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Game Preview #68 – Timberwolves at Thunder

**Minnesota Timberwolves at Oklahoma City Thunder**

**Date:** March 15th, 2026

**Time:** 12:00 PM CDT

**Location:** Paycom Center

**Television Coverage:** ABC

**Radio Coverage:** Wolves App, iHeart Radio

Just over a week ago, the Timberwolves looked like a team that had finally remembered who it was supposed to be. They had steadied themselves, stacked some wins, climbed back into the heart of the Western Conference race, and started to feel like one of those teams nobody wants to see once the playoffs arrive. Then came this past week, and with it a harsh reminder that this version of the Wolves is still capable of going from “sleeper contender” to “what the hell was that?” in about 48 hours.

The Wolves spent the better part of last week getting their doors blown off, most embarrassingly in that grotesque 153-point defensive disaster against the Clippers, and now they head into one of the biggest games of the season needing not just a win, but something even more valuable: evidence that they can still be taken seriously.

Sunday in Oklahoma City is not just another game on the schedule. It is not just the fourth stop on a four-game road trip. It is not just a revenge spot against the team that ended Minnesota’s season in the Western Conference Finals last year. It is all of those things, yes, but it is also a survival game. It is the kind of game that sits in the middle of March and quietly decides whether the rest of the month gets framed as a charge or a collapse.

The setup is brutal. Oklahoma City is the defending champion, playing at home, fully aware that San Antonio is charging hard enough to make the top seed feel less secure than it looked a month ago. The Thunder have already dropped two of three to Minnesota this season, which means they don’t need any manufactured motivation here. The Wolves, meanwhile, are coming in with all the warning signs flashing. Their defense has sprung leaks. Their offense has looked disjointed. Their identity has wobbled. And as the cherry on top, this is also a Sunday afternoon game, which for this year’s Timberwolves has basically been code for “blowout loss.”

Yet, despite all of that, the game remains there for them.

That’s the funny thing about the Wolves. They can play three ugly games in a row, get kicked down from the three seed to the six seed, and still find themselves a half-step away from climbing right back into prime position. Lose here, and the trip starts to look like the beginning of a real unraveling, especially with Phoenix waiting next. Win here, and suddenly Friday’s victory in Golden State starts to look like the first real foothold in a recovery.

That’s why this game matters so much. If Minnesota loses in OKC and then stumbles again against the Suns, that seventh seed stops being an abstract worry and starts becoming a very real possibility. And from there, with March still loaded with landmines, the slide could get ugly fast. But if they can shock the Thunder on their home floor and follow it with a win over Phoenix, then the conversation changes again. Suddenly the play-in fears cool off. Suddenly the three seed becomes visible again. Suddenly all those “the Wolves are falling apart” takes start looking a little premature.

The Wolves do have one thing working in their favor, and it’s something that has made them both fascinating and impossible to trust all season. They have shown a unique ability to go from disinterested to fully engaged in the blink of an eye. That’s part of what makes this team so exhausting. You can watch them get embarrassed by the Clippers on Wednesday and then talk yourself into them beating OKC on Sunday because, honestly, both outcomes feel equally plausible.

So the question becomes simple: which Wolves team is getting off the bus?

Is it the disconnected, soft, turnover-prone group that spent the last week giving up layups, open threes, and chunks of its dignity? Or is it the team that swarmed OKC the last time these clubs met, frustrated Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, made Chet Holmgren’s life miserable, and looked every bit like a team that could absolutely do damage in May?

That answer will likely determine everything.

And with that, here are the keys to the game.

**#1 - Deliver a locked-in, aggressive defensive performance.**

The last time Minnesota beat Oklahoma City, it did so by playing one of its most inspired defensive games of the season. The Wolves didn’t just defend hard. They defended together. They swarmed Shai, they made him work, they cut off driving angles, and they used their size to turn the paint into a miserable place to operate. They’re going to have to do that again, only harder, because this version of the Thunder is more complete. Jalen Williams is back, which means there’s now another All-Star-level scorer on the floor who has to be accounted for. Minnesota won’t be able to survive with partial effort here. Jaden McDaniels has to be elite. Anthony Edwards has to defend with pride. Rudy Gobert has to anchor everything. And the perimeter resistance has to be real, not the fake kind where a guy gets beat and everyone just hopes Rudy erases the mistake.

**#2 - Be smart with the ball.**

OKC will absolutely try to steal the Wolves’ cookies. This is not the team to play loose, lazy basketball against. The Thunder get handsy. They pressure. They jump passing lanes. They turn bad decisions into instant transition points, and once they get downhill and rolling, the avalanche comes fast. Minnesota basically gave away the Clippers game in the opening minutes by throwing the ball all over the floor and putting itself in a hole. Against OKC, that kind of start is a death sentence. Friday’s first half against Golden State was a much better example of what this has to look like: sharp passes, controlled possessions, fewer self-inflicted wounds. Every possession in this game is too valuable to donate away.

**#3 - Win the second-chance points battle.**

Good defense means nothing if you don’t finish the possession. One of the most demoralizing things in basketball is defending like hell for 20 seconds, forcing a tough shot, and then watching the other team grab the rebound and do it all over again. This is where Gobert has to be massive. He needs to be the biggest guy on the floor in every sense. On the other end, the Wolves need to steal some extra chances of their own. Gobert, Randle, and Naz Reid have to turn their size into tangible extra points. In a game likely to be decided in the margins, those second chances matter enormously.

**#4 - The offense has to stay connected**.

Oklahoma City is going to send pressure at Anthony Edwards. That’s not speculation. That’s a certainty. They know what he is, and they know what happens when he gets downhill and starts feeling the game. So when the pressure comes, Ant has to make the mature read. He has to trust his teammates. He has to use his gravity to bend the floor and open up the rest of the offense. That means moving the ball. That means getting Rudy involved as a lob threat. That means finding Donte DiVincenzo, Naz, Jaden, and Ayo in the right spots. That also means Julius Randle has to be a connector, not a possession-stopper. The Wolves can’t afford long stretches where everyone stands around waiting for Ant to solve the puzzle by himself. Against Oklahoma City, stagnant offense becomes bad offense in a hurry.

**#5 - Stay composed and show some actual maturity.**

This is where Oklahoma City is so dangerous. You can play them evenly for a quarter and a half, maybe even feel pretty good, and then one weak stretch, one lazy cross-match, one turnover, one rushed three, one failure to get back, turns into a 12-2 run and suddenly the game is tilting away from you. The Thunder are excellent at sensing weakness and pressing on it. So the Wolves have to resist the urge to get emotional, frantic, or careless. That means not letting a bad whistle or a mini-run turn into full panic. That means concentrating and hitting free throws. This probably isn’t going to be a blowout victory for the Wolves. If Minnesota wins, it will likely be because it played a tight, smart, grown-up game in the final six minutes. They’ve certainly had enough crunch-time experience this season. Now they have to prove they learned something from it.

The question heading into this game is not “can the Wolves beat the Thunder?” We already know they can. They’ve done it twice. It’s whether they can beat the Thunder **now**, with their season wobbling, with the standings tightening, with the pressure ratcheting up, and with all the bad habits of the last week still lingering.

This isn’t the biggest game of the season, but it is a very big game for every reason that matters right now. The Wolves need a reset. They need a statement. They need something to stop the creeping feeling that the season is turning in the wrong direction.

Beat Oklahoma City, and the road trip becomes survivable. Beat Phoenix after that, and the last week starts to feel like a stumble instead of a collapse. Lose both, and suddenly this team is staring at the play-in while trying to explain how a season with this much promise got so messy.

The Wolves have spent the year walking the line between contender and cautionary tale. Sunday is another chance to decide which one they want to be.

So yes, the Thunder are excellent. Yes, the Sunday afternoon demons are real. But if Minnesota wants to be taken seriously again, if it wants to prove that the chatter about its demise was premature, if it wants to make one more push at that three seed that somehow remains within reach, then this is exactly the kind of game it has to steal.

We’ll find out soon enough whether the Wolves rise to the moment or hit the snooze button again.

See More:

* [Timberwolves Game Discussion](/timberwolves-game-previews)

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