Short-Handed Timberwolves Lose Ayo Dosunmu for Game 6 vs. Denver Nuggets
The margin for error in a second-round playoff series is razor-thin. For the Minnesota Timberwolves, that margin just got even smaller. In a devastating blow ahead of a must-win Game 6, the Timberwolves will be without guard Ayo Dosunmu, who has been ruled out due to a right calf issue. This news, which originally appeared on The Sporting News, throws a massive wrench into Minnesota’s game plan as they try to stave off elimination against the defending champion Denver Nuggets.
Dosunmu’s absence is not just a rotation hiccup; it is a strategic crisis. While he may not be a household name on a roster featuring Anthony Edwards and Karl-Anthony Towns, Dosunmu has quietly become the connective tissue for this Timberwolves team. His ability to guard multiple positions and provide steady, low-turnover ball-handling has been a silent weapon in a series defined by physicality and defensive adjustments. Losing him for Game 6 forces head coach Chris Finch to dig deep into a bench that was already running on fumes.
The Defensive Void: Why Dosunmu’s Calf Injury Changes Everything
Let’s be clear: the most painful loss here is on the defensive end. The Denver Nuggets, led by the two-time MVP Nikola Jokić, are a system that thrives on finding mismatches. Jamal Murray is a pick-and-roll nightmare. Aaron Gordon attacks the paint with brute force. Michael Porter Jr. uses his length to shoot over smaller defenders. Against this arsenal, perimeter defense is not optional—it is survival.
Dosunmu was the Timberwolves’ best answer for that survival. He is a versatile, switchable defender who can hound Murray on the ball, fight through screens, and then rotate to contest a three-point shooter. In the playoffs, where every possession feels like a chess match, his basketball IQ allowed Minnesota to switch 1-through-3 without losing structural integrity. Without him, the Nuggets will now have a much easier time isolating weaker defenders.
Consider the math: If Dosunmu is out, the Timberwolves are likely to lean on Mike Conley (who is battling his own age and fatigue), Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and Jordan McLaughlin. While Alexander-Walker has had moments of brilliance, he is not the same level of point-of-attack defender as Dosunmu. Conley, for all his veteran savvy, can be exploited by the quicker, younger Murray. This creates a defensive domino effect that could collapse the entire scheme.
- Point-of-Attack Pressure: Dosunmu could stay in front of Murray. Without him, Murray may get cleaner looks early in the shot clock.
- Help Defense: Dosunmu’s rotations were crisp. His replacement may be a half-step slower, allowing Jokić to find open cutters.
- Transition Defense: Dosunmu’s speed in getting back stopped fast-break opportunities. That safety net is now gone.
Offensive Adjustments: Who Steps Up in the Backcourt?
Offensively, the Timberwolves will feel the pinch just as acutely. Dosunmu is not a primary scorer, but he serves as a steady ball-handler who rarely turns the ball over. In a series where Denver’s defense has been aggressive in trapping Anthony Edwards, having a secondary playmaker who can dribble into the teeth of the defense and make the right read is invaluable.
With Dosunmu sidelined, the pressure on Edwards to initiate the offense multiplies. The Nuggets will likely throw a box-and-one or aggressive double-teams at him, knowing that the Timberwolves’ depth chart behind him is compromised. Minnesota needs someone—anyone—to knock down open catch-and-shoot threes to relieve that pressure.
Nickeil Alexander-Walker becomes the X-factor. He has the length to contest shots on defense and the confidence to pull the trigger from deep. But he is streaky. If he hits three or four threes early, the Timberwolves can survive. If he goes cold, the offense stagnates into isolation basketball, which is exactly what Denver wants.
Another name to watch is Jordan McLaughlin. He is a pure point guard who can run the offense and find cutters, but he lacks the size and defensive tenacity of Dosunmu. In a playoff setting, McLaughlin can be targeted defensively by the Nuggets’ bigger guards. Finch will have to pick his spots carefully—perhaps using McLaughlin only in short bursts to spell Conley.
The Timberwolves’ offensive spacing will also suffer. Dosunmu shot a respectable 35% from three-point range this season, forcing defenders to stay honest. If his replacement is not a credible threat from deep, the Nuggets can sag off, clog the paint, and make life miserable for Edwards and Towns in the pick-and-roll.
Depth Crisis: The Timberwolves’ Rotation is on Life Support
This is not a singular injury issue; it is the culmination of a depth crisis that has been brewing all season. The Timberwolves entered the playoffs with a relatively thin bench, relying heavily on their starting five. Now, with Dosunmu out, they are essentially running a seven-man rotation in a game where fatigue could decide the outcome.
Let’s look at the numbers. In Game 5, the Timberwolves’ starters played heavy minutes. Edwards logged over 40 minutes. Towns was in the high 30s. Rudy Gobert was a defensive anchor for 38 minutes. Adding more minutes to these players in Game 6, with their season on the line, is a recipe for fourth-quarter breakdowns. The Nuggets, who have a deeper bench with players like Bruce Brown and Christian Braun, can rotate fresh legs and maintain defensive intensity for 48 minutes.
The Timberwolves’ frontcourt is also affected. While Dosunmu is a guard, his absence forces other wings to slide up in the rotation. This could mean more minutes for Taurean Prince or even a small-ball lineup that puts Jaden McDaniels at the four. However, those lineups sacrifice rebounding against a Denver team that dominates the offensive glass.
Key Prediction: The Timberwolves will try to win this game in the first three quarters by playing hyper-aggressive defense and pushing the pace. If they can build a 10-12 point lead and force Denver to play catch-up, they might survive. But if the game is close in the fourth quarter, the lack of depth and Dosunmu’s defensive IQ will be glaring.
Expert Analysis: How Minnesota Can Still Steal Game 6
Despite the grim outlook, this series is not over. The Timberwolves have shown they can beat the Nuggets—they won Game 2 convincingly. The blueprint is still there, but it requires near-perfect execution and a few breaks.
1. Anthony Edwards Must Be Superhuman. This is obvious, but it bears repeating. Edwards needs to score 35+ points and do it efficiently. He must attack the rim relentlessly, draw fouls, and get to the free-throw line. If he settles for jump shots, Denver’s defense wins.
2. Karl-Anthony Towns Must Avoid Foul Trouble. Towns has been inconsistent in this series, often picking up cheap fouls that send him to the bench. Without Dosunmu to help on the perimeter, Towns’ rim protection becomes even more critical. He needs to stay on the floor for at least 38 minutes.
3. Team Defense Must Be Elite. Without Dosunmu, Minnesota cannot rely on individual lockdown defense. They must rotate as a unit, communicate on every screen, and force Denver into contested mid-range jumpers. This is where Rudy Gobert’s defensive anchor role becomes paramount. He must patrol the paint and deter drives.
4. Role Players Must Hit Open Shots. Kyle Anderson, Alexander-Walker, and even Naz Reid (if he plays) need to knock down threes. If Denver packs the paint and dares Minnesota to shoot, the Timberwolves must make them pay. A cold shooting night ends the season.
5. Win the Turnover Battle. Dosunmu was a low-turnover guard. Without him, the Timberwolves must be extra careful with the ball. Denver thrives on transition points off turnovers. If Minnesota can keep turnovers under 10, they give themselves a fighting chance.
Final Verdict: A Near-Impossible Task
Let’s be honest: losing Ayo Dosunmu for Game 6 against the Denver Nuggets is a catastrophic blow. The Timberwolves were already the underdogs in this series. Now, they are fighting with one hand tied behind their back. The Nuggets are too well-coached, too deep, and too talented to let this opportunity slip away.
I predict the Nuggets will win Game 6, closing out the series in Minneapolis. The Timberwolves will fight hard—they have too much pride not to—but the defensive void left by Dosunmu will be exploited in the second half. Jamal Murray will have a monster game, and Nikola Jokić will orchestrate the offense with surgical precision.
However, this is not the end for the Timberwolves. This season has been a massive step forward. They have a young superstar in Edwards, a defensive anchor in Gobert, and a core that will only get better. The loss of Dosunmu for Game 6 is a painful lesson in the importance of playoff depth. But for now, the immediate future is clear: the short-handed Timberwolves face an uphill battle that, without their versatile guard, is likely too steep to climb.
This article originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
