DENVER—Anthony Edwards overcame a slow start, and the Minnesota Timberwolves roared back from a 20-point, second-half deficit to eliminate the defending NBA champion Denver Nuggets 98–90 in a Game 7 masterpiece on Sunday night, May 19.

The Timberwolves overcame a 15-point halftime deficit—the largest comeback in a Game 7 in NBA playoff history—behind Edwards, who had just four points, no rebounds, and three assists at halftime but finished with 16 points, eight boards, and seven assists.

His impact belied his 6-of-24 shooting that included a 2-for-10 performance from 3-point range.

“It was tough, man, because I couldn’t find myself, my rhythm tonight,” Edwards said. “So, I just had to trust my teammates. … I just had to make the right plays throughout the rest of the game. I did that and my teammates made shots. Big shout-out to those guys.”

As Minnesota took control late, over and over Edwards denied Denver’s Jamal Murray, who had 24 points by halftime and finished with 35.

“There’s more ways to win the basketball game when you’re just not an offensive player,“ Edwards said. ”I’m not one-dimensional. I’m not just a guy who can score. I’m a guy who, whoever their best guard is, I can go lock him down. I feel like I did that on Jamal in the fourth quarter, in the third quarter and fourth quarter, and that’s what turned the game around.”

As the seconds ticked away, Edwards dribbled the ball up court and took time to wave good-bye to the stunned crowd at Ball Arena, where the Nuggets’ 33–8 record this season was second-best in the league, but where the Wolves won three times in this series.

The Wolves, who got 23 points each from Karl-Anthony Towns and Jaden McDaniels, advanced to the Western Conference finals for the first time in 20 years. They’ll face the Dallas Mavericks beginning Wednesday night at Target Center in Minneapolis.

“It feels great,” Wolves center Rudy Gobert said. “Beating a team like they are, an incredible team, a championship team, with the best player in the world, it feels good.”

Behind Murray’s fantastic start, the Nuggets raced to a 53–38 halftime lead, and Murray’s 3-pointer with 10:50 left in the third pushed Denver’s advantage to 58–38.

The Wolves turned to their defense, the NBA’s stingiest, to get back in the game, and they closed the quarter on a 28–9 run to pull within 67–66 heading into the fourth.

Gobert gave the Wolves their first lead since the first quarter with a bucket to start the fourth and when Towns picked up his fifth foul, Naz Reid, the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year, was spectacular at both ends of the floor to keep Minnesota ahead.

In one crucial stretch that started with Minnesota ahead 85–82, Reid had two free throws and a dunk before feeding Edwards for a back-breaking 3-pointer that put the Wolves ahead 92–82 with three minutes left.

Murray, coming off a 4-for-18 shooting performance in the Nuggets’ 115–70 loss in Game 6—the largest ever in the playoffs by a reigning champion—made 13 of 27 shots. Nikola Jokic added 34 points to go with 19 rebounds, but the duo got little help as no other Denver players reached double figures in points.

Jamal Murray of the Nuggets shoots over the Timberwolves' Nickeil Alexander-Walker in Game 7 of an NBA playoff series in Denver on May 19, 2024. (David Zalubowski/AP Photo)

“So much was being placed on their shoulders,” Nuggets Coach Michael Malone said. “We’re expecting Jokic and Jamal to continue pulling rabbits out of their hat, man, and somebody else has got to give some help.”

This marked the Timberwolves’ first Game 7 since beating Sacramento in the second round exactly 20 years earlier. That’s the only other time Minnesota reached the conference finals. The Nuggets were playing in their fifth Game 7 in the past six seasons and were seeking their third trip to the conference finals in that span.

“That was a hell of a series,” Mr. Malone said. “They gave us all we could handle, and they ended up winning Game 7 on our home court, which is a tough one to swallow. But we’ll be back.”

The Nuggets became the fifth consecutive defending champion to fail to reach the conference finals. The last one to do it was Golden State in 2019, when the Warriors reached the NBA Finals only to lose to Toronto.

“The one thing I keep on going back to right now is I consider the San Antonio Spurs a dynasty, and they never won back-to-back,” Mr. Malone said. “So, losing, the hurt of it, the pain of it, it helped us win our first championship. Can we use that this year?”

Murray thinks so.

“For sure,” he said. “It’s back to being the hunter.”

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