Timberwolves Are About To Learn If Joan Beringer Is Ready

The Minnesota Timberwolves are about to test Joan Beringer's potential to step into a critical, everyday role on a competitive roster, as his Summer League performance could reveal much about his readiness for the challenge.

The Timberwolves are about to get a better read on Joan Beringer, and that matters because the minutes are lining up for him whether he’s fully ready or not.

With Julius Randle and Naz Reid out of town, the second-year big man is positioned for a major slice of Minnesota’s rotation next season. Unless the roster changes in a big way, Beringer should be on the floor anytime Rudy Gobert sits. That’s a real responsibility for a 19-year-old who only started playing basketball in 2021, even if his rookie flashes made the upside obvious.

Summer League won’t settle everything, but it can sharpen the picture fast. If Beringer looks dominant when play begins Thursday, the questions about whether he can handle a meaningful role should quiet down at least a bit. If he has a rough run in Las Vegas, the concern gets louder, because the Wolves need him to be part of the answer.

The biggest thing to watch is his defense. Beringer already has All-Defensive-level potential.

He’s an explosive athlete, a shot-blocker, and a switchable defender who can cover ground in a hurry. That should show up again in summer league, especially with fellow second-year big man Rocco Zikarsky alongside him.

But the raw tools come with baggage. Beringer can get too eager hunting blocks, and that tendency got him into foul trouble last season.

He averaged 5.4 fouls per 36 minutes as a rookie. For Minnesota, the key is simple: he has to learn how to stay aggressive without gambling himself out of the game.

If that doesn’t improve, there’s a real reason to worry about how he’ll hold up with a bigger NBA workload.

Offensively, there’s growth to chase too. Beringer was better as a rookie than many expected, putting up 17.9 points per 36 minutes while hitting 66.3 percent of his shots. He looked like a dependable rim runner and held his own against quality competition, including the San Antonio Spurs, Houston Rockets and Milwaukee Bucks with Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Still, there were uneven stretches. His 4-for-10 night against the Orlando Magic stood out, and the next step is seeing whether he can do more than finish at the basket. He doesn’t need to become a perimeter threat overnight, but it would help if he showed he can attack the rim off the dribble or mix in some mid-range work.

Passing is another piece of the puzzle. Beringer finished last season with 12 assists and 11 turnovers, and while nobody is expecting Nikola Jokic, there’s value in a center who can make the right read on the short roll or function as a dribble hand-off option.

That kind of versatility would make him much easier to use as his role expands.

The Wolves have reasons to believe Beringer will look good in summer league after what he showed as a rookie. Even so, the real test comes when the regular season starts. Las Vegas will at least tell Minnesota a lot more about how prepared he is for what’s coming next.

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The Timberwolves are giving a familiar-looking frontcourt experiment a summer showcase, planning to run Joan Beringer and Rocco Zikarsky together as a double-big look in summer league. Both are second-year players from the 2025 draft class, with Beringer going 17th overall and Zikarsky coming off the board at 45th, and the team wants a closer read on how their size can work in tandem rather than just in theory.

There is a reason this pairing has caught attention beyond July games. Zikarsky brings enough offensive range to at least open the door to a frontcourt fit that echoes the kind of spacing-and-size balance Minnesota has chased before, while Beringers comfort shifting to the four gives the Wolves another way to test the idea. Even so, this is still more of an evaluation than a preview of the regular season, where the club is unlikely to lean on the look heavily. [Read more 🡒]

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The gamble is obvious from a roster-construction standpoint: Ball brings offense and a different kind of playmaking, but the fit next to Anthony Edwards has to work on both ends for Minnesotas ceiling to stay where it wants it. For a team that has leaned on its defensive identity, the concern is whether adding Ball helps push the Wolves forward or asks them to give up too much of what made them dangerous in the first place. [Read more 🡒]