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Wolves Snatch Victory From Houston's Jaws in Historic OT Thriller

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📅 March 26, 2026✍️ Alex Kim⏱️ 4 min read
By Alex Kim · Published 2026-03-26 · Timberwolves post NBA's largest overtime comeback on record

Look, we've all seen some wild finishes in the NBA. Teams blow leads, teams make impossible shots. But what the Minnesota Timberwolves pulled off Wednesday night against the Houston Rockets? That was something else entirely. Down 13 points with barely 3 minutes left in overtime, the Wolves looked dead in the water at Target Center. They trailed 108-95. The crowd was deflating. Then, Karl-Anthony Towns and Anthony Edwards decided they weren't going home with a loss.

What unfolded was the biggest overtime comeback in NBA history. Not just this season, *ever*. A 15-0 run to close out the game, culminating in a 110-108 victory that left everyone, including the Rockets, completely stunned. Jalen Green, who had been torching the Wolves all night with 30 points, must have felt like he saw a ghost. It's the kind of game that sticks with you, the kind where you wonder how the hell it even happened.

A Collapse for the Ages, A Comeback for the Books

Thing is, the Rockets had this game. Completely. They led by as many as 19 points in the third quarter. They were hitting everything, moving the ball, and making life miserable for Rudy Gobert in the paint. Then the fourth quarter happened, and the Wolves started chipping away. They forced overtime, a mini-miracle in itself, but even then, Houston seemed to find another gear. Fred VanVleet hit a couple of big shots, and suddenly it was 108-95 with 3:09 left on the clock. That's usually ballgame. You start thinking about the flight back to Houston.

But the Wolves didn't quit. Edwards hit a tough jumper. Towns got to the line. And then the defense locked in. Houston couldn't buy a bucket. Tari Eason missed a wide-open three that would have sealed it. Dillon Brooks, bless his heart, missed a couple of contested shots he probably shouldn't have taken. The pressure mounted, and the young Rockets folded under it. Naz Reid's put-back with 1:33 left cut the lead to two, 108-106. The place was absolutely rocking.

Ant-Man's Clutch Gene and Houston's Heartbreak

Anthony Edwards, who finished with 27 points, wasn't having his best shooting night, but he made the plays when they mattered most. His driving layup with 10.9 seconds left tied the game at 108. Then, after another Rockets turnover, Towns, who had 29 points and 16 rebounds, got fouled. He calmly sank both free throws with 2.7 seconds on the clock to give the Wolves the lead. The roar was deafening. Stephen Silas, Houston's coach, probably wanted to disappear into the locker room right then and there.

This isn't just about a win for the Wolves; it's a statement. This team, which has struggled with consistency at times, showed a resilience that championship contenders possess. They could have packed it in. They should have. But they didn't. For the Rockets, it's a brutal lesson in closing out games. You can't let a team like Minnesota, with the talent they have, hang around. You just can't.

Here's my hot take: This specific comeback, the magnitude of it, will be the turning point for the Timberwolves this season. They'll remember this feeling, this impossible victory, and it will fuel a much deeper playoff run than anyone expects.