Tied at 2-2 the Timberwolves and Spurs resume their best of seven games second round playoff series tonight in San Antonio. The Wolves pulled even in the series Sunday night in Minneapolis when uber talented and gritty Anthony Edwards scored 16 fourth quarter points to lead a closing minutes 114-109 win in Game 4.
Edwards scored a game-high 36 points, but about two weeks prior no one would have predicted such heroics. On April 25 in the opening playoff series against the Nuggets, he suffered an ugly left knee hyperextension and bone bruise. Edwards was in severe pain when he needed two individuals to help him hobble to the locker room, and it appeared his team might not see him for a long stretch.
Worry warts might have been thinking it might even be next season to see Edwards, who this spring has also been plagued by a right knee issue. The Wolves managed to win their last two games against the Nuggets without him and close out the series 4-2. Still, everyone knew the Wolves needed Edwards for a deep playoff run and the more optimistic timetable had him returning to game action after the second round started.
Instead, he was back for Game 1 against the Spurs in San Antonio on May 4. He played limited minutes (25) but was a key in Minnesota’s opening 104-102 win.
Edwards isn’t fully healthy, but he’s played in all the games against the Spurs, sometimes resting on the bench with large ice bags on his knee. He’s scored over 30 points in the last two games and totaled 81 minutes on the floor.
A limited “Ant” is much better than no “Ant.” His resolve to compete is elite and appreciated by observers who have been around him.
Dr. Robby Sikka is a former executive with the Timberwolves who led innovations in player health. He told Dan Barreiro on KFAN last week that Edwards has the awareness and commitment to take care of his body, even praising the amount of sleep the former Georgia player gets.
The doctor compared Edwards’ competitive fire with former Wolves superstar Kevin Garnett, who was known for his ferocious play. Sikka went further with his Edwards superlatives saying the 24-year-old has the freakish athleticism of former Viking legend Randy Moss and the charisma of the late Kirby Puckett, the ex-Twin and Cooperstown Hall of Famer.
“When he went down with that injury…unfortunately it looked like an injury that was going to keep him out for a long time,” Fred Hoiberg told Sports Headliners. “The fact that he got back as soon as he did I think just… shows…his toughness and his character. As a Wolves alum, it’s certainly something that we can be proud of just with the way that he approaches and plays the game.”
Hoiberg, the former Timberwolf guard and executive, is now head coach at the University of Nebraska. His son Jack works in the video department for the Spurs. So, Hoiberg has been closely following the series with the Wolves and was in attendance for Games 3 and 4 in Minneapolis.
“Oh, I think he’s one of the most talented players in the league,” Hoiberg said Sunday night about Edwards. “His athleticism, his ability to shoot, his ability to play one-on-one. He’s one of the most unique players in the league right now.”
Edwards reveled in his Game 1 return that surprised the basketball world. He scored 11 points in the closing period, after reportedly screaming at the Spurs bench early in the game that: “I’m back.”
Veteran Wolves’ guard Mike Conley said no one expected “Ant” to play. But Edwards did and he thought his presence was calming for his teammates.
Hobbled or not, limited in explosiveness because of his knees, Edwards’ availability is certainly reassuring for head coach Chris Finch who saw his star come up big Sunday night despite so much attention from Spurs’ defenders including frequent double teams.
“Oh, it was awesome, it was special,” Finch said. “This is what he loves, this is what he lives for, you know. Not just big games, big moments and…I thought for the most part, when he wasn’t doubled, you know, he got to his stuff quick and clean. Just kind of figured out how to get separation and that was just all that he needed.”

The Wolves have advanced to the Western Conference Finals the last two years led by the young shooting guard whose potential hints at even better days to come. To make it three straight the Wolves will have to get by the Spurs and 22-year-old ultra talented 7-4 center Victor Wembanyama.
Wemby was ejected early in the second quarter in Sunday night’s loss for tossing a startling elbow to the chin of the Wolves’ Naz Reid. His team couldn’t win without him, just like the Wolves are limited without Edwards.
The rest of the series figures to be a war, and “Ant” is battle-tested.
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