NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help

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NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help - Image 1
NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help - Image 2
NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help - Image 3
NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help - Image 4

NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help

The Magic, Thunder, Knicks and Wolves were winners on Saturday, but let's dive in deeper to the first-round action

NBA playoffs winners and losers: Ayo Dosunmu puts the Nuggets on the brink, Jalen Brunson gets some help

The Magic, Thunder, Knicks and Wolves were winners on Saturday, but let's dive in deeper to the first-round action

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Saturday was another busy day in the 2026 NBA playoffs. Four first-round games saw two teams pushed to the brink of elimination, one series get evened up and a No. 1 seed fall behind.

The Magic took down the Pistons as eighth-seeded Orlando is now up 2-1 in the best-of-seven affair over top-seeded Detroit. The West's No. 1 seed, however, is not having any issues. The Thunder are now up 3-0 against the Suns after another double-digit victory on Saturday, and OKC will go for the sweep on Monday.

The Knicks pulled off a crucial victory on the road on Saturday evening, running away from the Hawks to even their contentious series at 2-2. In the nightcap, the Timberwolves lost two key players to injuries -- Donte DiVincenzo tore his Achilles and Anthony Edwards exited with a knee issue -- but they still managed to beat the Nuggets and take a 3-1 series lead.

And now here are the biggest winners and losers from Saturday's action.

Rob Dillingham. Leonard Miller. Four second-round picks. That's all the Minnesota Timberwolves had to pay for Ayo Dosunmu, the reserve who changed their season. What is it about the Chicago Bulls and giving away postseason-altering guards without getting a first-round pick back?

Dosunmu's impact in Minnesota is hardly new. He was already averaging 16 points per game for the Timberwolves off the bench. He's picked up a lot of Nickeil Alexander-Walker's old bench defensive duties, he's barely missed a mid-range shot since he got to Minnesota, and he injects a degree of pace into this series that's downright toxic to these slow, unathletic Nuggets. If he'd just done that, he still would've gone down as one of the best additions of the deadline.

And then Donte DiVincenzo tore his Achilles. And Anthony Edwards left the game with a knee injury. So much for Minnesota's upset bid, right? Wrong. Dosunmu scored 43 points, the second-most ever posted by a reserve in an NBA playoff game, on 13-of-17 shooting. He made all five of his 3s, but more importantly, he got to the line 12 times and made all of his free throws. Shooting comes and goes. Aggression is a mindset, and these Nuggets just have no answer for the relentlessness with which Dosunmu is attacking them. All eight of his 2-pointers were in the paint.

Minnesota still has a ways to go. If the Edwards injury is serious enough to keep him sidelined, the Timberwolves might need another game like this out of Dosunmu just to get that fourth, clinching victory. This was the game of Dosunmu's life. He'll almost certainly be starting in DiVincenzo's place the rest of the way. But no matter what he does from here on out, games like this can be career-altering. This was a coming out party for a young player who languished on one of the NBA's worst teams, thrived in a small role for a contender and is now showing he's ready for a bigger one. With free agency looming for him this offseason, the timing couldn't be better. -- Sam Quinn

The Nuggets, on the rare occasions in which they were healthy this season, were every bit the championship contender they were supposed to be. They are also, more rapidly than most seem to accept, creeping up on this core's expiration date. Aaron Gordon has struggled to stay on the floor through muscle injuries for two years now. The Nuggets already had to make a major, financially motivated trade last summer when they spent a first-round pick to turn Michael Porter Jr. into Cam Johnson. With Peyton Watson hitting restricted free agency this offseason, more savings are expected. Denver is out of tradable first-round picks.

The Thunder and Spurs are probably never going to be more vulnerable than they are now. Their young rosters are only getting better. Who knows what the Lakers have planned to upgrade around Luka Dončić. Minnesota beat the Nuggets in 2024 and has them on the ropes in 2026. It's possible that the Western Conference is about to pass the Nuggets by. The window may not close after this season, but it's probably never going to be more open than it is this year. If it's going to happen again for the Nuggets, it kind of needs to happen now.

Which is what makes a loss like this so discouraging. There are ancillary factors, of course. Gordon is clearly not himself. Watson is out. Jokić has been playing through a wrist injury. But there was no sense of urgency from the Nuggets in the second half. They were outscored by 21 points after Anthony Edwards left the game for good. The Nuggets have a long history of playing with their food. This is a team that lost to the Wizards twice in the 2024-25 season. But the TImberwolves played with appropriate, playoff-level intensity for 48 minutes. By the time the Nuggets got to the party, it was already too late.

If Denver loses this series in this way, all bets are off this offseason. Ownership has all the justification it needs not to pay up to keep the team together. David Adelman's seat could certainly warm up. And Jokić himself, who has always sworn he plans to extend this offseason, suddenly has a decision to make. He has never been known to use his leverage as a star to influence team affairs. If he wants change, if he senses ownership isn't willing to make the investments needed to stay in the championship race, this would be the time. And if there's any part of him that has a wandering eye, well, a loss like this isn't exactly an encouraging note to end a season on before considering an extension.

The Nuggets should be the healthier team the rest of the way. They still have two home games. They can at least salvage the series. If they don't, well, get ready for a rocky offseason in Denver. -- Sam Quinn

When it's going bad for the Knicks, Jalen Brunson has to do everything, sometimes because he defaults to that and sometimes because he has no choice. In New York's Game 4 win over the Hawks on Saturday, that wasn't the case. Brunson, in fact, finished just 7 of 18 for 19 points. He was one of five Knicks who scored in double figures. Here are the other four:

All told, nine players contributed at least two buckets, and they did it efficiently on 49/45 shooting splits as a team. The Knicks were the more physical team from start to finish. They knew this was a must-win, and you saw a team that was somewhere between desperate and determined. Atlanta never really had a chance. The Knicks led by 21 going into the fourth quarter and as many as 24.

This is a serious series. These are two pretty evenly matched teams. On Saturday, the Knicks got themselves off the ropes. All attention now turns to Game 5 on Tuesday. Historically speaking, the winner of that game (in a 2-2 series) will have north of an 80% chance of winning the series. -- Brad Botkin

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was named the Clutch Player of the Year earlier this week and is likely going to win his second consecutive MVP award when that honor is announced next month. He showed why on Saturday.

With Jalen Williams sidelined due to a hamstring injury, Gilgeous-Alexander put together one of the best postseason performances of his career to lift the Thunder to a road win and a 3-0 lead over the Suns in their first-round series. The Thunder are now just one win away from their third consecutive first-round sweep.

Gilgeous-Alexander poured in a playoff career-high 42 points on 15 of 18 from the field and dished out eight assists. Twelve of those points and four of those assists came in the fourth quarter as he almost single-handedly held off the Sun's repeated attempts to get back in the game. Overall, he either scored or assisted on 62 of the Thunder's 121 points.

Gilgeous-Alexander is now the third player in Thunder history to have multiple 40-point playoff games, joining Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, who both have seven. He also recorded the second-most efficient 40-point playoff game in NBA history, behind only Terry Porter.

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