Timberwolves vs Rockets Preview

The Timberwolves and Rockets face off tonight with the Western standings tightening—both are just a hair apart in the loss column and need this win to set their playoff seeding. With Minnesota reeling from recent key injuries and Houston hunting for position on a tough road swing, this is the must-watch, true toss-up of the week.

Houston Rockets

Houston Rockets

VS
Minnesota Timberwolves

Minnesota Timberwolves

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Win Probability (BAC Model)

52%

48%

Toss-Up

Competitiveness

10/10

Must Watch

Viewing Value

8.0

True Toss-Up

HEAD-TO-HEAD COMPARISON
Rockets
Timberwolves
116.5

ORtg

116.0
112.5

DRtg

112.4
96.9

Pace

101.5
4.0

Net Rtg

3.6
60.6

Win%

61.1
3.7

TQS

3.4
LLWWL
Last 5
WLWWL
1 day rest (road 2 of 4)
Rest
2 days rest
Stat visualization


Record 43-28 44-28 Viewing Value 8.0 — True Toss-Up Game Competitiveness 10/10

Matchup Overview

This isn’t just a great game on paper—it’s a cold-blooded race for home court and first-round survival. Both teams hover just above .600 and come in with elite top-10 efficiency on both ends. The BAC Model reads it as an absolute coin flip: 52% Houston, 48% Minnesota. Every possession will matter.

Minnesota gets two days’ rest but is missing All-Star Anthony Edwards; their continuity is fractured. Houston steps in with just one day off and game two of a four-city trek, but brings a deeper, more settled roster. Both are banged up, but only Minnesota’s absences are new and unadjusted.

Stats Corner

  • Minnesota: 118.4 PS/G (elite offense)—but key injuries cloud those numbers.
  • Houston: 38.8 ORB%—battery-ram on the glass; best mark in the NBA.
  • Both teams: Net rating +3.6 vs. +4.0—razor-thin margin in actual game control.
  • Houston: 110.2 PA/G—stronger perimeter defense, slightly better than Wolves.
  • Minnesota: eFG% 56.2 (top 5); Houston’s TOV% 16.1 (worst among playoff teams).
  • Wolves’ recent run: Win vs. Boston, blowout over Utah—then awkward losses to Portland and OKC.

The Edge & What Could Break It

BAC Model pick: Houston Rockets. Why? Houston’s board dominance and fresher continuity trump a depleted Wolves backcourt.

Supporting points:
Offensive rebounding edge is overwhelming: Houston grabs 38.8% of their own misses, the best in the league—Minnesota has no Anthony Edwards (out, right knee) and may also lose Ayo Dosunmu, leaving them smaller and softer at the guard spot.
Houston’s defense travels: They allow just 110.2 points per game with a slower pace, minimizing easy buckets and demanding Minnesota’s shorthanded offense execute.
Minnesota’s offensive efficiency is inflated: Without Edwards and potentially Dosunmu, the Wolves’ 56.2 eFG% likely drops—Bones Hyland and Kyle Anderson running offense is a steep downgrade.

Risks to the pick:
– If Donte DiVincenzo gets hot early and stretches Houston’s defense, the Wolves can score in bunches—Houston’s 16.1 TOV% is a killer against teams that capitalize in transition.
– Houston’s only on their second road game in four nights, but if pace picks up and fatigue sets in late, their offense can stall—witness the back-to-back losses to the Lakers, when legs got heavy and shot quality dropped.

Confidence tag: True toss-up—52/48 split. This call could turn on a single quarter.

The Bottom Line

Houston’s board work and backcourt depth give them the thinnest margin in a game where every error will be punished. Minnesota’s injuries ask too much of the bench. Rockets by an inch—expect a war in the final minutes, but BAC’s math says Houston closes it out.