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Timberwolves takeaways from Game 3: The game had barely begun and the Thunder was done

Chris Hine, The Minnesota Star Tribune on

Published in Basketball

MINNEAPOLIS — Welcome to the Western Conference finals, Timberwolves.

After they appeared overmatched in the first two games of the Western Conference finals in Oklahoma City, the Wolves came back home and thrashed the Thunder 143-101 on Saturday at Target Center. They made a loud statement that this series isn’t over, despite how the first two games played out. The Wolves led 34-14 after the first quarter and they never let Oklahoma City back in it.

Anthony Edwards led the Wolves with 30 and Julius Randle had 24. The Thunder limited Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to 14 points and four free throw attempts. The Thunder shot 40.7% compared to the Wolves’ 57.3%, and the game entered garbage time early in the fourth quarter.

Terrence Shannon Jr. was an addition to the rotation early in the second quarter and finished with 15 points.

Turning point

It’s rare when a turning point is the opening minutes, but that first quarter marked a turning point for the Wolves in this series. After falling behind 4-0, the Wolves outscored the Thunder 25-5. That included a stretch in which they held the Thunder without a point for 4 minutes, 47 seconds.

Edwards had 16 points and five rebounds in the first as he was aggressive inside and out. He hit three 3s in the first quarter, while the defense forced six Thunder turnovers for 11 Wolves points.

The Wolves defense was flying around and guarding the gaps against Gilgeous-Alexander, who had just two points in the quarter and didn’t go to the free-throw line. The Wolves shot 57% for the quarter compared to 29% for the Thunder.

How the rest happened

The Wolves continued to pour it on in the second quarter, as Game 2 resembled Game 6 of their series against Denver a season ago. The Thunder looked all out of sorts and the Wolves never let up, as they led 72-41 headed into halftime.

 

Finch went into his bench for a ninth man to start the second quarter and Shannon Jr. delivered with nine points in the quarter for the Wolves, who went up as much as 26 as Edwards and Gilgeous-Alexander sat. The crowd gave him a standing ovation when he checked out at the 7:50 mark and the Wolves up 46-20. The Wolves pushed their lead to as much as 35 before heading into the locker room up 72-41. They limited the Thunder to 30% shooting.

The 72 points were the most in a half in Wolves franchise history.

The Thunder opened the second half on an 11-2 run, which prompted a timeout from Finch, but out of that timeout, the Wolves answered with a 12-0 burst to put the lead back to 34. They then extended the lead beyond 40 later in the quarter as five players hit double figures before the quarter was over.

Big bench

After struggling to score in the first two games, the Wolves’ bench found its rhythm in the comforts of home. Naz Reid had 10 points, Nickeil Alexander-Walker had 12, Donte DiVinceno had six on just two shots and Shannon Jr. had 15.

MVP

Edwards set the tone for the Wolves in the first quarter, and they followed his lead. Not only was he aggressive, he was also efficient, going 12 for 17 from the field. He also added nine rebounds and six assists.

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©2025 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit at startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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