DALLAS – Sometimes age catches up with an athlete in big moments, when their bodies might not be able to do the things they once could.
Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards might be having the opposite problem as the Timberwolves face a 2-0 hole in the Western Conference finals with Game 3 looming on Sunday: His youth might be catching up to him.
Throughout this playoff run, the Wolves are asking a lot of the 22-year-old All-NBA player, and early in Edwards’ career, it seemed as if he could outrun his postseason inexperience and possibly defy recent NBA history in the process.
In the first round of the playoffs, Edwards was a marvel against the Suns and scored 33 or more points in three of the four games. He was making the right decisions all around the floor, and when he sealed Game 4 with an electrifying dunk, it was clear Edwards’ ascension was underway.
In the second-round series against Denver, he had two games in which he scored 40 or more, and he paced a huge Game 6 with 27 points. His performance was more inconsistent as he faced constant double-teams later in the series, and in Game 7 he shot just 6-for-24, but he found other ways to contribute in that critical game.
Edwards has looked flummoxed so far against the Mavericks, who have found a way to bottle him up by, like Denver, throwing a lot of defenders at him and mixing up coverages to confuse him. Through two games, it has worked wonders for the Mavericks, and the Wolves are left wondering what might be if Edwards played even an average game.
“They’re just showing me crowds, man, sitting in the gaps,” Edwards said. “But I’m turning down a lot of shots, like my midranges and stuff. I’m turning a lot of those down. But we’re getting open looks, so I ain’t tripping.”
Through two matchups, he is just 11-for-33. He appeared to find a way around that in Game 2, when he shot six free throws, but he had just three the rest of the game.