Andrew Wiggins thwarted the Oklahoma City Thunder’s comeback bid, launcing a game-winning three-pointer as time expired to lift the Minnesota Timberwolves to a 115-113 NBA triumph on Sunday.
Wiggins’ banked in shot from near halfcourt denied new Thunder signing Carmelo Anthony a signature moment with his new club. Anthony had put Oklahoma City up with five seconds remaining.
“I could see how much time was left,” Wiggins said. “I got as close as I could and let it go.
“Everything worked perfectly,” Wiggins added. “When it left my hands it felt amazing.”
The result left the crowd in Oklahoma City - not to mention the Thunder - stunned by a second straight defeat.
Anthony, acquired in September from the New York Knicks in a blockbuster trade, finished with 23 points. Wiggins and Karl-Anthony Towns led the Timberwolves with 27 points apiece. Towns also pulled down a team-high 12 rebounds.
Reigning NBA Most Valuable Player Russell Westbrook, coming off a six-point performance in a loss to the Utah Jazz on Saturday, shook off a slow start to score 31 points with 10 assists for Oklahoma City.
But his late-game heroics weren’t enough after the Thunder’s lacklustre start.
He scored 15 points in the fourth quarter, including a three-pointer with 30 seconds remaining that tied the game at 110-110. Towns answered with another basket, and after Anthony’s three-pointer put the Thunder up again Wiggins swooped for the win.
Westbrook wasn’t convinced that the hard screen set by Towns that freed Wiggins for the game-winner - and knocked down the Thunder’s Paul George - was legal.
Thunder coach Billy Donovan said he’d leave it to NBA officials to “deal with that stuff”.
Center Steven Adams was a lone bright spot for the Thunder in the early going, scoring 14 first-half points. But even though his efforts helped the Thunder outscore the Timberwolves by 10 points in the paint in the first half, it was Minnesota who led at the break 61-54.
The Timberwolves led 88-75 going into the fourth. The Thunder opened the final period with a 14-6 scoring run before their late charge ultimately fell short.
The Brooklyn Nets, stung by the injury to Jeremy Lin in the first game of the season, nevertheless notched a second straight victory with a 116-104 home win over the Atlanta Hawks.

Green light
Allen Crabbe, playing limited minutes as he continues his recovery from a pre-season ankle injury, produced 20 points, including a three-pointer with 4:37 left to play that broke a 99-99 tie and put the Nets ahead for good. Crabbe was efficient in his 25:38 minutes on the court, coming off the bench and making seven of 12 shots and four of the Nets’ 11 three-pointers.
“They give me the green light to shoot the ball, so it’s not going to hurt me to get them up,” Crabbe said. “The basket looks bigger and bigger after each one I make.”
Meanwhile The Phoenix Suns didn’t waste any time making a coaching change. Three games into the season, Earl Watson is out as coach and Jay Triano will replace him on an interim basis, the team announced Sunday night. The Suns lost their first three games, the latest a 130-88 blowout on the road against the Los Angeles Clippers on Saturday night. The Suns’ 48-point loss to the Portland Trail Blazers on Wednesday was the worst opening-night loss in NBA history. Watson’s dismissal is the first firing of an NBA head coach since 2016. It is the earliest a coach has been ousted during a season in league history.
Mike Brown was fired by the Los Angeles Lakers five games into the 2012-13 season. Watson lasted 118 games with the Suns and had a 33-85 record. Phoenix finished 24-58 last season. Watson was hired on an interim basis in 2016 after Jeff Hornacek was fired.
Triano was the associate head coach under Watson. He is expected to remain interim coach for the remainder of the season, ESPN reported. In two-plus seasons as the head coach of the Toronto Raptors, Triano compiled an 87-142 record. He also has served as Canada’s national coach and for four years as an assistant for the Trail Blazers.
The Suns, who play the Sacramento Kings on Monday night in Phoenix, are undergoing a massive rebuilding project under general manager Ryan McDonough. The roster includes four rookies and four second-year players.