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Thunder overwhelm Timberwolves to reach NBA Finals

Thunder overwhelm Timberwolves to reach NBA Finals
Oklahoma City Thunder chairman Clay Bennett celebrates after his team beat the Minnesota Timberwolves to win the Western Conference Finals for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center. (Imagn Images)
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Updated 29 May 2025

Thunder overwhelm Timberwolves to reach NBA Finals

Thunder overwhelm Timberwolves to reach NBA Finals
  • Oklahoma City advances to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2012
  • Thunder captured the best-of-seven Western Conference finals series 4-1

WASHINGTON: Oklahoma City, sparked by 34 points from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2012 by routing Minnesota Timberwolves 124-94 on Wednesday.

Gilgeous-Alexander, the NBA Most Valuable Player, added eight assists and seven rebounds as the Thunder captured the best-of-seven Western Conference finals series 4-1 and will host game one of the NBA Finals on June 5.

“This is a step in the right direction but we have a lot more work to do and we know that and that’s what we’re focused on so let’s buckle up and get ready,” said Gilgeous-Alexander.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do to get to our ultimate goal and this is not it. That’s all that I’m focused on.”

Oklahoma City will face the Eastern Conference champion, either the Indiana Pacers or New York Knicks, for the NBA title.

Gilgeous-Alexander, a 26-year-old Canadian who was named the series MVP, could become the first NBA scoring champion since Shaquille O’Neal in 2000 to win an NBA title in the same season.

Chet Holmgren added 22 points and Jalen Williams netted 19 for the Thunder, whose average age of 25.6 years makes them the youngest team in the NBA Finals since Portland in 1977.

“We have 17 dudes on the roster who will bring it every single game whether it’s a closeout game or not,” Holmgren said.

“It’s a step in the journey. We still have a season to play (in the Finals) so we’re not done.”

Williams was proud of the way players have melded into a team.

“We’ve been through ups and downs this entire season and that has only brought us closer. We’ve been able to bond and get better and that’s why we’re here now,” he said.

“We’ve still got a job to do but it’s very exciting.”

Julius Randle led Minnesota with 24 points while Anthony Edwards added 19 for the Timberwolves, who have never reached the NBA Finals.

“They came ready to play. We didn’t,” Edwards said. “They dominated the game from the tip.”

Oklahoma City have never won an NBA title, although the franchise won a crown as the Seattle SuperSonics in 1979 before relocating in 2008, and the Thunder last reached the finals in 2012, losing to Miami.

The Thunder had the best record in the NBA this season at 68-14.

“These guys are uncommon,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “They do everything right. They are professional. They are high character... They are competitive and most of all they are team first.”

From the start Oklahoma City overpowered Minnesota in epic fashion, as the visitors suffered a nightmare performance when it mattered most.

“We kept our foot on the gas for 48 minutes,” Daigneault said. “The tone we set in the game was really good from the jump.”

“We were beat by the better team,” Minnesota coach Chris Finch said. “This hurts.”

Gilgeous-Alexander scored 12 points in the first quarter as the Thunder grabbed a 26-9 lead, holding the Timberwolves to their lowest points total in any quarter all season.

“They came out and punched us,” Minnesota’s Mike Conley said.

Minnesota shot 3-for-20 in the first quarter, 1-of-9 from three-point range, and lost four turnovers.

Minnesota missed 10 of their first 11 shots as Oklahoma City jumped ahead 11-3 then closed the quarter on a 13-2 run.

The Thunder rolled to a 48-20 advantage early in the second quarter on the way to a 65-32 half-time lead as Minnesota surrendered a season-high 14 first-half turnovers while making only 12 baskets.

The Timberwolves trailed by as many as 37 points before reducing the deficit to 88-62 after three quarters, but never looked like overcoming the Thunder’s dominant performance.

“It hurts,” Conley said. “For me it’s going to take a while to dissect what we weren’t able to do.”


In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch

In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch
Updated 59 min 37 sec ago

In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch

In Morocco, exiled Afghan women footballers find hope on the pitch
  • The team played their first international matches at the FIFA Unites: Women’s Series late last month in Morocco
  • Twenty-year-old midfielder Mina Ahmadi said “a dream was taken away from us” back home, “but when FIFA recognized us, it was as if a part of that dream came true“

CASABLANCA: Manoozh Noori said she “wanted to die” when the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021. That meant she could no longer do what she loved most: playing football.
Noori, now 22, fled the country where the United Nations say authorities have implemented a “gender apartheid,” and has been playing in a team of Afghan refugee women, recently taking part in a first-of-its-kind tournament in Morocco.
“I had asked myself: do I want to stay in this country with people who want to forbid women from studying, from playing football, from doing anything?” Noori told AFP.
The Taliban authorities, who say that women’s rights are protected by Islamic law, have banned girls and women from schools beyond the age of 12, and also from most jobs and public services — and from playing sports.


Noori had defied family pressure to represent Afghanistan professionally by playing for the country’s national women’s squad before a Taliban government returned to power.
She said she buried her trophies and medals in her family’s backyard and left the country for Australia.
Noori’s team, Afghan Women United, was formed between Europe and Australia, where other teammates have also been living since 2021.

- ‘A beautiful story’ -

The team played their first international matches at the FIFA Unites: Women’s Series late last month in Morocco — and Noori scored the team’s first goal in the opening game against Chad.
They went on to lose both to Chad and Tunisia although they registered a big 7-0 win against Libya. But the tournament overall was a major win for the Afghan women.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino, who attended one of their games, described their participation as “a beautiful story” that the women were writing “for so many girls and women all over the world.”
Nilab Mohammadi, a 28-year-old striker and former soldier who also represented the Afghan national team, said football was “not just a sport — it represents life and hope.”
“There is no more freedom in Afghanistan, especially for Afghan women,” Mohammadi added. “But now, we are going to be their voice.”
Twenty-year-old midfielder Mina Ahmadi said “a dream was taken away from us” back home, “but when FIFA recognized us, it was as if a part of that dream came true.”
“This new adventure is a happy moment for us,” added Ahmadi, who is now studying medical sciences in Australia.
“It won’t stop anytime soon, because we will keep moving forward.”

- ‘Just to play football’ -

FIFA has yet to decide whether the refugee team can compete in official international matches as representing Afghanistan, but the players remain determined to get there.
The Afghan Women United now have one goal: to have the squad recognized by FIFA as the Afghan national women’s team since women in the country are not allowed to play the game.
“These women are incredible,” said Aish Ravi, a researcher on gender equity in sports who worked with several of the players when they first arrived in Australia in 2021.
“They are strong and inspiring,” she added. “They’ve had to overcome enormous adversity just to play football.
“This sport is more than a game,” Ravi said. “It symbolizes freedom for them.”
Ahmadi said she dreamed of playing in Europe one day, but being far from home can prove difficult.
“It’s very hard to get used to a country where you didn’t grow up,” she said. “You miss your family and friends... But we have to keep moving forward.”