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Browsing: Wolves

Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards is aiming to hit another level on the court in order to make his team an NBA championship contender.
“I know that s–t would be so fun for Minnesota. I already know,” he told The Athletic’s Jon Krawczynski about the significance of a title. “That’s why I be trying to do it. … Don’t worry about it. I’m going to make it happen. I’m going to get fly as hell to where they can’t stop me.”
Over the past two years, Edwards averaged 26.7 points on 45.4 percent shooting along with 5.6 rebounds and 4.8 assists. Minnesota also made back-to-back trips to the Western Conference Finals, with the 6’4″ guard putting up 26.5 points per postseason contest.
Still, the three-time All-Star admitted by the end of the 2025 playoffs he “got my ass whooped” by the Oklahoma City Thunder. In the final two games of the Conference Finals, he was held to 35 points on 12-of-31 shooting.
When a player is drawing favorable comparisons to Michael Jordan, the crown can be incredibly heavy. Edwards only turned 24 in August, yet the legacy conversations have started in earnest.
He at least seems to understand that burden.
“He has his own vision. He wants to be one of the greatest of all time, but he doesn’t want to be a social media star,” Timberwolves minority stakeholder Ãlex RodrÃguez said to Krawczynski. “He wants to be Jordan-esque, Larry Bird-esque, Magic Johnson-esque. And he knows the responsibility he has on his shoulders to put people around him.”
Edwards can’t do it all on his own. Minnesota’s supporting cast will need to step up as well.
The limits of individual brilliance against collective strength were apparent in the Conference Finals and when the Thunder knocked out Nikola Jokić and the Denver Nuggets a year earlier.
But Edwards is clearly taking it upon himself to lead by example.
Jake O’Brien had a goal and two assists, David Egorov made 31 saves and the Brantford Bulldogs showed their teeth in a 6-0 Ontario Hockey League victory over the visiting Sudbury Wolves on Friday.
The Bulldogs (5-0-1-1), ranked third overall in this week’s Canadian Hockey League rankings behind the OHL’s Windsor Spitfires and front-running Blainville-Boisbriand Armada of the QMJHL, also got goals from and Adam Benak, Parker Holmes, Caleb Malhotra, Layne Gallacher and Vladimir Dravecky.
The Bulldogs led 2-0 after the first period and 5-0 heading into the third at the TD Civic Centre.
Finn Marshall stopped 25 of 31 shots for the winless Wolves (0-6-1-0).
The Bulldogs went 0-for-3 on the power play, while the Wolves were 0-for-5.
Elsewhere in the OHL on Friday:
LONDON, Ont. — Henry Brzustewicz scored twice, Sam O’Reilly had three assists and the London Knights beat the visiting Erie Otters 6-1.
Ben Wilmott, Braiden Clark, Jaxon Cover and Noah Read also scored for the Knights (3-2-2-0), who led 1-0 after the first period and took a 3-1 lead into the third.
Aleksei Medvedev stopped 13 of 14 shots for London, which went 2-for-4 on the power play.
Callum Hughes scored for the Otters (2-6-0), who went 0-for-3 on the power play.
Noah Erliden stopped 35 of 41 shots.
GREYHOUNDS 5, RANGERS 4 (OT)
SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. — Quinn McKenzie’s second goal of the game, scored at 2:35 of overtime, helped the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds beat the visiting Kitchener Rangers 5-4.
Marco Mignosa, Chase Reid and Travis Hayes also scored for the Greyhounds (6-3-0), who trailed 4-1 late in the second period. Reid added two assists.
Landon Miller stopped 23 of 27 shots.
Cameron Arquette scored twice for the Rangers (4-2-1), while Jack LaBrash and Andrew MacNiel netted singles. Haeden Ellis had three assists.
Jason Schaubel stopped 24 of 29 shots.
BRAMPTON, Ont. — Cooper Foster scored twice and Nolan Jackson and Kaleb Dietsch each had two assists as the visiting Ottawa 67’s beat the Brampton Steelheads 5-3.
Jasper Kuhta, Spencer Bowes and Thomas Vandenberg also scored for the unbeaten 67’s (6-0-0), who went 1-for-5 on the power play. Jaeden Nelson kicked out 36 of 39 shots.
Joshua Avery, Jakub Fibigr and Gabriel Chiarot scored for the Steelheads (3-3-0), who were 0-for-3 with the man advantage. Zach Bowen stopped 21 of 26 shots.
SARNIA, Ont. — Brooks Rogowski had a goal and assist as the visiting Oshawa Generals edged the Sarnia Sting 3-1.
Owen Griffin and Harrison Franssen also scored for the Generals (3-5-0), who went 1-for-4 on the power play. Jaden Cholette stopped 37 of 38 shots.
Beckham Edwards scored for the Sting (3-4-0), who were 0-for-4 with the man advantage. Evan Maillet stopped 29 of 31 shots.
KINGSTON, Ont. — Jacob Battaglia had three goals and an assist as the Kingston Frontenacs trounced the visiting Peterborough Petes 9-1.
Tyler Hopkins and Andrew Kuzma each scored twice for the Frontenacs (5-2-0-1), while Landon Wright and Nolan Snyder netted singles. Kieren Dervin chipped in with three assists, while Tomas Pobezal and Hopkins each had two helpers.
Matthew Minchak stopped 26 of 27 shots.
Adam Novotný scored for the Petes (3-4-0), while Dylan Lee-Stack stopped 38 of 47 shots.
GUELPH, Ont. — Lirim Amidovski scored twice as the visiting North Bay Battalion defeated the Guelph Storm 5-2.
Nick Wellenreiter, Nolan Laird and Bronson Ride also scored for the Battalion (4-3-0), who led 1-0 after the first period and 3-1 heading into the third. Jack Lisson stopped 24 of 26 shots.
Hunter McKenzie and Jaakko Wycisk scored for the Storm (3-3-2), while Zachary Jovanovski stopped 36 of 39 shots.
Myron MedcalfSep 29, 2025, 05:45 PM ET
- Myron Medcalf covers college basketball for ESPN.com. He joined ESPN in 2011.
MINNEAPOLIS — Months after his team was eliminated by the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference finals, Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards called on a legend to help him take the next step in his game: Michael Jordan.
Through a mutual connection, Edwards said, the legendary player offered some advice to the young talent who aims to lead his squad to an NBA championship.
“[He helped me with] getting to my spots, pulling up, shooting over the defender,” Edwards said Monday during the Wolves’ media day.
Edwards, who added that the convos with the six-time champion and Hall of Famer go through their mutual connection, said Jordan also gave him a tip that could help him excel in the paint.
“I think the best tip that he gave me is that most people lean on people in the post with their [butt], and he does it with the top part of his back,” said Edwards, who pointed toward his right shoulder as he talked. “So I think I learned that from him.”
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Last season, Edwards connected on just 11 of 39 attempts from beyond the arc over five games as the Thunder eliminated the Timberwolves in five games. This season, Edwards said he has to become a better player in clutch situations and attack the rim more often.
But it’s bigger than just his performance.
He also said this year’s group has an advantage compared to last year’s team because of the chemistry they’ve been able to develop. He said he and Julius Randle have played one-on-one throughout the offseason and learned to balance their spacing on the court to help each other.
That push for more chemistry has been a theme for this franchise.
Most of the Timberwolves, who return seven of their top eight scorers from a year ago, remained in Minnesota this offseason. Edwards said this team is more intentional about supporting one another and building their bond long before the playoffs begin.
“I think winning starts with being together and it starts in the summertime,” he said. “We’ve got to be together. We’ve got to be a team. We can’t wait until the All-Star break to try and become a team. We’ve got to do it now.”
If Edwards, who said Monday that he “added another dimension” to his game, can improve this season, coach Chris Finch said he can become one of the top players in this league. Finch said Edwards has become more obsessive about watching film and molding his body entering the season compared to past years. Those qualities could position the NBA All-Star to compete for MVP honors, Finch said.
“I think [he has to] develop his playmaking and understand how to manipulate the floor with the ball in his hands,” Finch said. “I think he’s got a really good feel for that now, having been through it a couple years now. He’s just got to execute and complete the plays that are there in front of him and then just continue to be that every-night player at a high level that we know he can be, which is what you need to do if you want to be an MVP in this league. And I certainly think he’s got the DNA for it and he just has to really fully embrace it.”
Edwards said his team will have to win more and he’ll have to “average a bunch of points” to get into the MVP convo in 2025-26. But his focus is the win column, he said. Although the NBA champion Thunder might once again stand in the Timberwolves’ way in the postseason, Edwards said teams like the Denver Nuggets, which added Cameron Johnson and other key pieces through trades and offseason signings, and others can’t be overlooked.
“I don’t think it’s just the Thunder,” he said. “I think it’s a whole bunch of teams that got better this summer. I think the Nuggets are going to be really damn good. Give [Nikola Jokic] a couple of shooters, man? They’re going to be hard to beat, so I think we’ve got to focus on more than just the Thunder.”
Throughout the upcoming year, it’ll be beneficial for Edwards to have the attention of one of the greatest players in NBA history if he needs more advice. But his relationship with Jordan thus far, he said, is still fairly casual.
“We don’t really have the relationship y’all think we’ve got right now,” Edwards said. “It’ll come.”
From zero to thwarted heroes, life breathes yet through Wolves. Though it probably should have been three points rather than one. A point edged Tottenham into the surprise party Crystal Palace, Sunderland and Bournemouth are enjoying in the top five as João Palhinhaâ€s strike in the depths of stoppage time denied Wolves. Showing a fight and determination hitherto lacking from their season, the visitors had seemed destined for victory via Santiago Buenoâ€s scrappy opener.
So close to a tactical triumph for VÃtor Pereira, who signed a new, three-year contract last week, despite his team being on nil Premier League points. “The spirit was there, everything was there but the last minute, itâ€s football,†said the Wolves manager.
His team will require so much more than a single point, considering other expected relegation candidates†promising starts. He had taken drastic action. From a home defeat by Leeds last week that heightened the growing disquiet at Molineux, Wolves†starting team selection featured nine changes, the same formula successful against Everton in the Carabao Cup.
A near repeat of the form that relieved Gary Oâ€Neil of his duties almost a year ago had suggested the continued danger of asset-stripping a squad. At Tottenham, a number of Wolves†summer buys who mystified fans showed they had something to offer, only for concentration to lapse at the last as Pape Sarr laid up Palhinha for a raking drive.
As the final whistle sounded, Pereira threw his notes in rage at the turf: “Some players came at the end of the market and then went away with their national teams,†he said. “Now we are building the spirit and putting them on the tactical page. We came here to win this game.â€
Sam Johnstone could only watch Palhinhaâ€s strike fly by, after an excellent performance. In replacing José Sá he repeated a fine performance against Newcastle a fortnight previously. Like many others, Sáâ€s performances have fallen below standard. “They understand the decisions,†Pereira said of the omissions. “The first half we had some problems but the second half my team were the best team on the pitch.â€
Johnstone said: “We have to be proud of today. That is our baseline performance now.â€
Santiago Bueno bundles home to give Wolves the lead. Photograph: Richard Pelham/Getty Images
In the midst of a heavy schedule, a trip to the arctic circle set for Tuesday in the Champions League, Spurs rushed to get their Saturday night assignment completed, missing a number of first-half chances. They were eventually relieved to collect a point they would have struggled to collect under their previous management.
“We were clearly on top and in control,†said Thomas Frank of the first 45 minutes. Matt Doherty, the right-back, unprotected by Jhon Arias ahead of him, was booked when his hefty challenge stopped one of Destiny Udogieâ€s trademark overlaps. In the final action before the break Doherty hit the bar from a corner Spurs struggled with. It served as an unheeded warning.
Pereiraâ€s half-time changes reverted his defence to the usual back three/five from the previous four. The speed of Jackson Tchatchoua, the summer arrival, a half-time replacement, was deployed to stop Mohammed Kudusâ€s runs. Successfully, too; Udogieâ€s influence also faded.
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Frank said: “It changed our positions a bit and adapting to that and then the goals and the emotion of it, we gave simple passes away.â€
Wolves, having clogged up midfield and closed off the flanks, took the lead, Santiago Bueno bundling in after a Spurs made a mess of an Arias corner. Jørgen Strand Larsen, who held the ball up expertly until being replaced late on, had been given a first bite of the cherry as Spurs again failed to clear their lines.
Wolves did not completely sit on their lead, Hugo Bueno forcing a save from Gugliemo Vicario. Arias, a star of the summerâ€s Club World Cup with Fluminense, showed off serious chops with neat touches buying breathing space. His fellow South American, André, another former “Flu†player, impressed in midfield.
Frankâ€s late changes included the withdrawal of the disappointing Xavi Simons. Like many of his colleagues, little had come off for the Dutchman. When all seemed to be coming up Pereira, he was denied by Palihinha, who offered post-match commiserations to his compatriot. “We needed something special and we got that,†said Frank, not a little relieved.
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Half time: Spurs 0-0 Wolves
A frustrating half for Spurs, who dominated without creating too many clear chances. The closest they came to scoring was when Mohammed Kudusâ€s header was touched onto the bar by Sam Johnstone; it was an outstanding reaction save.
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45+4 min: Doherty hits the post!
A Wolves corner is headed on and reaches Doherty beyond the far post. He leans back and sidefoots a half-volley that hits the outside of the near post! Tough chance.
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45+3 minArias breaks dangerously for Wolves, slipping Bentancur before moving into space, but Udogie comes across to make an important tackle just outside the area.
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45+1 minKudusâ€s outside-of-the-boot cross nicks off Andre and justevades the stretching Richarlison at the far post. Had he made contact he would probably have scored because Johnstone didnâ€t have time to get across his line.
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44 minI thought Munetsi fouled Palhinha when I first saw it. The replays arenâ€t totally conclusive, and there is also the possibility that any contact was outside the area. Iâ€d like to see a few more replays though.
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43 minKudusâ€s shot is beaten away by Johnstone with the ball bouncing towards the edge of the area. Munetsi doesnâ€t see Palhinha on his blindside and seems to kick him in the chest. Palhinha goes down but the referee says no penalty; itâ€ll be checked by your friend in Stockley Park.
The original decision is upheld: no penalty.
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43 min“I enjoy watching Wolves play and only wish them the best,†says Peter Oh. “They may be in the relegation zone at the moment, but with a Bueno and another Bueno on the pitch, they are certainly two ‘good†to go down!â€
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Updated at 15.43 EDT
41 minKudusâ€s cross from the right is scissor-kicked over the bar by Bergvall, 12 yards out. Nice effort but well off target.
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40 minSimons is tripped by Joao Gomes, who becomes the last player to receive a yellow card. That one looked a bit harsh.
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38 minArias bullets a shot over the bar from the edge of the area. Wolves have come back into the game in the last few minutes.
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38 minMunetsi is holding his shoulder after landing awkwardly. Heâ€s in a fair bit of pain but looks okay to continue.
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35 minAnd now Doherty is booked for tripping Udogie.
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32 minSimons is booked for a lunging tackle on Munetsi.
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30 minA flying near-post header from Richarlison (I think) is well blocked by Krejci.
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30 minA couple of corners in quick succession for Spurs. Nothing happens with either but for the first time it feels like a goal is coming.
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27 min: Disallowed goalSpurs are taking control of the game slowly but surely. They thought theyâ€d scored a moment ago when Kudus finished emphatically from Bergvallâ€s backflick, only for the flag to go up for offside. It was a simple decision for the assistant.
Tottenham Hotspur’s Ghanian striker Mohammed Kudus shoots to score a goal which is disallowed as he was offside. Photograph: Ian Kington/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 15.40 EDT
23 minUdogieâ€s pass is half blocked by a Wolves player and spins kindly towards Bergvall in the area. He fresh-airs an attempted volley and the danger passes.
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21 minSpurs appeal for a penalty when Andre boots a cross straight into the face of his teammate Santiago Bueno. Thatâ€s not handball, lads.
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19 minSpurs are starting to enjoy more possession, though that Kudus header remains their only chance of not.
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15 min: Kudus hits the bar!
Simons cuts inside from the left and curls a wicked ball to the far post. It evades the falling Richarlison and bounces up towards Kudus, whose powerful close-range header is fingertipped onto the bar by Johnstone. Thatâ€s a marvellous reflex save.
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13 minThat Spurs lorner leads to another, which leads to a Wolves throw-in on the far side.
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12 minThe Spurs crowd appeal for a penalty when Udogieâ€s cross hits the arm of Doherty in the area. It was tight to his body to a corner is all Spurs will get.
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9 minPossession percentages so far: Spurs 38-62 Wolves. That sums up a really confident start by Wolves.
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6 minWolves have made an excellent start. Munetsi raids down the left this time and flips a good cross that ricochets around the Spurs area before being cleared.
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4 minHwang does well to win a corner on the left for Wolves. Ariasâ€s fast, flat corner is headed dangerously across goal and booted away at the far post.
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1 minPeep peep! Spurs kick off left to right as we watch.
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Here come the players. Itâ€s an important night for Wolves, who are currently pointless after five Premier League games. Truly, theyâ€re better than that.
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Today’s Premier League results
Sunderland have continued their brilliant start to the season with a 1-0 win at the City Ground. Omar Alderete scored the only goal to move Sunderland up to third in the table.
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Team news
Two changes for Spurs from the side that started last weekendâ€s 2-2 draw at Brighton: Djed Spence and Xavi Simons are preferred to Pedro Porro and Wilson Odobert.
Wolves bring in Joao Gomes for Jean-Ricner Bellegarde. Thatâ€s the only change from the XI that beat Everton in the Carabao Cup.
Tottenham Hotspur (4-3-3) Vicario; Spence, Romero, van de Ven, Udogie; Bergvall, Joao Palhinha, Bentancur; Kudus, Richarlison, Simons.
Subs: Kinsky, Danso, Tel, Gray, Johnson, Porro, Odobert, Sarr, Scarlett.
Wolves (4-3-3) Johnstone; Doherty, S Bueno, Krejci, H Bueno; Munetsi, Andre, Joao Gomes; Arias, Strand Larsen, Hwang.
Subs: Jose Sa, Wolfe, Agbadou, Arokodare, Rodrigo Gomes, Toti Gomes, Bellegarde, Lopez, Tchatchoua.
Referee Michael Salisbury.
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Updated at 14.25 EDT
Preamble
Hello and welcome to live, minute-by-minute coverage of Spurs v Wolves. Kick off is at 8pm and weâ€ll have the team news in a second.
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