Toronto Star

Edwards spells big trouble for Nuggets

Timberwolv­es have an advantage with Murray nursing calf

- TROY RENCK

Anthony Edwards is the future, and the evolution was televised Saturday night.

The defending champion Denver Nuggets lost for only the second time in their past 15 home playoff games Saturday, dropping the opener of their second-round series with the Minnesota Timberwolv­es, 106-99.

First, the obvious. The Nuggets stand zero chance of advancing if Jamal Murray, bothered by a sore left calf, cannot regain his explosiven­ess and scoring. And that problem is amplified by who the Nuggets are facing.

Viewed through the wide lens, the Timberwolv­es won because the Nuggets defence offered less resistance than a water slide in the second half. Minnesota made 27 of 38 shots, a stunning 71 per cent from the field. Edwards, Karl AnthonyTow­ns, Naz Reid and Mike Conley finished in double figures.

“It will be a quick exit if we allow four guys to get off like that,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said afterward. “We have to do a much better job. I don’t think we had what we needed, and I will leave it at that.”

It is easy to sell the idea that it was a defensive lapse, a team taking its heavy foot off the pedal. The more sobering thought for the Nuggets can be summarized in two words and a hyphen: Ant-Man.

He has a few moves. Has springs in his legs. And Prestone in his veins. The Nuggets squandered homecourt advantage in this series when Edwards drained a 14-foot jumper with 1:36 remaining, stretching Minnesota’s lead to 102-91. There was no counterpun­ch.

Edwards scored a playoff careerhigh 43 points, his second straight 40-point game in the post-season.

Before a raucous crowd, Edwards looked like a prime Kobe Bryant, a young Michael Jordan. The Nuggets have to beat him four times? This is going to be a problem.

Edwards goes by the nickname Ant-Man, but he put on a show that made everyone else look small. After their latest decaffeina­ted start, the Nuggets held the Timberwolv­es to 22 points over the final 25 minutes of the first half. It would suggest a sizable margin. Instead, Denver led 44-40. Edwards refused to let the Nuggets run away and hide. He scored 25 first-half points on 10-of-17 shooting.

“I just felt good. That was the main thing. And my teammates found me on some layups,” Edwards said. “I have never gotten that many easy buckets.”

There was one point when cinema came to life as he crossed over Aaron Gordon and then drilled a fadeaway jumper to shove Minnesota ahead 84-81. Before Saturday, mentioning Edwards in the same breath as legends rested with his scoring. He makes shots from all distances and his dunks are breathtaki­ng.

What deepened the comparison in Game 1 was his defence. Jordan and Bryant made everything personal on both ends of the court. So it was interestin­g to see Edwards open the game guarding Murray. This was not expected or normal. But it shows how much his skill set has broadened beyond his jumper.

Murray went scoreless in the first half. Edwards did not contest every shot, but he was part of shackling the Nuggets’ second-best scorer. Murray finished with 17 points and a minus-22 rating.

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