In the first quarter of the Timberwolves' 132-102 victory over Oklahoma City on Wednesday night, Anthony Edwards stole the ball from Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and sprinted down the court for a dunk.
The injured left knee that kept Edwards out of the previous four games, the first games he has missed in his career because of physical injury, looked just fine as he soared to the hoop and landed without a wince of pain.
That may not always be the case because Edwards' injury, left knee tendinopathy, appears to be one he will have to manage the rest of the season and potentially play through some pain.
"It's something that you can play through," Edwards said. "Certain people can play through it, but if you don't have a certain tolerance for pain, you can't play through that."
Edwards, who said he has not been injured much in his athletic career, is going to try to play as much as possible. After scoring 16 points in his return on 7-for-15 shooting, Edwards said recently he felt a "big knot just hurting, hurting, hurting" and it became too much.
"That joint was just throbbing on my knee, right by my kneecap," he said.
Edwards said he would start games fine, but just a few minutes into a night he would start feeling pain.
"It would start off good, then three to four minutes into the game, hurting, hurting, hurting for the rest of the game," he said. "And I be in trouble because I can't really do nothing, for real."