Timberwolves Duo Edwards and McDaniels Target Series Lead in West Semis
Anthony Edwards and Jaden McDaniels have become one of the NBA's most effective duos as Minnesota looks to take a 2-1 series lead in the Western Conference Semifinals against an opponent to be determined by earlier Game 2 results.
Anthony Edwards calls Jaden McDaniels his favorite player in the NBA — and on the evidence of the 2026 playoffs so far, the feeling appears mutual. The Minnesota Timberwolves pair enter Game 3 of their Western Conference Semifinal series on Thursday, 8 May 2026, with a chance to claim a 2-1 series lead against whichever opponent advanced through the earlier Game 2 matchup.
The Edwards-McDaniels pairing has emerged as one of the more productive two-way combinations in these playoffs. Edwards, the franchise cornerstone who has carried an increasingly heavy offensive load since Karl-Anthony Towns was traded to New York, offers scoring creation and transition athleticism. McDaniels, the long-armed forward acquired in the 2022 trade that sent former All-Star D'Angelo Russell westward, provides secondary creation and — critically — the length and instincts to neutralize opposing wings and guards at the perimeter.
The Chemistry Question
What makes the pairing notable, beyond raw talent, is the documented camaraderie. Edwards publicly naming McDaniels as his favorite player in the league is not merely a press-conference pleasantry. It reflects a working relationship built on mutual accountability and complementary skill sets. McDaniels does not need the ball to affect games; his presence as a weak-side threat opens driving lanes for Edwards, and his defensive rotation speed allows Minnesota to switch more aggressively without surrendering clean looks at the rim.
The counter-narrative — that McDaniels remains inconsistent as a third-scoring option — holds some truth. He has shown streaks of passive play during stretches when Minnesota's offense stalls, and critics within the analytics community have noted that his assist numbers do not reflect the playmaking gravity he theoretically commands. Whether he can translate comfort and chemistry into sustained assertiveness in high-stakes moments remains the central question heading into Game 3.
What a 2-1 Lead Would Mean
In the NBA's playoff structure, winning the first two games on the road and returning home up 2-0 is the ideal script. Winning Game 3 at home to take a 2-1 advantage is the next-best outcome. It forces the opponent to respond on Minnesota's floor, applies pressure heading into the extended road trip, and — perhaps most importantly in the Western Conference semifinals — keeps the series from reaching a critical 3-1 deficit.
The Western Conference playoff picture has featured significant parity in recent seasons, with homecourt advantage proving less reliable than in prior eras. That context makes every individual game feel heavier than its sequence number suggests. A 2-1 series lead heading into a potential Game 4 road assignment would position Minnesota as the de facto favorite to close the series, regardless of opponent.
The Structural Picture
The broader context is franchise trajectory. Minnesota is no longer rebuilding. The Towns trade signaled a commitment to a postseason ceiling built around Edwards's timeline. McDaniels, on a long-term contract extension, represents the most important supporting piece the franchise has constructed since acquiring Rudy Gobert — a move that ultimately proved divisive but temporarily vaulted Minnesota into genuine contender status before internal injuries and fit issues intervened.
For McDaniels personally, these playoffs serve as a validation window. League observers have long debated whether his tools would ever consistently translate to All-Star-level production. Edwards's endorsement — unprompted, public, and specific — adds a layer of internal credibility that stat lines alone cannot provide. If Minnesota advances past this semifinal, the conversation about McDaniels's ceiling shifts materially.
The Road Ahead
Thursday's game tips at 9:30pm ET on Prime Video. The opponent remains to be confirmed pending Game 2 results from the series bracket. What is clear is that Minnesota enters the contest with clear role definition and a documented partnership that has answered the non-trivial question of how two high-usage players coexist without constant friction.
The series stakes are concrete: a loss at Target Center on Thursday hands momentum back to whichever opponent advanced, forces Minnesota to win a potential Game 5 in Minneapolis, and extends the pressure window through a potential Game 6 in hostile territory. A win, conversely, puts Minnesota one home game away from a Conference Finals berth — the franchise's deepest run since the Kevin Garnett era.
This publication will continue tracking the Timberwolves' series progress through the Western Conference Semifinals and beyond.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive
