The Timberwolves got a manageable NBA Cup 2026 draw on Wednesday night, with one glaring obstacle sitting right in the middle of it: the Thunder.
As the league unveiled the Emirates NBA Cup 2026 Group Draw, Minnesota landed in a group that looks favorable on paper, but not without a serious challenge. Oklahoma City is the clear headliner, and DraftKings Sportsbook currently lists the Thunder as the betting favorite to win the Western Conference.
The rest of the group is far less imposing by the same odds: the Pelicans have the second-worst conference odds, the Grizzlies are third-worst, and the Clippers sit 11th. In other words, the Wolves drew the best team in the West and three clubs rated well below them.
That setup gives Minnesota a real shot to navigate the group stage, but the Thunder matchup could decide everything. The NBA Cup format sends the winner of each of the six groups plus one wildcard from each conference into the knockout rounds, and every team plays the other four teams in its group once, with two home games and two on the road. That makes the Minnesota-Oklahoma City meeting more than just a marquee early-season game; it could function as a de facto play-in game for the knockout bracket.
The event itself has a bit more weight now after what the Knicks did last season. New York turned an NBA Cup run into a springboard, winning the tournament before going on to capture an NBA Finals championship. The league still hasn’t fully convinced fans to treat the Cup as must-see theater, but the formula has already shown it can matter.
There’s also a new destination for the final. The NBA said Wednesday that the championship game will be held at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, on December 11. Butler currently plays there during the college basketball season, and the arena is also known as the setting where Hickory High beat Milan in the 1986 film Hoosiers.
For Minnesota, the bigger picture is simple: another early crack at Oklahoma City, another chance to test itself in a high-stakes setting. The Wolves and Thunder are still building toward a real rivalry, and games like this only add fuel. As for the broader draw, the Timberwolves came away with a favorable path - just not one that leaves much margin for error when the Thunder show up.
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Now Sam Amick of The Athletic has added another layer by reporting that the Wolves have at least been part of the broader conversation around LeBron James. It is the kind of idea that would have seemed far-fetched not long ago, and it remains very much in rumor territory, but Minnesota suddenly finds itself mentioned in a place reserved for teams with real ambitions and a willingness to swing big. [Read more 🡒]
Mike Conley Exit Leaves Wolves Losing More Than A Guard
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Rudy Gobert Trade Debate Just Got More Uncomfortable For Timberwolves Fans
The Rudy Gobert trade has lived under a microscope in Minnesota since the Timberwolves sent a massive package to Utah in 2022, and the conversation only gets trickier when the Jazz keep turning those assets into more future flexibility. Utahs latest move sent Walker Kessler to the Lakers in a sign-and-trade that brought back a haul of draft capital, another reminder that the return from the Gobert deal is still echoing across the league.
For Timberwolves fans, the discomfort is less about what Gobert has done in Minnesota and more about how the trade could look years from now when all those picks and swaps finally come due. Utah has already used part of the Wolves' original package on Keyonte George, and each new step the Jazz take makes it harder to view the deal as a finished story instead of a long-term ledger still being balanced. [Read more 🡒]
