Table of Contents
Timberwolves vs. Grizzlies Preview: Minnesota’s composure test vs. Memphis momentum
Match Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Matchup | Memphis Grizzlies at Minnesota Timberwolves |
| Date | Wednesday |
| Venue | Target Center (Minneapolis) |
| Minnesota form | Won seven of last eight, with improved late-game composure |
| Memphis form | Won six of last eight, coming off a 121-103 win vs. LAC |
| Key swing | Availability of Anthony Edwards and Ja Morant |
For matchup context and team pages, use NBA teams.
Line and Odds
- Spread: Timberwolves -7.5
- Moneyline: Timberwolves -298 / Grizzlies +240
- Total: 233.5
This number is built on Minnesota’s current form and home-court edge, but it’s also highly sensitive to late availability. If Edwards is cleared, Minnesota’s shot creation and transition pressure jump a level. If Morant sits, Memphis’ offense becomes more Jackson-centric and easier to scheme against in the half court. Before placing anything, confirm where the market settles on NBA scores and odds.
Movement Matchup
Minnesota’s recent surge is tied to cleaner decision-making late. They’re getting better shots in crunch time, protecting leads with more control, and avoiding the empty possessions that flip close games. Without Mike Conley, the Wolves lean more heavily on guard depth to organize offense, so the quality of their reads and spacing becomes the separator, not just raw scoring.
Memphis brings a different challenge. Even when Morant is limited or out, the Grizzlies can still create pressure with pace, crashing the glass, and forcing mistakes that lead to runouts. Jaren Jackson Jr. is the matchup stressor: if Minnesota plays him straight up, he can score over size or drive past it; if they send help, Memphis will live and die by whether the supporting shooters punish rotations.
Breakdown Injury Reports
Minnesota Timberwolves
| Player | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Anthony Edwards | Questionable | Right foot (injury maintenance) |
| Mike Conley | Out | Right Achilles (tendinopathy) |
Memphis Grizzlies
| Player | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ja Morant | Questionable | Left ankle sprain |
| Brandon Clarke | Questionable | Right knee (surgery recovery) |
| Zach Edey | Out | Left ankle (stress reaction) |
| Ty Jerome | Out | Right calf strain |
| John Konchar | Out | Left thumb (UCL) |
| Scotty Pippen Jr. | Out | Left great toe (surgery recovery) |
| Javon Small | Out | Left toe (turf toe) |
| Cam Spencer | Out | Personal reasons |
Minnesota Timberwolves Recent performance
Minnesota is winning with maturity. The offense isn’t just “make tough shots,” it’s getting into sets with purpose, generating better looks late, and staying composed when the opponent makes a run. The win over Sacramento without Edwards and Conley also mattered because it showed the Wolves can survive a key-availability hit if the role players keep the ball moving and defend with energy.
If Edwards plays, Minnesota’s ceiling rises immediately because he warps coverages and creates advantages without needing perfect screening actions. If he doesn’t, the Wolves can still win, but they need to keep the pace controlled, limit turnovers, and manufacture points through balance rather than one-man creation.
Memphis Grizzlies Recent performance
Memphis has been finding ways to win regardless of who’s available, and Jackson’s season-high 31 against the Clippers was a reminder of what it looks like when he’s decisive. When he’s dominating, Memphis’ entire offense simplifies: spacing improves, drives are cleaner, and the game becomes harder to guard because you’re constantly choosing between single coverage and open threes.
Morant’s status is the key lever. If he plays, Memphis has more rim pressure and more transition chaos. If he sits, the Grizzlies can still compete, but they’ll need disciplined shot selection and strong defensive possessions to keep Minnesota from building separation in the second half.
Betting Insights and Trends
This game is largely about game script. Minnesota wants to keep the floor balanced, win the half-court battle, and avoid live-ball turnovers that fuel Memphis runs. Memphis wants to create chaos: speed, extra possessions, and a steady diet of pressure possessions that force Minnesota into rushed decisions.
Injury uncertainty matters more than usual for totals. Edwards’ availability affects Minnesota’s pace and shot quality, while Morant’s availability changes Memphis’ ability to score efficiently without relying on jump shots. If either star is limited, you can see longer possessions, more deliberate offense, and fewer easy points.
For slate navigation and alternative angles once statuses lock, use NBA picks.
Best Bets and Prediction
Best bet: Under 233.5.
This is the best bet because both teams have clear incentives to play more controlled basketball if their primary creators are limited. Minnesota’s recent improvement has been about composure and better late-game reads, which often shows up as slower, cleaner possessions in the fourth. Memphis can still score through Jackson, but without full Morant availability they’re more likely to have empty stretches that keep the total in check.
Prediction: Timberwolves 118, Grizzlies 110.
For broader context on where both teams sit in the conference race, use Western Conference odds.
Handicapper section
If you’re building a card beyond the total, wait for the final injury statuses and keep every play consistent with one story. If Edwards is in and Morant is out, Minnesota spreads and team totals become more attractive. If Edwards is out and Morant is in, the game leans toward tighter margins and more volatility.
For market selection guidance and how to match bet type to script, use the NBA betting guide.


