Golden State Warriors Dominate the Minnesota Timberwolves Following Postponement Due To Minneapolis Unrest
Sports are often called the “toy department of human life”โa distraction from the heavy stuff. But sometimes, the real world punches through the drywall and sits right at center court. Thatโs exactly what happened in Minneapolis this weekend.
Sunday wasn’t your typical NBA matchup. The air inside the Target Center was heavy, thick with the kind of tension that makes a basketball game feel secondary. Following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by federal agents and the subsequent postponement of Saturdayโs scheduled tip-off, the Warriors and Timberwolves finally took the floor.
And while the scoreboard says Golden State walked away with a 111-85 victory, the story was written long before the first whistle blew.
A Heavy Heart in the Twin Cities
You donโt often see Chris Finch rattled. Finchโs voice cracked as he spoke about the fear gripping his community. “Iโm more than a resident. This is my home,” he said, visibly emotional. It was a raw reminder that these guys don’t just parachute into cities to play; they live there. They drive the same streets and feel the same grief. When Finch said, “Playing basketball just didnโt feel like the right thing to do” on Saturday, he wasn’t offering PR fluff. He was reading the room.
Across the court, Warriors Head Coach Steve Kerr, never one to stick to sports, acknowledged the “pall cast over the city.” Kerr noted that you could literally feel the tension. When you have protests visible from the team hotel and fans holding “ICE out now” signs in the stands, itโs impossible to just shut up and dribble.
The Game That Barely Was
When the ball finally went up, one team looked locked in, and the other looked like they were sleepwalking through a nightmare. The Timberwolves were a mess. Maybe it was the emotional hangover, or maybe it was just a bad night at the office, but Minnesota coughed up the rock 25 times. That is not a typo. You simply cannot hand the ball to a team like the Warriors two dozen times and expect to remain competitive.
Anthony Edwards tried to drag his team into the fight, dropping 32 points, but even he was bitten by the turnover bug, giving it away eight times. The Wolves kept it close for a half, fueled mostly by adrenaline and some decent shooting from downtown, but the wheels completely fell off in the third quarter.
The Warriors, smelling blood in the water, went on a 38-17 run in the third frame. It was surgical. It was precise. It was everything the Wolves weren’t. By the time the fourth quarter rolled around, the Minnesota faithful, those who hadn’t already headed for the exits, were raining boos down on the home team. It was the Wolves’ fifth straight loss, and frankly, it was the ugliest of the bunch.
Curry Continues His Climb
In the middle of the blowout, Stephen Curry decided to do that thing he does: casually rewrite history while everyone else is just trying to keep up.
Curry finished with 26 points, 7 assists, and 4 steals. It wasn’t his most efficient shooting night from the floor (7-for-18), but it was enough to push him past Celtics legend John Havlicek on the NBAโs all-time scoring list. Curry now sits in the 20th spot with 26,397 career points.
Itโs actually getting ridiculous how routine this is becoming. Every other week, Curry is leapfrogging another Hall of Famer. Next up on the list is Paul Pierce, and considering Curry is currently tied with “The Truth” in total points, that record is going to fall the next time Curry laces them up.
Heโs now staring down the barrel of passing Tim Duncan, Dominique Wilkins, and the Big O, Oscar Robertson. For Warriors fans, it was a bright spot in a grim weekend; a reminder that we are watching one of the absolute masters of the craft at work.
Bigger Than Basketball
Ultimately, this game will be a footnote in the standings, but the context will stick around. The NBA Players Association issued a strong statement supporting the right to protest, and players across the league were making their voices heard.
For the Warriors, it was a business trip handled with professionalism. They said the right things, showed the proper respect, and then absolutely dismantled their opponent on the court. For the Timberwolves, itโs back to the drawing board. They need to fix the turnover issue, find some bench scoring, and figure out how to focus when the world outside is shouting.
Sunday night proved that sports can be a sanctuary, but they are never a fortress. Sometimes the real world gets in. And when it does, the final score doesn’t seem to matter quite as much.
