The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No. 1 recruit becomes No. 1 draftee

Anthony Edwards goes to the Timberwolv­es as still a bit of a riddle.

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In this strangest of all years, the strangest of all NBA drafts fifinally arrived. It was held eight months and six days after the last college basketball game of 2020 was played, and that last game — Creighton vs. St. John’s in the Big East quarterfif­inals — ended at halftime. ( St. John’s led 38- 35.) This draft was staged in November, as opposed to June, and it came in a week slotted between the Masters and Thanksgivi­ng.

Ahead of most NBA drafts, we have a working knowledge of the players apt to go fifirst. ( There have been exceptions. The legendary Andrea Bargnani was No. 1 in 2006.) Last year’s overall No. 1 was Zion Williamson, world- famous wrecker of shoes. This year’s No. 1 wasn’t exactly a no- name — in these parts, Anthony Edwards of Georgia by way of Holy Spirit Prep was a pretty big deal — but Ant Man, as he’s known, remains a bit of a riddle even to those who’ve seen him.

Now he’s the property of the Minnesota Timberwolv­es, who have made the playofffff­fffffffs once since 2004. They’re sort of the NBA equivalent of UGA, where Edwards arrived as the nation’s No. 1 recruit but didn’t quite have the desired efffffffff­fffect. His one season in Athens wasn’t a dud — he averaged 19.1 points, 5.2 rebounds and 2.8 assists — but it wasn’t a success, either.

The Bulldogs went 16- 16. They fifinished 13th in a 14- team conference. In a victory over Ole Miss in Round 1 of the SEC tournament on March 11, the night the sports world began to shut down, Edwards matched his season low with six points. Had there been no pandemic and had Georgia failed to win a nonaborted SEC Tournament, he’d have exited as the third overall No. 1 of the past fifive

years, joining Ben Simmons of LSU and Markelle Fultz of Washington, to have missed the Big Dance as a one- and- done.

Georgia coach Tom Crean hasn’t and won’t say a negative word about Edwards, describi ng him as “one of the greatest teammates I’ve ever been around.” The other Bulldogs recognized his t alent but didn’t seem to begrudge i t . On the March day when Edwards announced he’d i ndeed be l eaving after one season, Crean pronounced him “one of the most i mproved- from- beginning- of- June- to- end- ofseason players I’ve been around i n all my years of coaching.” ( Note: Crean coached Dwyane Wade and Victor Oladipo.)

Crean also said: “Sometimes it showed up statistica­lly, and sometimes it didn’t.”

Had Edwards come of draft age in 2019, he might not have been among the top five picks. His draft class is among the least imposing ever. As skimpy as Edwards’ body of work is, it dwarfs those of the two players most mentioned as alternativ­e No. 1s. Edwards played 32 college games. James Wiseman, briefly of Memphis, played three. Lamelo Ball has played 30 games over the past three years — eight for Prienai in Lithuania, 10 for the Los Angeles Ballers in a league his dad created and 12 for the Illawarra Hawks in Australia.

ESPN Sports Analytics rated Edwards as this year’s No. 1 prospect. That data, writes Paul Sabin, “also views Edwards as the weakest top prospect in the model’s data set since 2001.” ( We around here might label him the Aundray Bruce of basketball­ers, minus the machete.) Consensus held that this was a good year not to have the No. 1 pick — or, if you were Minnesota, to trade it. The T- Wolves kept it.

Edwards shoots a lot, which isn’t to say he’s a great shooter. He took a slew of 3- pointers last season — of his 505 shots, 48.6 were trey tries — and made but 29.4% of them. He settled for jump shots too often; he’s quick enough and strong enough to drive the lane whenever he has the urge. He’s a willing passer. He’s a powerful rebounder. He had moments of defensive excellence. For all that, there were only a few games — and in the case of his most famous Georgia performanc­e, a stunning second half against Michigan State — when we saw the player he’s capable of being.

In an ESPN profile written by Alex Scarboroug­h, Edwards was quoted as saying: “To be honest, I can’t watch basketball.” He said he prefers football because “you can spike the ball. You can dance. You can do all kinds of disrespect­ful stuff.”

Scarboroug­h asked when Edwards got into basketball. The response: “I’m still not really into it.”

In a subsequent interview two weeks later, Edwards sought to recant. He told Scarboroug­h: “Basketball is my life. I love it, and it’s what I do.” And maybe that’s true. Still, if you’re the team holding the No. 1 pick and you’re set to invest millions in a teenager, the not- really- into- it line surely gave you pause.

Then again, who else should Minnesota have taken? Wiseman, a

7- footer in a time of small ball? Ball, with his chatty daddy as a package deal? The guy who was the nation’s No. 1 recruit just became the NBA’S No. 1 draftee, so this shouldn’t have been a surprise. And now we wait to see if Edwards’ time with the T- Wolves will be more fulfilling than his five months as a Bulldog.

 ?? Mark Bradley In The AJC ?? Only
Mark Bradley In The AJC Only
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM ?? Georgia coach Tom Crean said Anthony Edwards was “one of the greatest teammates I’ve ever been around.” Crean also said: “Sometimes it showed up statistica­lly, and sometimes it didn’t.”
CURTIS COMPTON/ CURTIS. COMPTON@ AJC. COM Georgia coach Tom Crean said Anthony Edwards was “one of the greatest teammates I’ve ever been around.” Crean also said: “Sometimes it showed up statistica­lly, and sometimes it didn’t.”

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