Oklahoma City Thunder vs Minnesota Timberwolves Match Player Stats 2026

Oklahoma City Thunder vs Minnesota Timberwolves Match Player Stats 2026

The Oklahoma City Thunder vs Minnesota Timberwolves match player stats from March 15, 2026, tell the story of a dominant Thunder performance on their home floor.

OKC defeated Minnesota 116–103 in a hard-fought NBA regular season clash at Paycom Center.

Whether you follow SGA, Ant Edwards, or Chet Holmgren, this in-depth breakdown gives you every number you need from one of the most compelling Western Conference matchups of the 2026 NBA season.

Game Overview: Oklahoma City Thunder vs Minnesota Timberwolves Match Player Stats

The Oklahoma City Thunder hosted the Minnesota Timberwolves on March 15, 2026, in a pivotal Western Conference regular season game at Paycom Center.

Final score: Oklahoma City Thunder 116, Minnesota Timberwolves 103. OKC won convincingly, outscoring Minnesota in three of the four quarters.

The Thunder led wire to wire after halftime, taking control with a dominant 33-point third quarter. Minnesota’s offense never found a consistent rhythm to match OKC’s pressure.

Quarter-by-Quarter Score Breakdown

Here is a full look at how each quarter unfolded in the Thunder vs Timberwolves game.

Quarter Thunder (OKC) Timberwolves (MIN)
Q1 23 22
Q2 24 31
Q3 33 23
Q4 36 27
Total 116 103

Minnesota actually won the second quarter 31–24 to take a halftime lead. But OKC flipped the script with a 33–23 third quarter and then closed it out 36–27 in the fourth.

The Thunder’s biggest lead was 18 points. Minnesota’s biggest lead was just 9. OKC clearly controlled the most important stretches of the game.

Team Stats Comparison: OKC vs Minnesota

A full side-by-side look at how both rosters performed at the team level across all major statistical categories.

Team Shooting Stats

Stat Thunder (OKC) Timberwolves (MIN)
Field Goals Made 42 36
Field Goals Attempted 101 77
FG% 41.6% 46.8%
3-Pointers Made 15 15
3-Pointers Attempted 40 33
3P% 37.5% 45.5%
Free Throws Made 17 16
Free Throws Attempted 19 22
FT% 89.5% 72.7%
Effective FG% 49.0% 56.5%
True Shooting% 53.0% 59.4%

Minnesota actually shot the ball better from the field and from three. But OKC had far more attempts — 101 FGAs compared to Minnesota’s 77. The Thunder’s volume and free-throw efficiency (89.5%) offset the shooting percentage gap.

Team Rebounding and Defense Stats

Stat Thunder (OKC) Timberwolves (MIN)
Total Rebounds 51 58
Offensive Rebounds 15 8
Defensive Rebounds 29 38
Assists 28 18
Steals 16 5
Blocks 6 5
Turnovers 7 25
Assists/Turnover Ratio 4.0 0.82
Points Off Turnovers 29 6
Points in Paint 46 32
Fast Break Points 17 10
Second Chance Points 20 7
Bench Points 61 32

The turnover differential was the defining statistical story. Minnesota turned the ball over 25 times compared to OKC’s 7. The Thunder converted those 25 turnovers into 29 points — a 23-point swing in that category alone.

OKC’s bench outscored Minnesota’s bench 61–32, providing an enormous advantage in the rotation battle.

Team Advanced Stats

Stat Thunder (OKC) Timberwolves (MIN)
Offensive Rating 114.4 99.3
Defensive Rating 99.3 114.4
Possessions 101.4 103.7
Points Per Possession 1.14 0.99
Efficiency Score 140 99
Biggest Lead 18 9

OKC’s offensive rating of 114.4 versus their defensive rating of 99.3 reflects a team firing on both ends. Minnesota’s numbers were flipped — struggling offensively at 99.3 per 100 possessions.

Oklahoma City Thunder Player Stats: Full Individual Breakdown

OKC Individual Player Stats

Player Pos MIN PTS REB AST STL BLK TO FG 3P FT +/-
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander G 20 3 10 2 1 1 7/22 2/4 4/5 +3
Chet Holmgren F 21 9 2 3 1 0 9/13 1/4 2/2 +23
Jared McCain G 15 0 0 1 0 0 5/10 5/9 0/0 +13
Alex Caruso G 17 2 1 3 0 0 6/10 1/3 4/4 -3
Cason Wallace G 4 6 7 3 2 0 1/4 0/0 2/2 +11
Isaiah Hartenstein C 0 12 3 0 2 1 0/3 0/0 0/0 +13
Jaylin Williams F 5 3 2 1 0 2 2/7 1/5 0/0 -2
Aaron Wiggins G 0 0 0 0 0 0 0/1 0/1 0/0 -11

Chet Holmgren was OKC’s most efficient performer, shooting 69.2% from the field (9-of-13) for 21 points with 9 rebounds, 3 steals, and a stunning +23 plus/minus. His true shooting percentage was 75.6%.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander recorded a double-double with 20 points and 10 assists while managing just 1 turnover — a 10:1 assist-to-turnover ratio that shows his elite playmaking control.

Jared McCain caught fire from three, going 5-of-9 from beyond the arc for 15 points. He finished with a 75.0% true shooting percentage and a +13 plus/minus.

Alex Caruso was everywhere defensively with 3 steals, shooting 60% from the field (6-of-10) for 17 points. He made all 4 of his free throws.

Cason Wallace did not score much but was instrumental with 7 assists, 6 rebounds, 3 steals, and 2 blocks while committing zero turnovers. His +11 reflects his real impact.

Isaiah Hartenstein grabbed 12 rebounds and dished 3 assists without scoring — a pure hustle performance that gave OKC an edge on the glass with a +13 plus/minus.

Minnesota Timberwolves Player Stats: Full Individual Breakdown

Minnesota Individual Player Stats

Player Pos MIN PTS REB AST STL BLK TO FG 3P FT +/-
Julius Randle F 32 7 6 0 1 1 11/18 3/5 7/8 -5
Anthony Edwards G 19 6 5 1 1 6 6/17 2/5 5/10 -7
Donte DiVincenzo G 16 9 1 0 0 1 6/9 4/7 0/0 -7
Rudy Gobert C 2 7 2 1 0 4 1/4 0/0 0/0 -23
Jaden McDaniels F 2 1 1 0 0 2 1/3 0/2 0/0 -17
Naz Reid C-F 6 4 0 2 0 4 1/5 0/3 4/4 -4
Kyle Anderson F-G 0 5 0 1 0 2 0/1 0/0 0/0 -2
Terrence Shannon Jr. G-F 3 0 1 0 0 0 1/2 1/1 0/0 +3
Joe Ingles F-G 0 1 0 0 0 0 0/0 0/0 0/0 +3
Jaylen Clark G 0 1 0 0 0 0 0/1 0/1 0/0 +3

Julius Randle was the lone Timberwolves standout, delivering 32 points on 61.1% shooting (11-of-18) with 7 rebounds and 6 assists. His 74.3% true shooting was exceptional. But his team’s 25-turnover performance neutralized his individual brilliance.

Anthony Edwards scored 19 but struggled with efficiency — 6-of-17 from the field and 5-of-10 from the free-throw line. He also committed 6 turnovers, his worst turnover game of the stretch run. His -7 plus/minus reflects a difficult night.

Donte DiVincenzo had a quality shooting performance — 6-of-9 overall including 4-of-7 from three for 16 points with 9 rebounds. One of the few Wolves who made his shots consistently.

Rudy Gobert had a frustrating evening. He scored just 2 points on 1-of-4 shooting, committed 4 turnovers, and finished with a -23 plus/minus — the worst mark on either team.

Jaden McDaniels was limited to just 2 points on 1-of-3 shooting, picking up 4 personal fouls in limited minutes. A very quiet and costly outing for the wing.

Key Performance Highlights

Thunder Stars Who Delivered

Chet Holmgren had a near-perfect shooting night. Going 9-of-13 from the field with 3 steals, 1 block, and zero turnovers made him OKC’s most impactful two-way player.

SGA’s playmaking was on full display. His 10 assists against just 1 turnover showed why he controls games without needing to score 30. His 10.0 assist-to-turnover ratio was elite.

OKC’s bench was a revelation. Scoring 61 bench points is exceptional at any level of play. McCain, Caruso, and Wallace all contributed meaningfully off the pines.

Timberwolves Struggles

Minnesota’s turnover problem was the game-changer. Twenty-five turnovers is a catastrophic total. OKC scored 29 points directly off those giveaways.

Rudy Gobert’s -23 rating tells the story of how much the Thunder targeted him on both ends. He was in foul trouble and offered little offense, a rare off-night for the three-time DPOY.

Ant Edwards’ FT shooting hurt Minnesota. Going 5-of-10 from the line with a chance to extend possessions and score cheap buckets is a missed opportunity in a 13-point loss.

Shooting Efficiency Analysis: OKC vs MIN

Both teams hit 15 three-pointers, but the efficiency story is more nuanced beneath that surface stat.

Shooting Zone OKC Made/Att OKC% MIN Made/Att MIN%
At Rim 18/32 56.3% 9/17 52.9%
Mid-Range 4/13 30.8% 5/12 41.7%
3-Point 15/40 37.5% 15/33 45.5%
Free Throws 17/19 89.5% 16/22 72.7%

OKC’s dominance at the rim — 18 makes on 32 attempts — reflects their interior pressure and offensive rebounding (15 ORBs). They turned second chances into 20 second-chance points.

Minnesota was more efficient per shot, but OKC generated far more shot attempts, creating a volume advantage that overcome the efficiency gap.

Plus/Minus Leaders: Who Moved the Needle

Plus/minus reveals which players were on the floor during the game’s most decisive moments.

Thunder Plus/Minus

Player Plus/Minus
Chet Holmgren +23
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander +3
Cason Wallace +11
Jared McCain +13
Isaiah Hartenstein +13
Alex Caruso -3
Jaylin Williams -2
Aaron Wiggins -11

Holmgren’s +23 stands as one of the highest single-game plus/minus numbers OKC has produced in this stretch of the season. Wallace and Hartenstein at +11 and +13 respectively show the deep rotation impact.

Timberwolves Plus/Minus

Player Plus/Minus
Julius Randle -5
Anthony Edwards -7
Donte DiVincenzo -7
Rudy Gobert -23
Jaden McDaniels -17
Naz Reid -4
Kyle Anderson -2

Every Minnesota starter and key rotation player posted a negative plus/minus. Only Terrence Shannon Jr., Joe Ingles, and Jaylen Clark — each playing minimal minutes — posted +3. The team-wide negative differential illustrates how OKC dominated across all lineup combinations.

Turnover Breakdown: The Decisive Factor

The 25-turnover performance by Minnesota was the clearest reason they lost this game.

Turnover Category OKC MIN
Player Turnovers 7 22
Team Turnovers 0 3
Total Turnovers 7 25
Points Off Turnovers 29 6
Assists/TO Ratio 4.0 0.82

Anthony Edwards led Minnesota with 6 turnovers. Rudy Gobert and Naz Reid each had 4. The Timberwolves simply could not protect the ball against OKC’s pressure.

OKC’s 16 steals — more than double Minnesota’s 5 — directly fueled their transition offense and fast break points total of 17.

Second Chance and Paint Dominance

OKC’s interior presence was one of the most significant advantages in the game.

The Thunder had 15 offensive rebounds compared to Minnesota’s 8. Those extra possessions produced 20 second-chance points versus just 7 for the Wolves.

In the paint, OKC outscored Minnesota 46–32. Holmgren led that charge with 14 paint points, followed by Caruso with 10 paint points on drives.

The combination of paint scoring, second-chance points, and fast break points gave OKC 57 “extra” points from those three categories alone compared to Minnesota’s 27. That 30-point differential in opportunistic scoring was insurmountable.

Bench Performance Comparison

The bench battle was one of the biggest separators in this game.

Bench Stats OKC MIN
Bench Points 61 32
Bench Advantage +29

OKC’s reserves outscored Minnesota’s by 29 points. Jared McCain (15 points, 5-of-9 from three), Alex Caruso (17 points, 60% FG), and Cason Wallace (7 assists, 0 turnovers) were the key contributors from the second unit.

Minnesota’s bench produced just 32 points, with Naz Reid (6 pts), Kyle Anderson (0 pts), and Terrence Shannon Jr. (3 pts) offering very little against OKC’s defensive intensity.

Head-to-Head Statistical Summary: OKC vs MIN

Category Thunder (OKC) Timberwolves (MIN) Winner
Points 116 103 OKC
FG% 41.6% 46.8% MIN
3P% 37.5% 45.5% MIN
FT% 89.5% 72.7% OKC
Rebounds 51 58 MIN
Assists 28 18 OKC
Steals 16 5 OKC
Turnovers 7 25 OKC
Bench Points 61 32 OKC
Points in Paint 46 32 OKC
Fast Break Pts 17 10 OKC
2nd Chance Pts 20 7 OKC
Pts Off TOs 29 6 OKC
Offensive Rating 114.4 99.3 OKC
Defensive Rating 99.3 114.4 OKC

OKC won 11 of 15 major statistical categories. Minnesota’s advantages — FG%, 3P%, and total rebounds — were not enough to overcome the Thunder’s dominance in turnover margin, bench production, and opportunistic scoring.

OKC Season Trajectory and Western Conference Implications

This win continued OKC’s push for the top seed in the Western Conference. With a roster built around SGA’s playmaking, Holmgren’s two-way versatility, and one of the best defensive identities in the NBA, the Thunder are a legitimate championship contender.

Their 16-steal performance in this game reflects a team-wide defensive philosophy. Pressure defense, active hands, and transition offense are the hallmarks of head coach Mark Daigneault’s system.

The Thunder’s 61 bench points in a single game shows exceptional roster depth — something that becomes even more important in a seven-game playoff series.

Minnesota’s Concern Areas Heading Forward

The 25-turnover game is an outlier, but it exposed a real weakness. Minnesota’s assist-to-turnover ratio of 0.82 in this game is far below their usual standards.

Anthony Edwards’ 6 turnovers and 50% free throw shooting in a loss of this magnitude will be a storyline heading into the playoff push. Minnesota needs Ant to be more disciplined with the ball when OKC applies pressure.

Rudy Gobert’s -23 plus/minus is not a reflection of his overall season, but the Thunder exposed how much they can target the paint when he is not at his best.

Julius Randle’s 32-point game shows Minnesota has the firepower. The Wolves simply need to protect the ball to match OKC’s execution.

OKC Thunder vs Timberwolves 2026: Season Series Context

This game was the second matchup between these two teams in the 2025-26 season. Earlier in the season (January 30, 2026), the Timberwolves beat OKC 123–111 at Target Center in Minneapolis.

Date Location Winner Score
Jan 30, 2026 Minneapolis (MIN home) Timberwolves MIN 123 – OKC 111
Mar 15, 2026 Oklahoma City (OKC home) Thunder OKC 116 – MIN 103

The split season series means both teams have proven they can beat each other. A potential playoff matchup between these two Western Conference powers would be one of the most compelling first or second-round series of the 2026 NBA Playoffs.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q1. What was the final score of the OKC Thunder vs Timberwolves game on March 15, 2026?

The Oklahoma City Thunder defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves 116–103 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City on March 15, 2026.

Q2. Who was the best player in the Thunder vs Timberwolves game?

Chet Holmgren led OKC with 21 points, 9 rebounds, and 3 steals on 69.2% shooting, posting the game’s best plus/minus of +23. Julius Randle’s 32 points led all scorers overall.

Q3. How many points did Shai Gilgeous-Alexander score against the Timberwolves?

SGA scored 20 points and added 10 assists with just 1 turnover, recording a double-double and a 10:1 assist-to-turnover ratio in the Thunder’s win.

Q4. How many turnovers did the Minnesota Timberwolves commit in this game?

Minnesota committed 25 total turnovers (22 player, 3 team) compared to OKC’s 7. The Thunder converted those turnovers into 29 points, the decisive swing of the game.

Q5. How did Anthony Edwards perform against OKC Thunder on March 15, 2026?

Ant Edwards scored 19 points but shot just 6-of-17 from the field, committed 6 turnovers, and shot 50% from the free-throw line, finishing with a -7 plus/minus in the loss.

Q6. How many bench points did OKC score against the Timberwolves?

The Thunder bench scored 61 points compared to Minnesota’s 32, a massive 29-point bench advantage that played a major role in the Thunder’s 13-point victory.

Q7. What was Rudy Gobert’s stat line in the Thunder vs Timberwolves 2026 game?

Gobert struggled with just 2 points on 1-of-4 shooting, 7 rebounds, and 4 turnovers. He finished with the game’s worst plus/minus at -23 in a difficult performance.

Q8. How many steals did OKC record against Minnesota?

The Thunder recorded 16 steals as a team compared to Minnesota’s 5, reflecting OKC’s elite pressure defense and the Timberwolves’ ball security issues throughout the game.

Q9. Who led the Timberwolves in scoring against the Thunder?

Julius Randle led Minnesota with 32 points on 61.1% shooting (11-of-18), adding 7 rebounds and 6 assists. It was one of the best individual performances of the game despite the team loss.

Q10. What is the OKC vs Minnesota Timberwolves season series record in 2025-26?

The season series is tied 1–1. Minnesota won the first meeting 123–111 in Minneapolis on January 30. Oklahoma City won the second 116–103 at home on March 15, 2026.

Conclusion

The Oklahoma City Thunder vs Minnesota Timberwolves match player stats 2026 reveal a Thunder team operating at an elite level on both ends of the floor.

OKC’s 16 steals, 29 points off turnovers, 61 bench points, and dominant interior scoring were too much for Minnesota to overcome despite Randle’s 32-point masterclass.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander orchestrated with precision, Chet Holmgren was unstoppable in the paint, and the bench delivered 61 points to seal the win convincingly.

With a tied season series and the playoffs approaching, a potential rematch between these two Western Conference heavyweights in the 2026 NBA Playoffs would be one of the most anticipated series of the postseason.