The Minnesota Timberwolves’ offseason priorities changed during Game 4 against the Denver Nuggets. Anthony Edwards left the game after suffering a knee injury and Donte DiVincenzo lasted barely a minute before tearing his Achilles. The Timberwolves suddenly needed someone else to carry them.
Then came Ayo Dosunmu, who delivered one of the best playoff performances in franchise history. He scored a career-high 43 points and pushed Minnesota closer to the next round. In one night, he may have changed how the front office views its summer plans.
Why Letting Ayo Dosunmu Walk Could Wreck Minnesota’s Backcourt
Minnesota Saw This Potential Before Anyone Else
Dosunmu’s breakout performance did not come out of nowhere. Minnesota targeted him before the trade deadline for a reason. The Timberwolves wanted another guard who could defend, attack and play multiple roles.
They believed he could help immediately while fitting beside Edwards. What looked like a depth move in February now looks much larger. Minnesota may have identified DiVincenzo’s insurance policy before it was needed.
Ayo Dosunmu’s Regular Season Play Quietly Built the Case
The early returns suggested Minnesota made the right decision. Dosunmu arrived averaging 15 points per game for Chicago. He shot efficiently from both the field and beyond the arc. More importantly, he fit naturally into head coach Chris Finch’s rotation. In 24 games (nine starts) for Minnesota, Dosunmu averaged 14.4 points, 4.2 rebounds and 3.5 assists on 52% shooting from the field and 41% from deep.
Some nights he handled the ball. Other nights he worked off it. Minnesota never needed to redesign its offense around him. He simply made the roster better whenever he stepped on the floor.
The Playoffs Changed Everything
Regular-season success built confidence, and the playoffs instilled belief. Dosunmu first scored 25 points in Game 3 against Denver. Then he followed it with a historic Game 4 performance. Edwards was unavailable, and DiVincenzo was gone almost immediately.
Minnesota needed someone to replace a massive amount of production. Dosunmu answered with 43 points off the bench. He shot efficiently, attacked without hesitation, and never looked overwhelmed. Suddenly, he was not just useful for depth. He looked like a player capable of handling a much larger responsibility.
Donte DiVincenzo’s Injury Changed the Entire Conversation
Game 4 changed Minnesota’s offseason plans. Before that night, retaining Dosunmu looked like a smart depth move. After 43 points off the bench, it looks like a necessity.
DiVincenzo’s Achilles injury makes that need even more urgent. Guards who tear their Achilles tendons rarely come back the same. Minnesota cannot afford to assume DiVincenzo will be the exception. That leaves a real void behind Edwards in the backcourt. Dosunmu just proved he can fill it.
The Timberwolves Also Have a Major Advantage
Finding another player like Dosunmu would not be easy. Finding one who already understands the roster would be even harder. Minnesota holds Bird Rights on the guard entering free agency. That gives the Timberwolves more flexibility than outside teams.
The front office does not need to search for a replacement. It already has one in the building. Keeping proven production is often smarter than chasing uncertain alternatives.
Minnesota Cannot Repeat an Old Mistake
The Timberwolves already learned how quickly guard depth disappears. Every contender needs reliable rotation players beyond its stars. Once those players leave, replacing them often costs additional money or assets. Minnesota spent part of this season rebuilding depth around Edwards.
Dosunmu became one of the biggest reasons that the effort succeeded. Letting him leave would create another problem that the organization has already solved.
Keeping Ayo Dosunmu Could Define Minnesota’s Offseason
Every offseason produces one decision that shapes everything else. For Minnesota, that decision may already be obvious. Dosunmu arrived as a trade deadline addition expected to strengthen the bench. A few months later, he looks far more important than that.
His Game 4 performance showed he can handle a larger role. DiVincenzo’s injury made that role more valuable. Minnesota may have found its replacement before the injury ever happened. Now, the Timberwolves must ensure the replacement remains in Minnesota for years to come.
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