
For years, the Minnesota Timberwolves have had a curious Achilles’ heel: beating bad teams.
Even during what’s become a golden era of Wolves basketball — an era defined by Anthony Edwards ’ rise and one of the league’s best defenses — Minnesota has too often stumbled against opponents it should easily dispatch. Losses to teams like the Charlotte Hornets and Washington Wizards over the past few seasons have been painful reminders that consistency, not talent, was still the missing ingredient.
This year, that may finally be changing.
Through the early portion of the season, the Timberwolves have done exactly what good teams are supposed to do — take care of business. They’ve beaten every opponent on their schedule that’s projected to miss the playoffs. The Portland Trail Blazers, Brooklyn Nets, Indiana Pacers, Sacramento Kings, and yes, the Utah Jazz (twice) have all fallen to a Minnesota team that looks more mature and more focused.
That kind of growth matters. In a league where every night presents a new challenge, the difference between a top-four seed and a Play-In spot often comes down to how teams perform in games they should win. For the Timberwolves, who are historically prone to playing down to the competition, that’s been a tough lesson to learn.
But this version of the Wolves — led by Edwards, Julius Randle, and Rudy Gobert — looks ready to leave those bad habits behind. The effort level hasn’t wavered, even against lottery-bound squads. The ball movement has been crisp, the offense flowing, and the energy consistent from tip-off to the final buzzer.
It’s a sign that the team is growing up.
Minnesota’s ceiling has never been in question. When locked in, the Wolves can beat anyone. The real question has been whether they can sustain that level over 82 games, through long road trips, and through the inevitable lulls of the regular season.
If this early stretch is any indication, the answer might finally be ‘yes, they can’.
In a stacked Western Conference where the Thunder, Nuggets, Rockets, Lakers, and even a resurgent Spurs team are all battling for playoff position, there’s little margin for error. Every win matters — especially the ones against the teams the Wolves are supposed to beat.
For the first time in a long time, the Timberwolves seem to understand that. And that might be the clearest sign yet that this franchise is growing from potential contender to legitimate powerhouse.
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