Wolves Notes: Edwards, Roster, Giannis, Randle, Hyland

Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards made an unusual gesture during Friday’s Game 6, congratulating the Spurs during a timeout with Minnesota down 33 points at home with 8:01 remaining (YouTube link). Edwards said it was an acknowledgement that San Antonio was the better team, per Myron Medcalf of ESPN.

As Medcalf writes, the Timberwolves have now lost three consecutive playoff elimination games by an average of 27 points. They lost at home to Dallas in Game 5 of the 2024 Western Conference finals, at Oklahoma City in Game 5 of the 2025 Western finals, and at home to San Antonio on Friday in the conference semifinals.

When asked if there were any common themes during those three losses, Edwards replied, “Good question. No comment.

According to Medcalf, Edwards said he was content with the current roster, but he also said the Wolves didn’t prepare like a championship contender.

I feel like you’re supposed to build championship habits or playoff habits in a regular season,” Edwards said. “No, we didn’t build the habits during the regular season.”

Here’s more on the Wolves:

  • Marcus Thompson II of The Athletic views Edwards’ gesture as a sign that the 24-year-old guard recognizes the Timberwolves have been passed in the West’s hierarchy and believes it was a message to the front office to trade for Giannis Antetokounmpo. As Thompson observes, while Edwards publicly said the roster wasn’t an issue, he also suggested his teammates didn’t take advantage of the double teams he faced. “It was no struggle,” Edwards said of handling the defense’s extra attention. “Just trusting in my teammates, trusting in the next action we’re going to make something happen. And I feel like we did, man. We just couldn’t make enough shots to win the game. I think that’s just what it came down to.” That’s not exactly a bold statement, considering Julius Randle (three points on 1-of-8 shooting), Rudy Gobert (zero points on 0-of-4 shooting) and Jaden McDaniels (13 points on 4-of-13 shooting, five fouls in 23 minutes) combined to score 16 points on 5-of-25 shooting in Game 6.
  • According to Medcalf, Edwards said the following when asked how the Wolves can catch up to the Thunder and Spurs, with other teams lurking in the West: “I don’t know, man. I don’t think that’s a question for me.
  • Randle, who was a game-worst minus-34 in 23 minutes, looks “miscast” as a No. 2 option when playing against title contenders, according to Thompson, who points out that Game 6 was so lopsided because San Antonio’s secondary stars — including Stephon Castle, who had a game-high 32 points, 11 rebounds and six assists — dominated. Randle had no answers for trying to score on Victor Wembanyama throughout the series, Thompson writes.
  • Backup guard Bones Hyland hopes to re-sign with Minnesota as an unrestricted free agent, tweets Chris Hine of The Star Tribune. “It feels like where I belong so I definitely want to come back,” Hyland said.

Chris Finch Expected To Remain Timberwolves’ Head Coach

Within a story examining the big-picture implications of the Timberwolves being eliminated from the playoffs following Friday’s lopsided Game 6 loss to San Antonio, Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic states that head coach Chris Finch “will be back for his sixth full season” in 2026/27.

Finch has compiled a 258-193 record (.572 win-loss percentage) in parts of six seasons at the helm in Minnesota. The Timberwolves have posted a winning record and made the playoffs in each of his five full years on the job, including back-to-back trips to the Western Conference finals in 2024 and 2025.

The Wolves had another uneven regular season in 2025/26, winning 49 games for the second straight year and entering the playoffs as the sixth seed. Minnesota upset the third-seeded Nuggets in round one before falling to the No. 2 Spurs in the Western semifinals.

Finch was a longtime assistant before he landed the Wolves’ top coaching job in February 2021. The 56-year-old, who has two years left on his contract, Krawczynski notes, suggested after the team was eliminated that some roster tweaks might be necessary to try to catch up to the defending champion Thunder and the rising Spurs.

You either gotta be a problem or have a solution,” Finch said. “You have to be built in a way that troubles your opponent with something they don’t have or have something to counter what they do have.”

Krawczynski also confirms that owners Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez are interested in signing president of basketball operations Tim Connelly to a contract extension, and writes that team employees on both the business and basketball sides of the organization were happy Matt Lloyd stayed in his role as general manager. Lloyd was a finalist for the Bulls’ top basketball operations job before they hired Bryson Graham.

Elliot Cadeau Withdrawing From Draft, Returning To Michigan

Junior guard Elliot Cadeau is withdrawing from the 2026 NBA draft and returning to Michigan for his senior season, agent Drew Gross tells Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports (Twitter link).

A 6’1″ point guard, Cadeau tested the draft waters this spring after he helped lead the Wolverines to the NCAA championship in early April. He was named to the NCAA All-Tournament team and took home Most Outstanding Player honors as well after averaging 12.3 points, 7.5 assists, 3.7 rebounds and 1.7 steals while shooting 38.7% from long distance in six games during the tournament.

Cadeau, who played his first two college seasons at UNC prior to transferring to Michigan, appeared in all 40 of the Wolverines’ games in 2025/26. He averaged 10.5 PPG, 5.9 APG, 2.7 RPG and 0.9 SPG in 27.3 MPG, with a shooting line of .411/.376/.709.

A New Jersey native, Cadeau was invited to attend the G League combine earlier this month and reportedly worked out for the Knicks on May 5. His decision to withdraw doesn’t come as a surprise, as he wasn’t on ESPN’s latest big board of the top 100 prospects in the class of 2026.

Mike Conley Wants To Continue Career

Timberwolves guard Mike Conley wants to play at least one more season, he told Chris Hine of the Minneapolis Star Tribune (Twitter link).

“I think I might’ve proved to myself I can play a little longer,” he said.

Conley will be an unrestricted free agent this summer. The 38-year-old began the season with the Timberwolves but endured a tumultuous journey during the trade deadline.

The Timberwolves sent Conley to Chicago in a salary-dump trade on February 3, with the Bulls flipping him to Charlotte along with Coby White a day later, just ahead of the Feb. 5 trade deadline. The Hornets subsequently cut him, which cleared the way for the 38-year-old to return to Minnesota.

NBA rules prohibit a player who is traded and then waived to immediately re-sign with the team that traded him away. However, that restriction only applied to the Bulls, not the Timberwolves, since Conley was traded twice.

His playing time increased late in the regular season and he was part of the postseason rotation. He appeared in 12 playoff games, including five starts, and averaged 4.4 points and 2.7 assists in 14 minutes per game.

Conley has played 1,220 regular season games and 120 playoff games in a career that began in 2007 with Memphis.

Cavs Notes: Mitchell, Thompson, Game 7, Harden

Donovan Mitchell failed to carry the Cavaliers into the conference finals in Game 6 against Detroit on Friday. Mitchell scored a series-low 18 points on 6-of-20 shooting and had as many turnovers (three) as assists in the 21-point loss.

“I can’t dwell on it,” Mitchell said. “I missed shots tonight. … I’ve been making them most every game of this series, and tonight I didn’t.”

Mitchell must get past this clunker and deliver in Game 7 at Detroit on Sunday, Jason Lloyd of The Athletic opines. The outcome of Game 7 will have major implications for Mitchell and the franchise.

Lloyd also speculates that Mitchell might be hiding an injury, noting that he hasn’t looked like himself for most of this postseason.

Here’s more on the Cavaliers:

  • A controversial ruling allowed the Pistons’ defensive ace, Ausar Thompson, to stay in the game. While fighting through a screen during the second quarter, Thompson threw Sam Merrill to the court with his arm around Merrill’s neck. However, the officials assessed Thompson with a Flagrant 1 foul, rather than ejecting him. Lead official Zach Zarba explained the decision. “The criteria for a flagrant foul 2 would be windup, impact and follow-through,” Zarba said, per The Athletic’s Joe Vardon. “On this particular play, there was impact and follow-through, but there was no windup. It was unnecessary contact but also not excessive, so that’s why it wasn’t upgraded to a Flagrant 2.”
  • James Harden said the Cavs need to match Detroit’s defensive intensity to win Game 7, per Cleveland.com. “Not shooting the basketball well, I wouldn’t say it’s an excuse, but it’s not a reason. Our defense has to be the priority from the beginning of the game until the last buzzer,” he said. “That’s priority number one. And I don’t think we necessarily did that from the beginning of the game until the final buzzer, which is the reason why we didn’t play well. We feed off our defense, our energy comes from our defense, and we didn’t do that well enough like they did. So then our offense is a little bit more difficult just because you’re not getting stops. So we got to take the ball out, and it’s just a trickle effect. So in order to win this game, we gotta hang our hats on the defensive end, and we should be in a good position.”
  • At least for now, Harden has passed Stephen Curry on the all-time playoff scoring list, Daniel Oyefusi of ESPN notes. Harden moved into 10th place during the first quarter on a step-back three-pointer from the right wing. That gave him 4,148 postseason points. Curry has scored 4,147 points in the playoffs.

Pistons Notes: Game 6 Win, Bench, Duren, Cunningham

The Pistons shook off their Game 5 collapse with a convincing road victory in Cleveland on Friday night, forcing a decisive Game 7 in Detroit on Sunday night. It’s the fourth time this postseason the Pistons have delivered in an elimination game.

“They just don’t quit,” Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said of his team, per Jamal Collier of ESPN. “The resolve that they have, the belief that they have in one another. They just have the ability to bounce back mentally where they don’t hang on to things.”

The Pistons pulled away by holding the Cavaliers to 29% shooting in the second half and 39% overall.

“I just think you got to look at the backgrounds of this group,” guard Daniss Jenkins said. “I’m not supposed to be in this position according to everybody in the league. I just think we’re special. We just want to defy all the odds. We not taking [anything] from [anybody]. We know it’s us against the world.”

Here’s more on the Pistons:

  • Reserves Marcus Sasser, Paul Reed and Caris LeVert delivered in dynamite fashion in Game 6, Omari Sankofa II of the Detroit Free Press notes. They combined for 34 points, 10 rebounds and five assists. Sasser, who had been out of the rotation, played 18 minutes and Detroit outscored Cleveland by 27 points during his court time. “That was the plan,” Bickerstaff said. “We have so much depth. Obviously, foul trouble changed a couple of things for us, but we just trust these guys and trust the depth that we have and that they can go out and make an impact. Guys like Sass, in the two years we’ve been here, has proven that when his number’s called, he’s prepared and he goes out and can give us buckets, defend at a high level. I thought he was great tonight. Up and down the roster, I thought we had great production, great intensity.”
  • All-Star center Jalen Duren, the subject of heavy criticism during this postseason, posted a double-double in Game 6 with 15 points and 11 rebounds. He added three blocks, equaling his total from the first five games of the series. “My confidence never wavered in myself. I know what I can do. I know what I can be and try to keep it rolling,” Duren said, per Joe Reedy of The Associated Press. “I’m playing my best basketball when I’m being assertive and picking my spots. I think early on I was just getting a groove.”
  • The Pistons are looking forward to having a raucous atmosphere for Game 7 at Little Caesars Arena, Cade Cunningham told Bob Wojnarowski of the Detroit News. “It’s gonna be a madhouse in there, the crowd’s gonna come to play as well,” Cunningham said. “They want to insert themselves in the game, so it’s gonna be a fun environment.”

NBA To Announce MVP Award Sunday; SGA, Jokic, Wembanyama Finalists

The NBA will announce the winner of the Most Valuable Player award on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. ET on Amazon Prime, just before the start of Game 7 of the CavaliersPistons series, the league office announced (via Twitter).

Reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Nikola Jokic and Victor Wembanyama are the three finalists for the award.

Gilgeous-Alexander, last season’s Most Valuable Player, averaged 31.1 points, 6.6 assists, 4.3 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game in 68 regular season contests while leading the Thunder to a league-high 64 victories.  He shot a career-best 55.3% from the field.

Jokic is seeking his fourth career MVP. The Nuggets center averaged a triple-double for the second consecutive season with 27.7 points, 12.9 rebounds, and a career-high 10.7 assists in 70 games.

Wembanyama averaged 25.0 points, 11.7 rebounds, 3.1 assists, and a league-leading 3.1 blocks in 64 regular season games. He was named the league’s Defensive Player of the Year last month. The Spurs center would be the first French player to claim the MVP trophy.

The Spurs will face the Thunder in the Western Conference Finals, beginning on Monday, and the scheduling announcement hints that SGA could be the winner, as Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press notes. Last season, Gilgeous-Alexander was announced as the winner on May 21, and he was formally presented with the trophy before Game 2 of the conference finals in Oklahoma City the following day.

Former First-Rounder Sam Dekker Transitioning To Coaching

Former NBA first-round pick Sam Dekker has been named an assistant men’s basketball coach at the University of South Carolina, the school announced in a press release. The 32-year-old will work under head coach Lamont Harris, who was an assistant at Wisconsin during Dekker’s time with the Badgers.

While Dekker will be involved in all aspects of coaching for the Gamecocks, his focus will be on-court player development.

I couldn’t be more excited to be a part of Gamecock basketball,” said Dekker. “I’m so grateful to Coach Paris for trusting me with this role, and I take it very seriously. The decision to transition from player to coach is not one I took lightly, but joining Coach Paris and this program was a dream opportunity.

I am thrilled to return to the college game and compete at such a high level in the SEC. My 11 years as a pro have provided so many experiences with amazing players, coaches and styles. Some of my best memories as a player were competing in two Final Fours with Coach Paris, and I look forward to doing that with him again. My goal is to win in March and give our players the best opportunity for success on and off the court.

The 18th overall pick in the 2015 draft, Dekker spent his entire rookie scale contract (four years) in the NBA but didn’t find a ton of success. He was traded multiple times in those four seasons and spent a couple years in Russia and Turkey before catching on with the Raptors in the 2021 offseason.

The 6’9″ forward only spent a few months with Toronto, having been waived at the start of the 2021/22 campaign after making one brief appearance with the team. He has spent the past five seasons playing professionally in Turkey, England and — most recently — Spain.

Dekker was a productive international player as recently as 2024/25, but his numbers fell off considerably last season the Spanish club Joventut. The former Badgers star averaged 5.4 points and 3.0 rebounds in 15.4 minutes per game across 201 NBA appearances.

Knicks Notes: Robinson, Anunoby, Towns, Brown

Re-signing Mitchell Robinson should be a top priority for the Knicks this summer on the heels of another strong playoff run, argues Stefan Bondy of The New York Post (subscription required).

It feels like every year Mitch just continues to get better. He’s so important to our team,” Miles McBride said. “And when it’s time for him to show up, he shows up. … It’s huge for us creating opportunities at the offensive end. And obviously being at the rim and helping us in so many ways is huge.”

Whether or not Robinson returns in unrestricted free agency may hinge on the Knicks achieving their stated goal of advancing to the NBA Finals, according to Bondy, since re-signing him would likely push New York over the second tax apron in 2026/27.

The Kings would have to shed a significant amount of payroll to make a competitive contract offer to Robinson, but Bondy hears from league sources that they could be interested in doing just that. Kings GM Scott Perry drafted Robinson in 2018 when he was a member of the Knicks’ front office, Bondy notes.

Here’s more on the Knicks:

  • Forward OG Anunoby went through a full practice on Friday for the first time since he injured his hamstring in Game 2 of the Knicks’ second-round sweep of Philadelphia, per The Associated Press. That bodes well for Anunoby’s availability for the Eastern Conference finals, which will begin on Tuesday after the Pistons defeated the Cavaliers in Friday’s Game 6 at Cleveland.
  • Karl-Anthony Towns is thrilled head coach Mike Brown made the adjustment to make him more of a play-maker than a scorer during the first-round matchup vs. Atlanta, a trend that carried over to round two, writes Kristian Winfield of The New York Daily News. “I’ve always loved this role,” Towns said. “I’ve always wanted this role, so happy we got to this point.” Towns’ fit in Brown’s offense was scrutinized throughout the season, but getting him more involved — as a passer rather than a scorer — has the Knicks playing their best basketball at the perfect time. “He’s done a great job of adjusting our team to give us the best chance to win,” Towns said of Brown. “The spot we’re in now is because of his courage and trust to change what we were doing and putting us in a better position.”
  • The Knicks wanted a new voice when they fired Tom Thibodeau last offseason after making their first conference final in 25 years, and now Brown has led them back to that round with seven consecutive playoff victories, according to Brian Mahoney of The Associated Press. While Brown has final say on any coaching-related decisions, he has embraced a collaborative approach with both the front office and the players, Mahoney writes. “He’s always wanted to have open dialogue since day one,” captain Jalen Brunson said. “And obviously he’s still the coach and he’s going to make the decisions and everything. But I mean, we give our opinions, and whether they’re good or bad opinions, they’re talked about and they’re decided on later.”

Blazers Notes: Holiday, Camara, Thybulle, Hansen, Murray

After the Trail Blazers were eliminated from the playoffs by San Antonio, guard Jrue Holiday made it clear he wants to back in Portland again for 2026/27, according to Joe Freeman of The Oregonian.

I hope so. I don’t like being traded and moved and stuff,” Holiday said. “I like being a part of something and building with the team and seeing the progress and going through the progress with them. So I hope so. I’d love to be here.

Honestly, just kind of how we ended the season, fighting and clawing, knowing that we have a team that has proven ourselves to some extent to be a playoff team. We have a good mix of older gentlemen and then young guys that are still hungry. You hear them. They’re still in the gym now and it’s been two days (since) we lost in the playoffs. So I’m really excited for that.”

Freeman reviews Holiday’s season, writing that the veteran guard provided much of what the team wanted when it traded for him last June, though injuries and “inexplicable” turnovers were an issue in the 35-year-old’s first season in Portland. Freeman also spoke to a couple of NBA scouts to get their opinion on Holiday — both praised his professionalism, but one said he’s overpaid while acknowledging he could be an invaluable mentor to Scoot Henderson.

Here’s more on the Blazers:

  • Freeman’s season review series continues with third-year forward Toumani Camara, who played all 82 regular season games and finished fourth in the NBA in total minutes. Camara was critical of his performance in 2025/26, calling it “up and down,” but he was still pleased with some of the strides he made. “I think he’s a solid player and a piece that you keep for the future and just keep developing him,” a scout told Freeman. “He’s 26, so he’s an older third-year guy. He’s probably not developing a new skillset. But he keeps getting better with his shooting and he defends. His IQ and rebounding are good; he’s a good offensive and defensive rebounder for his position and he’s a smart player who plays within himself, doesn’t try to do stuff he doesn’t do. This is a piece you keep and grow with. He would be great if you put better players around him.”
  • Veteran wing Matisse Thybulle says he has “no expectations” ahead of unrestricted free agency, according to Freeman, but added that he’d “love” to return to the Blazers. Injuries were a major issue for Thybulle over the past two seasons, as he appeared in just 45 regular season games over the span, but he was playing a rotation role at the end of 2025/26. Both scouts Freeman spoke to praised Thybulle’s anticipation skills as a defensive roamer, but said he’s not nearly as good at on-ball defense. One scout said the Blazers should let Thybulle walk in free agency due to availability concerns. “All I’ve heard about him is he doesn’t want to play basketball,” one scout said. “So are you really going to count on him to produce for you when you’re trying to win games?
  • Freeman also reviews the seasons (subscriber links) of Yang Hansen, the 2025 first-round pick who just finished his rookie campaign, and third-year forward Kris Murray, who’s entering the final year of his rookie scale contract. To put it kindly, neither scout Freeman talked to was high on Murray’s game. “I just don’t understand what they’re doing with him,” one scout told the Oregonian. “I think this is a kid they just missed on. Is he a power forward? Is he a small forward? He probably needs to be a small forward, but he can’t do that. I would just try to move on from this kid, to be honest.”