Anthony Edwards' Third Player of the Week Award Shifts Wolves' Momentum and Standings
Here’s why this week matters: anthony edwards' three-win stretch didn’t just pad his stats — it produced immediate movement in the Western Conference table and supplied the Wolves with renewed momentum as the season heads into its final month. The award underscores who on Minnesota feels that lift first: teammates and the club’s positioning in a crowded West.
Anthony Edwards' impact: standings, momentum and what changes for Minnesota
Edwards' week coincided with a perfect 3-0 run that moved the Wolves ahead of the Nuggets and into fourth place in the Western Conference. That jump matters because it changes matchup math and the team's short-term outlook: the club is riding an 11-of-15 surge and has fewer than a full season's worth of games left to solidify home-court advantages and seeding. Here's the part that matters — the award is also the first conference player-of-the-week honor earned by a Wolves player this season, signaling that Minnesota's recent run has real traction rather than being a string of isolated wins.
Event details: the stretch that produced the honor
Edwards averaged 28. 7 points, 5. 0 assists, 3. 3 rebounds and 1. 3 steals during the 3-0 week. Game highlights inside that span include a 34-point effort in a 124-121 win over Portland, a late clutch three that extended a lead to four points with 43 seconds remaining in a 94-88 victory over the Clippers, and a 21-point, 6-assist performance in a 117-108 win over the Nuggets.
Across the season so far he is averaging 29. 5 points, 5. 2 rebounds, 3. 7 assists and 1. 4 steals per game, and he was recently named to the All-Star Game for the fourth straight season while also claiming the All-Star Game MVP award. Despite those credentials, a recent model run excluded him from its top-10 MVP list, which underscores a split between public accomplishments and certain analytic projections.
- Weekly averages during the award week: 28. 7 PTS, 5. 0 AST, 3. 3 REB, 1. 3 STL
- Key performances: 34 points vs. Portland; clutch 3 vs. Clippers with 43 seconds left; 21 points and 6 assists vs. Nuggets
- Season context: averaging 29. 5 PPG and named All-Star Game MVP this season
- Team trend: Wolves have won 11 of their last 15 games; this is the franchise's first conference player-of-the-week award this season
What’s easy to miss is that a short hot streak from a single star can ripple deeper than box-score numbers — it changes opponent game planning and can free teammates in offensive sets, which in turn helps sustain a multi-game run rather than producing a one-off flash.
Key takeaways for readers tracking the playoff chase:
- The award reflects both individual efficiency and outcomes: a perfect week in wins paired with strong per-game numbers.
- Minnesota's jump to fourth matters for matchups and perception; holding that position will require continued team-level consistency.
- The contrast between Edwards' visible impact and his omission from a recent analytic top-10 list highlights a narrative split — popularity in game outcomes versus certain projection methodologies.
The real question now is whether this week can be a turning point rather than a brief spike. With fewer than a couple dozen games remaining, every stretch like this tightens the playoff picture and raises expectations for how the Wolves deploy Edwards in high-leverage moments.
Brief timeline: Edwards won conference player of the week for the weeks of March 17, 2025, and November 13, 2023, and this latest honor is his third career award.
Overall, this award is as much about timing as it is about tallying numbers — it arrives at a moment when wins directly alter seeding and when confidence can translate into tangible gains down the stretch.