The Minnesota Timberwolves entered free agency needing to show which players truly fit their long-term plans. Their first major answer came quickly, and it centered on one of their biggest second-half success stories.
Timberwolves Sign Ayo Dosunmu To 5-Year, $112 Million Deal To Support Anthony Edwards
Minnesota Moves Quickly To Secure Ayo Dosunmu
The Timberwolves are keeping one of their most important trade-deadline additions for the long haul after agreeing to a major new deal with guard Ayo Dosunmu.
Free agent guard Ayo Dosunmu intends to sign a five-year, $112 million contract to return to the Minnesota Timberwolves, with a player option in the fifth season, sources tell ESPN. Timberwolves made it a major priority to lock in Dosunmu after his tremendous postseason. pic.twitter.com/xw93nAUhJt
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) June 23, 2026
The report answered one of Minnesota’s biggest offseason questions. Dosunmu entered free agency after a strong finish to the regular season and an even better playoff run, making him one of the Timberwolves’ biggest offseason decisions.
Minnesota’s urgency also made sense. The Timberwolves did not acquire Dosunmu at the trade deadline as a short-term rental. They gave up Rob Dillingham, Leonard Miller, and four second-round picks to bring him in from the Chicago Bulls, and his play quickly justified a larger commitment.
Why Minnesota Made This Deal Now
This contract is about more than rewarding a hot stretch. It is about Minnesota deciding Dosunmu can be part of its core during the most important years of Anthony Edwards’ prime.
Dosunmu averaged 14.4 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 3.5 assists in 24 regular-season games with Minnesota after the trade while shooting 52.1 percent from the field and 41.4 percent from 3-point range. His impact grew in the postseason, where he averaged 15.6 points in 10 games and looked comfortable in a bigger role.
That combination matters for Minnesota because Dosunmu solved multiple problems at once. He gave the Timberwolves another guard who can handle the ball, get downhill, defend his position, and play without dominating possessions. That is a valuable profile next to a star like Edwards, who still needs more reliable help in the backcourt.
The size of the contract also shows Minnesota was not interested in letting the market set Dosunmu’s price and risk losing him. If the Timberwolves truly believed he fit their future, the cleanest move was to pay him now and remove the uncertainty, rather than drag out Dosunmu’s free agency valuation.
How This Deal Helps Anthony Edwards
The clearest reason this signing matters is what it can do for Edwards over a full season.
Edwards has already become the center of everything Minnesota does offensively, but the Timberwolves still need more players who can ease that burden without taking the ball out of his hands. Dosunmu helps because he can attack a closeout, push the pace, make quick reads, and still defend on the other end. He does not need the offense built around him to be useful, which matters for a team still trying to solve Edwards’ burden.
That should make life easier for Edwards in several ways. Minnesota can use Dosunmu to start possessions, keep the ball moving, and reduce the amount of creation Edwards has to do every trip. It also gives the Timberwolves another credible option when teams load up on Edwards late in games.
Just as important, Dosunmu fits Edwards’ timeline better than many of Minnesota’s older veterans. At 26, he gives the Timberwolves a younger, more athletic backcourt piece who can grow with the franchise’s best player instead of simply filling minutes around him.
What This Means For The Timberwolves’ Roster Next
The bigger picture is that Minnesota has now made a very public choice about the type of team it wants to build.
The Timberwolves are betting that Dosunmu’s late-season production was not a short burst, but the start of something sustainable in a larger role. They are also betting that his versatility makes him worth keeping even if the roster changes around him in the next year or two.
That does not solve every question on Minnesota’s roster. The Timberwolves still have to sort through the rest of the backcourt, figure out how the rotation settles, and keep building enough offense around Edwards to match a defense that is already good enough to win big.
But this move gives them a clearer foundation than they had a day ago. Minnesota did not just keep a productive guard. It kept a player who already looks like one of the cleaner fits next to Edwards, and it paid him like it believes that will still be true years from now.
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