Dallas Mavericks rookie point guard Luka Doncic entered the fourth quarter at Target Center in Minneapolis looking to be one of the two youngest players to ever record a triple-double.

Doncic ultimately fell two rebounds short. Instead, he decided to capture the souls of the Minnesota Timberwolves instead.

The third overall pick of the 2018 NBA draft, Doncic finished a 119-115 Dallas win with 29 points, 8 rebounds, 12 assists, and 2 steals. Most impressive, he got buckets after the Mavericks blew a lead that was as large as 14 points in the first half and 10 points with 5:50 left in the final quarter.

A 16-5 Minnesota run evaporated Dallas' lead, with Timberwolves center Karl-Anthony Towns scoring 10 of those points and Minnesota scoring on 10 straight possessions after falling behind 105-95.

After Towns made a go-ahead hook with 1:41 left in the fourth quarter, Doncic went to work. It started with a pick-and-roll with center DeAndre Jordan that allowed Doncic to get downhill and convert on a floater over Towns, giving Dallas a 112-111 lead with 1:28 left. Minnesota regained the lead after a floater from point guard Jeff Teague, but then Doncic used another screen from Jordan to dunk all over Minnesota's frontcourt.

Of course, that wasn't enough. Teague missed another floater, but Minnesota power forward Taj Gibson tipped the miss in to force a Dallas timeout with 35.7 seconds left and the Timberwolves leading 115-114.

Gibson then stole Doncic's pass out of the timeout, but Minnesota rookie Josh Okogie turned the ball right back over. With his team out of timeouts and down one, Doncic pulled up with 18 seconds left on the shot clock and launched a 28-foot 3-pointer with Towns running out to contest. Never mind the fact that Doncic had missed seven of his previous eight 3s. This one was good, and it represented the last lead change.

Minnesota would turn the ball over coming out of a timeout, and Dallas small forward Harrison Barnes iced the game from there to secure what was only the fourth road win of the season for Dallas. According to ESPN Stats & Information, the last rookie with three go-ahead field goals in the final two minutes of regulation before Doncic was Vince Carter against the Indiana Pacers on April 1, 1999. Doncic has made a habit of being clutch late, with the second-best high-volume clutch field goal percentage in the league.

Highest FG percentage in clutch time Clutch time is defined as a game within five points in the last five minutes. FG-FGA Victor Oladipo, Indiana 63.2 24-38 Luka Doncic, Dallas 57.1 24-42 Bradley Beal, Washington 53.5 23-43 Nikola Jokic, Denver 53.5 23-43 De'Aaron Fox, Sacramento 51.4 18-35 >> Min. 35 field goal attempts

Doncic keeps adding to his eye-opening rookie performances. He is the sixth rookie since the 1976 ABA-NBA merger with 29 points, 12 assists, and 8 rebounds in a game, joining Michael Jordan (twice), Kevin Johnson, Steve Francis, Stephen Curry (twice), and Victor Oladipo, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. He is the youngest player with at least 25 points and 10 assists since LeBron James in 2004, according to ESPN Stats & Info. And he continues to gain acclaim from his peers.

Luka Doncic was laughing in the purple rain after his clutch baskets lifted the Mavericks to a win in Minnesota. Jordan Johnson/NBAE/Getty

Doncic's next opportunity to ball out will be at home against the Golden State Warriors. The Mavericks will need Doncic to keep leading them to wins, as the Mavericks are still two games under .500 at 20-22. the same record as Minnesota and New Orleans in a wide-open Western Conference.