Edwards outduels Jokic: Wolves ‘know who we are’

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Anthony Edwards shines with 43-point performance in win over Nuggets (2:08)Anthony Edwards goes off for 43 points to lead the Timberwolves past the Nuggets and take a 1-0 series lead. (2:08)

DENVER — If you asked another young star what it felt like to go into the defending champs’ building and put up a career playoff-high 43 points in a 106-99 Game 1 win to tip off the second round, he might call it a statement performance.

If he was really feeling himself, he might say Saturday night represented a seismic shift in the balance of power in the Western Conference with the Minnesota Timberwolves stealing home court away from the Denver Nuggets.

However, Anthony Edwards isn’t like any other young star today. He might not be like any other young star in league history.

“It’s not about introducing ourselves to nobody. We know who we are,” Edwards said when asked about Minnesota playing past the first round of the playoffs for the first time in two decades. “We’re coming out and as long as we got each other’s backs, it don’t really matter what anybody else thinks.”

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Edwards joked that he might not even have been born when Kevin Garnett and the Wolves beat the Sacramento Kings in the second round in 2004 to make the only conference finals appearance in franchise history.

Whatever past woes that Wolves have had in the postseason, the current team is having a moment. It’s now 5-0 in the playoffs, including a sweep of the Phoenix Suns in the first round, with Edwards joining Kobe Bryant as the only other player in NBA postseason history with consecutive 40-point performances at age 22 or younger, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

Edwards’ 119 points over his past three playoff games are the most by a Wolves player over a three-game span in the team’s postseason history. And he did it Saturday by outplaying the reigning NBA Finals MVP — and a top-three finalist for the regular-season MVP this year — in Nikola Jokic.

“To be honest, he’s a special player, I have huge respect for him, he can do everything on the floor,” Jokic said of Edwards. “You need to give him respect, how good and how talented he is.”

Jokic finished with 32 points, 9 assists, 8 rebounds and 3 steals, but he shot just 11-for-25 from the field (2-for-9 from 3) and coughed up a game-high 7 turnovers. When asked how he could be better against the Wolves’ three-headed front line of Karl-Anthony Towns, Rudy Gobert and Naz Reid in Game 2, Jokic quipped he would need to “have a duplicate clone of myself.”

Edwards, meanwhile, shot 17-for-29 with 7 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 2 blocks and just 1 turnover. Even more remarkable, he shot 7-for-10 on heavily contested jump shots in Game 1, according to Second Spectrum. This postseason, he’s shooting 53% on heavily contested jumpers, the best in the NBA.

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Despite the disparity in production between the two stars, Edwards still deferred to the opponent, while giving credit to his teammates for the outcome.

“Going against the best player in the world is always fun, going against the best team in the world is always fun,” Edwards said. “Our guys came out and competed tonight. So, it’s not about me personally, it’s about my team. They give me confidence also.”

Edwards was perfect from the field to start things off, going 5-for-5 during the Wolves’ 18-4 run in the first seven minutes of the first quarter. The Nuggets battled back to take a 44-40 lead by halftime, holding every Minnesota player other than Edwards to just 6-for-27 shooting (22.2%). The Wolves pushed back ahead in the third while Edwards said he “didn’t do anything” and “was just out there running up and down” while Towns went 5-for-5 to score 11 of his 20 points and Mike Conley went 4-for-4 to score 11 of his 14.

The fourth belonged to Edwards and Reid, the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year. Edwards, who was held scoreless in the fourth quarter in both of the Wolves’ regular-season losses to Denver, scored 12 points on 4-for-5 shooting to close things out. Reid scored 14 of his 16 in the fourth — including 10 straight for the Wolves — to seal it.

“For a guy like me who’s seen him grow from day one to where he is now, I think he’s a superstar in the making if he’s not [already] now,” Reid said of Edwards. “He’s a tremendous player and a tremendous person off the court. … He’s a guy you want to be around.”

And Minnesota plans to stick around the playoffs for a while to come, as evidenced by the “11” written in big black numerals on the whiteboard in the visitors locker room at Ball Arena after the game. It represents the number of wins the Wolves still need to capture the first championship in team history this spring.

“He’s been growing every day, he’s been getting more mature every single night,” Gobert said of Edwards. “So it’s fun to be a part of.”

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Why wait? Malone wants better starts by Nuggets

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Anthony Edwards shines with 43-point performance in win over Nuggets (2:08)Anthony Edwards goes off for 43 points to lead the Timberwolves past the Nuggets and take a 1-0 series lead. (2:08)

DENVER — On the way to their NBA championship last season, the Denver Nuggets were also widely renown for having arguably the best starting five in basketball.

Minnesota Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said as much before his team’s 106-99 Game 1 victory Saturday, calling the Nuggets’ first unit “probably the most complete and complementary starting five in the league.”

But Denver’s starters haven’t been getting off to great starts this postseason, and Nuggets coach Michael Malone said that needs to change.

“We have to do a better job, our starters in particular, have to do a better job of being ready to play and setting the tone early,” Malone said after the Nuggets’ film session on Sunday. “What are we waiting for? I mean, now we’re down 0-1, what are you waiting for?”

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In the Nuggets’ first-round matchup with the Los Angeles Lakers, they were outscored in the first quarter in four of the five games and were minus-23 in the quarter overall for the series.

In the first quarter of Game 1 to start their second-round series against Minnesota, the Nuggets actually outscored the Wolves 25-23, but only after falling behind 18-4 and needing to expend energy to rally back into it.

“I talked to our players this morning about how for five games against the Lakers, we were down [virtually] every first quarter,” Malone said. “So, do I believe that our guys are fully ready to give whatever it takes to try to defend our title? Of course I do. But at some point, man, you got to stop doing the same thing.”

One of the Nuggets who got off to an underwhelming start against Minnesota was point guard Jamal Murray. After coming into the game questionable because of a left calf strain that he suffered against the Lakers, Murray was scoreless in the first half, going 0-for-5.

When asked what the Wolves did to lock him up in the early going, Murray replied, “Nothing, I’ve been scoreless plenty of times before.”

He finished with 17 points — shooting 6-for-9 in the second half — and played 34 minutes.

“I’m good,” Murray said when asked about his health. “How [many] minutes did I play? It was good enough.”

As the questions continued about his calf injury, Murray refused to acknowledge any limitation.

“I’m not going to make no excuses, bro,” Murray said. “Everybody has got nagging injuries. Everybody is playing through something at this point of the season. My calf is no different than anybody else on the team or in the league, honestly. Obviously, it sucks, but it’s not something that I enjoy talking about as part of the loss.

“It’s going to be a part of [the playoff run], and I’ve accepted that and there’s counters for everything. So I just got to keep adjusting, we got to keep adjusting and find ways to get it done. I don’t know, man. The calf is whatever it is.”

The Nuggets are listing Murray as questionable for Game 2.

Last spring, the Nuggets never trailed in a series, and they didn’t lose a home game until the NBA Finals. Now they’re down after giving away home-court advantage to open up the conference semifinals.

“This year is different,” Malone said. “It’s a different team. It’s a different setup. And now it’s a new challenge. So let’s embrace that.

“We are down. We didn’t want to be, but we are. So let’s fight like hell tomorrow night and leave it all out there.”

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