Edwards, Timberwolves Exorcise Demons in Toronto with Stunning 18-Point Comeback
To understand the weight of what happened Wednesday night at Scotiabank Arena, you have to rewind the clock. The last time the Minnesota Timberwolves won a basketball game in Toronto, “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” was the No. 1 movie in America. Kevin Garnett was in the midst of his MVP campaign. It was January 21, 2004.
For over two decades, this city has been a house of horrors for the franchise. And on Wednesday, Anthony Edwards picked up the pen and scribbled out a new ending.
Rallying from an 18-point deficit that felt like a death sentence early on, the Timberwolves stormed back to stun the Raptors 128-126, snapping a 22-year drought north of the border. It wasn’t pretty, it was chaotic, and at times it was downright ugly—but it was the kind of gutsy, character-defining win that turns a mediocre season into a special one.
Edwards sparks the Timberwolves’ historic rally
When the Timberwolves went down by 18, the body language on the bench looked all too familiar. It was the posture of a team ready to pack it in and look toward the next city. But Anthony Edwards had other plans.
Edwards, who has been battling inconsistency along with the rest of the squad, decided to put the team on his back in the fourth quarter. He poured in 13 of his game-high 30 points in the final frame, playing with a level of desperate aggression that Toronto simply couldn’t match.
The defining moment came with 2:26 left on the clock. Edwards slashed through the lane, absorbing contact and finishing a driving layup that put Minnesota up 118-117. It was the moment the Timberwolves stopped hoping they could win and started believing they would.
Depth shines as Bones Hyland erupts
While Edwards was the closer, he didn’t dig out of that 18-point hole alone. The Timberwolves got massive contributions from a supporting cast that has been searching for its rhythm.
Bones Hyland was electric off the bench. He dropped 20 points, injecting a level of pace and chaotic energy that the Raptors struggled to contain. When the starting unit looked stagnant in the first half, it was Hyland who kept the heartbeat going.
This was a total team effort. You had seven players hitting double figures. Jaden McDaniels continued his hot streak with 19 points, looking increasingly comfortable as a primary scoring option. Naz Reid and Julius Randle each chipped in 17, providing the interior toughness necessary to survive a physical game. Even Rudy Gobert, despite a quieter scoring night (10 points), cleaned the glass with 12 rebounds and altered enough shots to make Toronto think twice about driving the lane late.
Capitalizing on chaos down the stretch
If we’re being honest, the Raptors helped Minnesota out the door. Toronto fell apart when the pressure ramped up, committing seven of their 13 turnovers in the fourth quarter alone. Those mistakes directly led to 11 Timberwolves points.
Minnesota’s defense, which has been hot and cold all year, finally locked in. They were flying around in the passing lanes, deflecting balls, and forcing the Raptors into isolation basketball. The Timberwolves didn’t just wait for Toronto to miss; they forced the issue.
Looking ahead for the Timberwolves
This win puts Minnesota at a fascinating crossroads. They’ve been a team defined by high peaks and low valleys this season. Just days ago, they were reeling from a loss to Memphis. Now, they’ve pulled off their biggest comeback of the year in a building where they haven’t won since the flip phone era.
Breaking the Toronto curse is a nice narrative, but for head coach Chris Finch, the bigger takeaway is resilience. Wins like this forge identity. When you look up at the scoreboard, see a nearly 20-point deficit on the road, and find a way to grind out a victory, that matters.
The Timberwolves are still a work in progress. They need to figure out how to avoid digging these holes in the first place. But for tonight, they can enjoy the flight home. The demons of Toronto have finally been put to rest.

