As the Timberwolves were hurrying out of the visiting locker room in Denver following their Game 5 loss, Anthony Edwards wasn’t too upset and was in a talkative mood.
He chatted a bit with teammates and some media members even after the cameras turned off. But just before he left, he was chatting with a Nuggets locker room attendant. He told the attendant, “We’ll see you on Sunday for Game 7.”
Edwards and the Wolves made good on that promise with a resounding 115-70 victory in Thursday night’s Game 6 at Target Center, a game that was about as dramatic a turn from their previous three games as they could get.
Fans, league observers and maybe even the Wolves themselves wondered if they would ever find themselves again. Their offense was grounded, the Nuggets were outhustling them and Nikola Jokic was barely breaking a sweat against their once-intimidating defense.
But that defense came roaring back to force just the second Game 7 in franchise history on Sunday in Denver. It will be 20 years to the day the Wolves won their only other Game 7 in franchise history, at home against Sacramento in the second round in 2004.
Sunday’s tip-off time will depend on the outcome of tonight’s Game 6 in of the Pacers vs. Knicks series in the Eastern Conference. It will be at 2:30 p.m. if the Knicks win and 7 p.m. if the Pacers extend that series to Game 7.
Negativity had filled the Wolves after their past three losses. There was finger-pointing around the team, Edwards said. So coming into Game 6, the coaching staff decided to inject a little positivity by showing the Wolves an edit of all the good things they did in Games 1 and 2. That team showed up Thursday night.
“I think the last three games we were all down on ourselves,” Edwards said. “Just trying to point the finger, blame somebody. … Everybody started to believe after that little edit that they put together. I could tell the energy shifted after that little edit. That was big-time. I told them that was big-time putting the edit together.