Sports
Minnesota Timberwolves Star Anthony Edwards Spoke Way Too Soon
After leading his team to the Western Conference finals last season, no one was more confident than Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards.
Talking the talk has always come easy for Edwards. Prior to the 2024 playoffs, he shared a self-assessment that he reached just 40 percent of his full potential. He was also the self-proclaimed No. 1 option on Team USA at the Paris Olympics, putting himself over future Hall of Famers LeBron James, Kevin Durant and Stephen Curry.
And then there were his comments from “Starting 5,” Netflix’s 10-episode docuseries that came out this past October.
“When you’re in your prime, you’re like 26. The s— that I’m doing, I’m doing this s— at 22,” Edwards said. “Imagine when I’m 25, 26, when this s— is perfect, everything is perfected.”
Edwards was far from perfect on Thursday night, making only 5 of 16 shots from the field in 36 minutes of action to finish with 15 points in a 118-115 loss to the Boston Celtics on primetime television.
When Minnesota needed Edwards the most, he was nowhere to be found. The first overall selection of the 2020 draft went 1-for-2 at the free-throw line to prevent the Timberwolves from pulling within 110-105 with 4:36 remaining, then missed a wide-open layup with 1:50 to go and his team in an eight-point hole.
Still, Minnesota kept fighting to make it a one-possession game in the final seconds, but Edwards was way off the mark on a potential game-tying triple at the buzzer.
Thank goodness he’s only operating at 40 percent of his full potential, though, right?
Edwards is officially in a slump, with averages of 18.9 points (on 39.3 percent shooting overall and 35.4 percent shooting from long range), 6.3 rebounds and 4.5 assists over his past eight games. The Timberwolves have gone 3-5 during that span.
So, it might be time for Edwards to take his foot off the gas just a little bit when it comes to being cocky. All he really has under his belt is a pair of All-Star appearances and a strong playoff run. One strong playoff run, that is.
One.
Players far more decorated than Edwards haven’t run their mouths nearly as much, and Edwards can only draw more attention to his subpar performances if he continues to act like he’s already running the league at the age of 23.
This isn’t to say that Edwards isn’t one of the top young talents in the league. He is. And he’ll likely bounce back sooner rather than later. However, very rarely does modesty ever hurt anyone. Arrogance, on the other hand, does.
Edwards clearly still has some rawness to him, and he’ll only become more and more mature over time. Next time he goes off for 40 points or leads the Timberwolves to a statement win in the postseason, maybe he’ll remember to continue to simply let his play do the talking.
Sports
Cadillac Championship final round moved up due to forecast
May 1, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Cameron Young plays his tee shot on the eighth hole during the second round of the Cadillac Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Romance-Imagn Images The final round of the Cadillac Championship was moved up to a 7:30 a.m. ET start with groups teeing off from the Nos. 1 and 10 holes due to Sunday’s forecast in Miami calling for heavy thunderstorms and rain.
Formula 1’s Miami Grand Prix also moved up the start of its race from 4 p.m. to 1 p.m.
Cameron Young holds a six-shot lead entering the final round at Trump National Doral’s Blue Monster Course following a 2-under-par 70 on Saturday that put him at 15 under for the tournament. The fifth elevated event of the season features a $20 million purse.
Young will tee off in the final group at 9:42 a.m. along with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and South Korea’s Si Wo Kim, who are tied for second along with Norway’s Kristoffer Reitan at 9 under.
“I think I tend to play well at difficult golf courses, difficult setups, difficult conditions,” Young said after completing a third round that featured significantly more wind than the first 36 holes. “This is all of those things. I think it plays into my hands a little bit.”
Young will be looking for his second victory of the season and the third of his career on the PGA Tour during Sunday’s final round.
“I’m sure it will not be as easy as I want it to be,” Young said. “Sounds like the weather is not going to be great. It will be a fight from the beginning and just looking to execute the way that I did for the most part today.”
Scheffler shot 69 to move to second place by the time he finished the third round.
“The tournament’s in (Young’s) hands right now,” Scheffler said. “I can go out and have a really good round, and if he has another really good round he’s going to be a tough guy to catch.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Martin Ojeda (3 goals), Orlando rally to snap Miami's unbeaten streak
May 2, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Orlando City SC midfielder Martín Ojeda (10) scores a goal as Inter Miami CF defender Maximiliano Falcón (37) follows on the play during the first half at Miami Freedom Park. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images Martin Ojeda scored his second career MLS hat trick, Tyrese Spicer pounced for a winner in second-half stoppage time and visiting Orlando City rallied from three goals down to a historic 4-3 victory over Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami on Saturday night.
Orlando (3-7-1, 10 points) became only the third team in MLS history to win a regular season match after going three goals behind, the first since the LA Galaxy in 2018. The unlikely comeback extended Miami’s wait for a first win in its recently opened Nu Stadium to at least a fifth match, after drawing the first three and losing to its Florida Derby rivals.
Messi had a goal and two assists for Miami (5-2-4, 19 points), which saw its 12-match unbeaten run in all competitions snapped. Telasco Segovia also scored and had two assists, Ian Fray scored the early goal and Luis Suarez also had two assists for the Herons.
But Ojeda outdueled his more famous Argentine countryman, leveling his third goal in the 79th minute from the penalty spot after referee Guido Gonzalez ruled Maximiliano Falcon had pushed down Iago Teodoro during an Orlando corner-kick sequence.
Ojeda hesitated to get Dayne St. Clair to lunge to the right, then finished to the left for a stunning equalizer that came 46 minutes after Messi had given Miami a three-goal lead.
Then in second-half stoppage time, Ojeda was present in a dummy capacity as Braian Ojeda played a throughball from deep in his own half for Spicer.
The halftime substitute finished hard and low through the legs of St. Clair to complete one of the most unlikely victories in MLS history.
Martin Ojeda’s first goal came in the 39th minute. Justin Ellis provided the final pass, but it was mostly Ojeda creating the shot himself, spinning to elude a defender and then unleashing a ferocious left-footed strike that beat Clair to the bottom-left corner.
The second came in the 68th after Adrian Marin’s impressive slaloming run up the left. The result was similar, this time Ojeda hitting the inside of the right post with a perfectly placed shot that left St. Clair rooted to the ground.
Miami harassed Orlando throughout the opening hour and quickly built a three-goal lead.
In the fourth minute, after the Herons failed to put away one dangerous chance, Messi recycled the ball on the left and laid it off for Segovia, whose cross picked out Fray’s head at the 6-yard box.
A Messi give-and-go with Suarez set up a tap-in for Sevogia in the 25th minute. And then Messi found the bottom-left corner from the edge of the penalty area in the 33rd.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Dillon Dingler, Keider Montero guide Tigers past Rangers
May 2, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers catcher Dillon Dingler (13) celebrates at home plate with teammates Riley Greene (31) and Colt Keith (33) after hitting a three-run home run against the Texas Rangers in the first inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images Dillon Dingler had a three-run home run and a double to spark the Detroit Tigers to a 5-1 home win against the Texas Rangers on Saturday.
Keider Montero (2-2) gave up one run on five hits, walked two and struck out two in 6 2/3 innings as Detroit evened the three-game series.
Gleyber Torres had two hits and an RBI for the Tigers before leaving with left side tightness. Riley Greene went 2-for-4 with a run and Wenceel Perez was 2-for-3 with a run and a walk.
Jake Burger hit a solo home run while Josh Smith and Josh Jung each had two hits for Texas.
Moments after Rangers right fielder Ezequiel Duran fielded Greene’s single and threw out Torres at the plate in the first, Dingler launched a homer that traveled 443 feet to left.
An inning later, Detroit took a 5-0 lead with a pair of two-out singles. Perez singled, stole second and scored on Kevin McGonigle’s grounder up the middle. McGonigle swiped second and came around to score on Torres’ bloop single to shallow right.
Montero gave up two walks in the third, but kept Texas off the board. In the fourth, Burger’s solo shot was the Rangers’ first hit and cut the Detroit lead to 5-1.
Duran and Smith posted back-to-back singles to lead off the fifth, but Montero induced a double play and a popout to escape the jam.
With one out in the eighth, the Rangers threatened with runners on second and third. Reliever Drew Anderson got Joc Pederson to ground out and struck out Burger. Anderson gave up two hits and struck out three in 2 1/3 innings of relief.
Rangers starter Kumar Rocker (1-3) gave up five runs on six hits in two innings.
Torres exited the game in the third with what was reported as left-side tightness.
–Field Level Media
