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The Minnesota Timberwolves announced some truly rare news on March 31. The team used a social post to spotlight Ayo Dosunmu’s place in NBA history, but the bigger story for Minnesota is what that performance could mean over the final two weeks of the regular season.
Dosunmu’s line in Monday’s 124-94 win over the Dallas Mavericks was the kind of stat sheet that immediately jumps off a graphic: 18 points, 15 rebounds and 12 assists, with Minnesota noting he joined Larry Bird and Nikola Jokic as the only players in league history to hit that combination of points, efficiency, rebounds, assists, steals and ball security. For the Wolves, though, this was more than trivia. It came in a needed bounce-back win and from a guard who has quickly become one of the cleaner fits on the roster since arriving at the deadline.
Ayo Dosunmu has given the Timberwolves real value since the trade
That is part of why this lands even harder. Dosunmu is not some end-of-bench name popping up in a random stat search. Across the 2025-26 season, he is averaging 14.6 points, 3.4 rebounds and 3.7 assists while shooting 51.9% from the field and 44.6% from 3-point range. Since being traded to Minnesota, his sample has been even more encouraging: 13.5 points, 4.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists in 19 games entering Tuesday.
The trade itself helps explain why Minnesota should care about a night like this. The Timberwolves acquired Dosunmu and Julian Phillips from the Bulls in February, sending Rob Dillingham, Leonard Miller and four second-round picks to Chicago. At the time, the move looked like a bet on playoff-ready depth. Right now, it looks more like a practical late-season fix for a team that needed another dependable two-way guard around Anthony Edwards.
Why Larry Bird and Nikola Jokic matter in this stat
The Bird and Jokic names also matter because they are not random stars tossed into a tweet for decoration. Bird is one of the defining forwards in league history, a three-time MVP, three-time champion and Hall of Famer, largely considered one of the most influential players in the NBA’s history.
Jokic has already won three MVPs and a Finals MVP, putting him firmly in the conversation as one of the greatest offensive centers the league has seen.
Dosunmu is obviously not entering that class as a player, but joining those two in any all-around statistical category underscores how unusual his Dallas performance really was. It was the kind of game that showed off nearly every useful part of his profile at once: efficient scoring, secondary playmaking, rebounding from the guard spot and disruptive defense.
Timberwolves schedule and standings: where Minnesota can finish in the West
This is where the story turns from novelty to relevance. Minnesota sits fifth in the West at 46-29, behind the Lakers at 49-26 and Nuggets at 48-28, with Houston one game back at 45-29 in sixth. That leaves the Wolves with room to climb but not much room to slip if they want to avoid the play-in conversation getting louder.
The remaining schedule is manageable in spots but not soft all the way through: at Detroit on April 2, at Philadelphia on April 3, home against Charlotte on April 5, at Indiana on April 7, at Orlando on April 8, at Houston on April 10 and home against New Orleans on April 12. The Houston game is the obvious swing game, because it directly affects the team chasing Minnesota in the standings. Realistically, the Wolves still have a path to fourth and an outside shot at third, but the more urgent task is holding off Houston and locking in the best possible playoff seed.
Anthony Edwards’ return could raise Minnesota’s ceiling
Anthony Edwards’ return only sharpens that picture. He came back Monday after a six-game absence caused by right knee inflammation and scored 17 points in 23 minutes. Even in limited action, getting Edwards back changes the feel of the final stretch and raises Minnesota’s offensive ceiling.
If Dosunmu keeps supplying efficient secondary play next to him, the trade may end up looking far more important than it did on deadline day. That is the real payoff to the Timberwolves’ tweet. The history angle is fun, but the more important takeaway is that Minnesota may have found another useful stretch-run piece at exactly the moment the West race is tightening.
Erik Anderson is an award-winning sports journalist covering the NBA, MLB and NFL for Heavy.com. He also focuses on the trading card market. His work has appeared in nationally-recognized outlets including The New York Times, Associated Press , USA Today, and ESPN. More about Erik Anderson
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