Nuggets Journal: Anthony Edwards asked Peyton Watson if Nuggets planned to foul before game-tying 3

Nikola Jokic once identified and called out a play the Timberwolves were planning to run before it happened, a trick so elusively intuitive that it left Minnesota stars Anthony Edwards and Rudy Gobert openly bewildered in the locker room afterward. It was entirely dependent on memory and intellect.

Edwards has a simpler method of figuring out his opponent’s strategy before a key play.

He just asks.

Before Jokic could assemble the highest-scoring overtime period in NBA history, Edwards had to get it there first. His miraculous game-tying 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds left in regulation ended up being a footnote in Denver’s 142-138 Christmas win for the ages. That’s how memorable the game was. But Edwards has been establishing himself as a worthy worst enemy in Denver for years. His latest crowd-silencing shot represented another step forward in that arc, regardless of what happened in overtime.

And it was made all the more memorable by a characteristically amusing exchange before the play. Television cameras caught a conversation between Edwards and Denver’s Peyton Watson, who explained it afterward.

“He was saying, ‘Are you gonna let us get a three off, a shot off, or are you gonna foul?’ ” Watson recounted. “I said, ‘We’re gonna try our best to foul, but I mean, this is a tricky situation. Like, it’s two seconds left. We foul you (on a shot), you get three free throws. Or we let you shoot, and you get a three off.’ It’s almost one of those ones where you’ve kind of got to just play as solid as you can and hope for the best.”

That’s what Denver ultimately did, to no avail. Edwards caught the inbound pass from the sideline then quickly turned to face the basket before the Nuggets had a chance to intentionally foul him (a common strategy when protecting a three-point lead in the final seconds of a game). Jamal Murray contested the shot and made it difficult on Edwards, but that still wasn’t enough. “Ant Man” specializes in these shots.

He even earned himself a Kobe Bryant comparison from first-year Nuggets coach David Adelman.

“We wanted to front him to make the ball go toward the basket,” Adelman said. “The hard thing is — Kobe Bryant was like this, and I can use that name with Anthony Edwards because Anthony’s got a chance to be one of those guys you put up there — once he caught it in rhythm to turn, that’s part of his shooting motion. And now you’re in trouble (if you intentionally foul him).”

“Incredibly tough shot from him,” Watson added, “just like he made all night. He’s an amazing player.”

The Nuggets have encountered two of the most talkative superstars in the NBA in the past week. Houston’s Kevin Durant made the rounds taunting Adelman, his former teammate Bruce Brown and a fan at Ball Arena during a Rockets win. The animosity spilled over into postgame interviews, as Brown said Durant went too far with his trash talk. Durant responded by unapologetically agreeing that he “crossed the line.”

Edwards has also gleefully gloated at the Nuggets’ expense before. While taking in a Summer League game between Denver and Minnesota in July, he agreed to give an autograph to a Nuggets fan. He loudly responded to nearby protests that “it’s all good; I be busting their (butt).”

But in general, the tone surrounding their rivalry has always remained one of begrudging mutual admiration rather than bitterness. Edwards said Jokic “might be the best basketball player I’ve ever seen close-up, besides myself,” after a double-overtime thriller in April. He also told The Denver Post in 2024, “If you can find me somebody that don’t think Jamal Murray is one of the best (freaking) guards in the league, then they’re crazy.” Edwards has made a habit of antagonizing his opponents on the court and complimenting them off it.

As for the latest chapter in Nuggets-Wolves lore — which ended with Edwards getting ejected in overtime — Watson took no issue with the 24-year-old guard brashly asking about Denver’s strategy.

“There’s a lot of respect between me and Ant, I think. Every time we play, we talk the whole game pretty much, me and him,” Watson said. “And it’s just situational, depending on what’s going on. We’re just competitors.”

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