Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Denver Nuggets
Date: April 30th, 2026
Time: 8:30 PM CDT
Location: Target Center
Television Coverage: ESPN
Game 5 was the Wolves’ opportunity to end the argument.
They had Denver on the mat. They had won three straight. They had discovered the recipe: suffocating defense, relentless rim pressure, and enough pace to make Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray look for the oxygen masks that drop from airplane ceilings. Even without Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo, there was a real
belief that Minnesota could walk into Ball Arena and finish the Nuggets off.
And then the wounded animal bit back.
That’s the thing about trying to close out a proud, desperate team with the best player on the planet: they don’t just quietly accept their fate, grab a duffel bag, and head to the Serbian horse stables. Denver came out playing like a team that understood its season was on the line. Ball Arena was rabid. Jaden McDaniels was Public Enemy No. 1. The crowd was ready to boo him every time he touched the ball, breathed, blinked, or maybe even thought about scoring again in the final second.
For the first time in a few games, Denver looked like the team throwing the first real punch. The Wolves didn’t roll over. They didn’t no-show. Minnesota came ready to compete, but the problem was simple: they also came ready to hand Denver the ball like it was a promotional giveaway.
Twenty-five turnovers.
Twenty-five.
You can survive a cold shooting night. You can survive foul trouble. You can survive the other team’s role player having the game of his life. But 25 turnovers in a playoff closeout game on the road against Jokic? That’s like walking into a shark tank wearing a meat suit.
The turnovers didn’t just choke off Minnesota’s offense. They gave Denver exactly what the Wolves had spent the previous three games trying to deny them: easy points, early offense, and the ability to attack before Minnesota could get its half-court defense set. When the Wolves are locked in defensively, they have shown they can turn Denver’s offense into a clogged drain. But if you’re throwing live-ball turnovers into the middle of the floor, suddenly Jokic doesn’t have to solve Gobert in the post. Murray doesn’t have to grind through McDaniels for 18 seconds. Denver doesn’t have to earn anything. They just had to run, finish, and let the building explode.
And then came Spencer Jones, who killed the Wolves from deep, giving Denver the exact supporting punch it had been missing. Minnesota spent so much energy trying to contain Jokic and Murray, and rightly so, but when a role player starts cashing threes like he found a cheat code, the math gets ugly fast.
So now here we are.
Wolves 3, Nuggets 2.
Game 6 at Target Center.
The Wolves are still in control, still holding the lead, and still one win away from the second round. But they are also now staring at the most uncomfortable truth: You do not want to go back to Denver for Game 7 without your superstar.
Yes, the Wolves have done the Game 7-in-Denver thing before. Yes, it ended with one of the greatest wins in franchise history. But that version had its full arsenal. This one is trying to close out Jokic with a backcourt being held together by duct tape, prayer candles, and the memory of Ayo Dosunmu’s 43-point fever dream.
Game 6 is not technically win-or-go-home for Minnesota. It just feels like win-or-start-panicking.
And with that, here are the keys.
1. Defense Has to Be the Anchor Again
Everything good in this series has started with Minnesota’s defense. Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels have been the two biggest reasons the Wolves are even in position to close this thing out. Gobert has battled Jokic as well as anyone on Earth can reasonably battle him, and McDaniels has made Murray’s life miserable when he’s been able to stay on the floor.
That last part matters.
McDaniels picked up two quick fouls in Game 5, and the whole structure of the game shifted. Suddenly Murray had more room to breathe, and Denver could get into offense without being hounded from baseline to baseline.
That cannot happen Thursday. McDaniels has to be aggressive, but smart. Gobert has to be physical, but disciplined. And the rest of the Wolves have to understand that this cannot be a two-man defensive effort. If Minnesota clamps down on Jokic and Murray but lets Spencer Jones, Tim Hardaway Jr., or some other Nuggets supporting character turn into a folk hero, then what was the point?
The closeouts have to be crisp. The rotations have to be early. The perimeter resistance has to keep Denver from putting Gobert in impossible spots. And most importantly, the Wolves have to protect the rim better than they did in Game 5. Denver got too much in the paint, too many easy chances, too many moments where Minnesota’s defense was reacting instead of dictating.
Without Edwards and DiVincenzo, the Wolves are not built to win a fireworks show. They need to drag Denver back into the mud and make them earn every single point.
2. Stop Punching Yourself in the Face
Twenty-five turnovers is not just bad. It’s disqualifying.
The Wolves could have survived a lot of things in Game 5. They could have survived Denver’s crowd, the officials, even Spencer Jones hitting shots. They could not survive repeatedly handing the Nuggets transition chances like it was a charity event.
The maddening part is that even with all of those self-inflicted wounds, Minnesota was still close enough for long enough to make Denver sweat. The lead ballooned, sure, but there were stretches where you could feel Ball Arena getting nervous. The Wolves cut the margin down. They forced Denver to keep playing. They made the crowd remember that weird things happen when these two teams share a court.
Now imagine if they had just treated the ball like it belonged to them.
That’s the whole Game 6 challenge. Mike Conley, Bones Hyland, Ayo Dosunmu, Julius Randle, and anybody handling the ball has to value possessions. No lazy cross-court passes, dribbling into crowds, casual outlets, or poor decisions that immediately turn into Murray layups or Jokic touchdown passes. This series is hard enough without giving Denver extra possessions.
Minnesota cannot beat itself and beat Denver at the same time.
3. Win the Dirty Work
Denver was the desperate team in Game 5, and it showed. Loose balls found Nuggets hands. Long rebounds bounced Denver’s way. Scrambles tilted toward the team that knew its season was about to end if it didn’t get there first. Those are the plays that don’t always dominate the box score but absolutely shape playoff games.
The Wolves have to match that desperation now. Not because they are facing elimination, but because they should treat Game 6 like they are. That’s the mentality required. Every rebound has to matter. Every deflection has to matter. Every 50-50 ball has to feel like it decides the series.
One offensive rebound can become a Jokic three-point play. One lazy box-out can become a momentum swing. One loose ball can turn into a five-point mini-run.
The Wolves need to be the team that wants those moments more.
4. Keep Your Composure
Let’s be honest: the whistle has been a whole subplot in this series. The Wolves have been battling foul trouble constantly. Reviews have felt like trips through a haunted house where the ending is always somehow worse than expected. Whether it’s the infamous foot-to-knee contact or whatever new interpretation gets invented mid-possession, Minnesota has had to play through more than its share of frustration.
That cannot become the game within the game.
Target Center helps. The crowd will be insane. The energy should tilt Minnesota’s way. But the players still have to stay composed. McDaniels and Gobert especially cannot afford early foul trouble. If either one gets yanked to the bench early, Denver gets breathing room. And giving Denver oxygen right now is how this series gets very uncomfortable very quickly.
The Wolves need to play physical without getting reckless. They need to absorb bad calls without spiraling. They need to make sure frustration doesn’t turn into a technical, a rushed shot, or a defensive lapse.
There is a fine line between intensity and chaos, and Minnesota has to live on the right side of it.
5. Somebody Has to Rise
In Game 4, Ayo Dosunmu answered the bell with one of the great unexpected playoff performances in franchise history. Forty-three points. Five threes.
In Game 5, nobody provided the sequel.
That has to change. Maybe it’s Ayo again. Maybe it’s Jaden McDaniels turning elite defense into aggressive offense and reminding everyone that his mid-range and rim pressure can swing games. Maybe it’s Randle giving Minnesota the full bully-ball, playmaking, glass-crashing version of himself. Maybe it’s Rudy dominating the paint so completely that Denver starts thinking twice about every drive. Maybe it’s Naz finally catching fire and giving the bench the scoring punch it desperately needs. Maybe Bones goes full microwave.
It doesn’t really matter who, but someone has to step forward and say, “Tonight is mine.”
Because without Edwards, this cannot be a passive collective. It has to be a connected team effort with one or two guys willing to seize the night. Denver will bring desperation. Jokic will bring brilliance. Murray will bring shot-making.
The Wolves need an answer.
Finish the Hunt
Nobody in Wolves Nation wants a Game 7.
Nobody wants the plane ride back to Denver. Nobody wants 48 hours of talking themselves into “well, they won there before.” Nobody wants to spend a Saturday night watching Jokic in his building with Minnesota’s season hanging by a thread and Anthony Edwards in street clothes.
The opportunity is right here. Game 6. Target Center. Home crowd. Series lead. A chance to end the Nuggets’ season and advance to the second round for just the fourth time in franchise history. This is the moment the Wolves have to own.
The Wolves have spent this series proving they can beat Denver. They have the blueprint. They have the defensive answers. They have shown they can drag the Nuggets into uncomfortable places and make the best player in the world look mortal enough.
Now they have to complete the mission.
No moral victories. No noble seven-game loss. No “if onlys…”
Finish the hunt.
Land the kill shot.
Send Denver home.












