2020 NBA Draft

Wolves select Edwards with overall No. 1 pick

The 6-foot-4, 225-pound guard has drawn comparisons to Dwyane Wade and Donovan Mitchell.

Anthony Edwards

Anthony Edwards led all Div. I freshmen with 19.1 points and was the SEC Freshman of the Year.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Timberwolves made Georgia shooting guard Anthony Edwards their latest addition in an ongoing attempt to return to NBA relevancy, adding a potentially dynamic scorer to their lineup with the first overall pick in the draft Wednesday night.

The 6-foot-5 Edwards was the nation’s freshman scoring leader at 19.1 points per game in 2019-20 for the Bulldogs, before the pandemic halted the season. The 19-year-old native of Atlanta has sharp long-range shooting touch, an ability to score off the dribble and a nose for driving to the basket, though he comes to the league with some questions about focus and effort after an uneven one-and-done college season.

President of basketball operations Gersson Rosas promised to be aggressive about entertaining trade offers for the top pick but ultimately opted to keep it. The Wolves also entered the evening with the 17th selection in the first round, plus their second-rounder, the No. 33 pick.

Memphis center James Wiseman and guard LaMelo Ball, who played professionally in Australia last season, were the other prospects widely considered in the top three.

Edwards will now slide into the lineup on the perimeter, buttressing the building blocks the Wolves believe they’ve cemented with center Karl-Anthony Towns and point guard D’Angelo Russell. There’s plenty of room to grow after a 19-45 finish that had them left out of the NBA’s postseason bubble. Minnesota has made the playoffs only once in the last 16 years, a first-round loss to Houston in 2018.

This was the second time in 32 drafts for this franchise that the Timberwolves held the top pick. They took Towns, now a two-time All-Star, with the first overall selection out of Kentucky in 2015.

The Wolves had the worst record in the league the previous season, so they earned that spot, but this year was stunningly the first time they’d ever benefited from the ping-pong balls and moved up from their default slot.

Rosas wasted no time putting his stamp on the team during his first year in Minnesota, making three significant in-season trades. The trio of swaps dumped a total of nine different players, including Andrew Wiggins, the up-and-down scorer whose athleticism once had him as the ideal sidekick on the wing to Towns.

The most significant of those deals sent Wiggins to Golden State for a package that included Russell, the offense-minded ball-handler who has been a close friend of Towns since they were the first two picks in the 2015 draft.

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