with OKC, and the overall record hasn’t screamed “elite.” The Wolves have been good. They’ve been dangerous. But they haven’t consistently stepped on the throat of the teams they’ll see in May.
This is the kind of game that starts changing that perception.
It’s a weekend game. Second night of a back-to-back. After you just melted down defensively in Cleveland. This is exactly the spot where teams with shaky habits mail it in, fall behind, and convince themselves they’ll “get the next one.”
Not this time.
If Minnesota wants to be taken seriously as a top seed, this is where they show it, by digging deep, playing connected, and matching San Antonio’s physicality and poise. Ant has to be the best player on the floor. Randle has to bring real two-way effort. Rudy has to anchor. McDaniels and Clark have to make life miserable on the perimeter. DiVincenzo needs his shot. Naz needs to ignite the crowd. Everybody has to show up, because that’s what good teams do in big spots.
5. Protect Target Center — Because This Is How You Build a Seed
Minnesota may not be undefeated in 2026 anymore, but they are still undefeated on the Target Center floor in the new year, and that matters. This is where you stack wins. This is where you build your seeding. This is where you turn “we could be the two seed” into “we are the two seed.”
And it’s bigger than standings. It’s psychological. The Wolves had a brutal taste left in their mouth from that Brooklyn finale to close 2025. They’ve started to wash it out with better basketball, but Sunday is the real cleanser. Beat San Antonio at home and you aren’t just bouncing back. You’re staking a claim.
Conclusion
This is the fork-in-the-road game.
If Minnesota comes out flat, plays sloppy, and gets punked on the glass while Wemby turns the paint into a no-fly zone, then Saturday in Cleveland becomes the start of another Wolves wobble.
But if they respond, if they bring back the energy and discipline that carried them through those 18 strong quarters, if they guard, rebound, and execute like a team that’s actually ready to live in the top tier, then Sunday becomes something else entirely.
Sunday becomes the moment the Wolves grab the standings by the collar and say, “No, we’re not just hanging around. We’re coming for that two seed.”
It’s a big game.
It’s a measuring-stick game.
It’s a “are you for real?” game.
And if the Wolves want the season they’ve been hinting at, the one where they finally stop finishing with a whimper, it starts with putting the Spurs down on your home floor and making Target Center feel like a place contenders win.
Because the door is open.
The ladder is right there.
Now climb.