“MVP and a championship.”
Those were Anthony Edwards’ stated goals entering the 2025-26 season. There was little reason to doubt his pursuit of either. The Timberwolves guard had made massive strides each season, dragging the franchise along with him in the process.
Why couldn’t he ascend to the sport’s ultimate individual and team heights this year?
This week is why.
Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) looks to pass as Dallas Mavericks center Moussa Cisse (30) and guard Max Christie (00), back, defend during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Monday, Nov. 17, 2025, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)
Being the best player in the world – or something very close to it – requires a robotic-level of dominance.
You walk onto the court, you take over the game.
Rinse, repeat – for the 70-plus times you take the floor in the regular season and beyond. There’s no room for duds like the one Edwards delivered in Minnesota’s home win Wednesday over Washington. The guard was aggressive in the first quarter, logging 12 points, two steals, a rebound and a blocked shot.
But then the shots stopped falling, and Edwards stopped impacting the game in any way, shape or form. Minnesota fell off the tracks in the second half, allowing a once 27-point lead to be trimmed to five by the one-win Wizards with fewer than five minutes to play.
“Really (we just lost) our edge and our activity and our aggressiveness,” Wolves forward Julius Randle said. “All that stuff, we kind of just left it in (the locker room) at halftime.”
Edwards led the charge on Minnesota’s relative indifference. He played all 12 minutes in a third frame in which the Wolves were out-scored 36-23. In that quarter, he scored two points on 1 for 7 shooting. On top of the misfires, he accrued a grand total of zero assists, rebounds, steals or blocks.
More of the same came in the closing quarter, where he scored two points to go with an assist and a turnover. Edwards was invisible on offense and not impactful in any other phase of the game. If your shots aren’t falling — Edwards has hit just 3 of his 30 3-point attempts over the past four games — then do something else.
He finished with 18 points on 30% shooting to go with two rebounds and two assists against Washington.
MVP? MVP?
Hey, there are 82 games. You’re bound to be at less than your best at various points throughout the course of a regular season. But the game’s best – the ones who legitimately contend for the ultimate awards – make their presence felt on a nightly basis.
That stat line from Edwards against Washington – shooting 30% or worse from the field on a night where you also grab two or fewer rebounds and dish out two or fewer assists in 30-plus minutes of action – has never been replicated even one time by any of the following players:
-Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
-Giannis Antetokounmpo
-Luka Doncic
-Steph Curry
-LeBron James
-Kawhi Leonard
And many more. Including Randle, who’s had that consistent impact Minnesota has desperately needed all season. Without it, the Timberwolves simply wouldn’t be 10-5 at this point in the campaign.
Forget League MVP, Edwards isn’t carrying the bulk of his own team’s burden at the moment.
Even as a one off, Edwards’ game Wednesday is simply not a performance those other names would accept from themselves. But an even bigger issue is this clunker came directly off the heels of another.
Against Dallas on Monday, Edwards shot 35.7% from the field while recording four rebounds and three assists in 29 minutes. The 24 year old has now shot 36% or worse with four or fewer rebounds and three or fewer assists in 28-plus minutes in consecutive games.
Here’s how many single games in which that’s happened throughout the careers of Doncic and Jokic: Zero.
LeBron James has done it one time in 1,563 career games.
It hasn’t happened to Antetokounmpo and Jayson Tatum since they were 22 years old, and Gilgeous-Alexander since he was 23.
Those players represent a high bar, but that’s supposedly the air Edwards hopes to occupy. It’s not the stratosphere in which he currently resides. That realm is reserved for those who deliver consistent excellence on a game-to-game basis, something Minnesota’s All-NBA guard is still either unwilling or unable to achieve.
Those are the guys who are able to bear heavy loads deep into the postseason and lift trophies in late May and June. They build up those muscles throughout the season to the point where elite production becomes second nature. Even the exhausted versions of themselves can deliver it, because it’s all they know.
If Edwards can’t do that, then his current goals feel rather unreachable.
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