PORTLAND, ORE. – After Cleveland trounced the Timberwolves on Friday night, coach Chris Finch mentioned he had to speak with Anthony Edwards about how teams have been defending of late.
Edwards has seen his efficiency dip as the Wolves entered Sunday's matchup against Portland.
Over his previous seven games, Edwards was averaging 19.3 points. But he was shooting just 38% from the floor and 28% from three-point range.
Finch wasn't alarmed at Edwards' recent struggles.
"What he's going through is just a normal series of processing information … " Finch said. "He came into the league and just kinda hooped. That's all he did, just hooped. Some nights it was good, some night it wasn't. And then he figured out a little bit more who he was, and then he had success there. Now the league's got some answers for him."
Some of those answers include how Cleveland defended Edwards. Edwards said no matter the situation, Isaac Okoro, the Cavaliers player guarding him, always found Edwards — even in transition. Transition is where Edwards can thrive in attacking.
"It helps. It gets me going for sure," Edwards said.
Finch said the coaching staff and Edwards have been discussing ways to counteract the increased focus Edwards has received from opponents. Some of that includes more movement off the ball.