Jaden McDaniels didnât dress it up because the game didnât require poetry. In the playoffs, when the playbook shrinks and every possession is filmed, tagged, and solved, offense becomes a search problem: find the defender who canât survive the action and make him guard it over and over. McDanielsâ deadpan âtheyâre all bad defendersâ is less a jab than a thesis. Minnesotaâs best offense is the one that turns opponent reputation into repeated, on-ball stressâuntil rotations crack.
Context
McDanielsâ quote landed because it aligns with what postseason basketball has become: relentless matchup targeting dressed in different uniforms. Teams donât ârun setsâ so much as they run interviewsâasking the defense, possession after possession, who can stay on the floor without being protected.
For Minnesota, the context is structural. With Anthony Edwards as the primary advantage creator and Karl-Anthony Towns stretching the frontcourt, the Timberwolves can play a two-man game that forces difficult choices at the point of attack. They donât need a complex menu; they need enough spacing and screening integrity to get Edwards downhill and enough shooting gravity to punish the first helper.
McDanielsâ listâNikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Tim Hardaway Jr., Cam Johnson, Aaron Gordonâreads like a scatter plot of âgood playerâ and âtargetable moment.â Thatâs the point. Playoff offenses arenât only about beating bad defenders; theyâre about forcing good ones into bad situations: cross-matches in transition, guarding up a position, closing out from the nail, or being the low man twice in one possession.
The broader backdrop is league-wide: teams are increasingly willing to live with the consequences of hunting. If you can manufacture a possession where a star is either the on-ball defender or the primary helper, youâre taxing his legs and decision-making. Minnesota is leaning into that math.
The Tactical Picture
âGo atâ is shorthand for a series of precise actions. Minnesotaâs most scalable version starts with high ball screens for Edwards, but the detail is in how they choose the screener and where they place the spacing. When Towns screens, youâre forcing the opposing big to operate in space. If that big plays at the level, Townsâ pop creates a catch-and-shoot window and drags rim protection away from the restricted area. If the defense switches, Edwards gets a runway against a slower body while Towns punishes the mismatch on the other end of the switch.
When Rudy Gobert screens, the point isnât his scoringâitâs the geometry. Edwards can turn the corner hard, and the defenseâs low man has to tag the roll. That tag is the âtell.â Minnesota then lives in the next pass: corner lift to the wing, slot drift, or a quick âshakeâ to create a clean kickout angle. The target isnât merely the on-ball defender; itâs the helper who canât cover ground twice.
The real hunting mechanism is pre-switch prevention. If opponents try to hide a defender on McDaniels or a low-usage wing, Minnesota can invert: bring that wing into the action as a screener (guard-guard pick-and-roll), or run âempty-cornerâ ball screens to remove the strong-side help and force the defender to survive in space. Empty-side PnR is especially punishing because the low man is pinned to the roller and the nearest rotation has to come from the topâlonger distance, more time for Edwards to read.
Against Jokic/Murray-type pairings, the stress point is decision speed. If Jokic plays drop, Edwards walks into pull-up threes and pocket-pass windows. If Jokic shows higher, youâre exposing the backside: tag-and-recover sequences that become corner threes or baseline cuts. The âbad defenderâ isnât always the one being scored on; itâs the one whose help rules can be manipulated into late rotations.
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A Coaching Lens
A head coach hears McDaniels and thinks in two tracks: identity and sustainability. The identity piece is clearâkeep the offense simple, keep the spacing honest, and keep the possession ending with a shot created off an advantage, not an overpass. That means prioritizing lineups that maintain two credible spacers around Edwards, and it means drilling the same reads: corner defender stunts? hit the corner. Low man tags? throw the skip or the short roll. Switch? slip and punish the backline.
The sustainability piece is where game planning lives. Opponents will counter by scramming the mismatch (late switching to pull the target out), pre-switching before the screen arrives, or zoning up behind the play to shrink Edwardsâ driving lanes. Minnesotaâs coaching staff has to anticipate that and build âsecond actionsâ that punish the first counterâre-screens, Spain pick-and-roll (back screen on the big in drop), and quick-hitter post seals when teams scramble.
On the other side, an opponentâs staff is asking: can we defend without exposing a specific player? The standard answer is to reduce the number of clean picks Edwards sees. That means switching more, top-locking shooters to take away easy kickouts, and showing early help from non-shooters to bait Minnesota into the wrong pass. If Towns is the spacer, you canât overhelp; if Gobert is the spacer, you can. That single personnel variable changes the entire help map.
Front-office implications follow quickly. If your postseason offense relies on hunting, you need wings who can screen, shoot enough to be respected, and make the extra pass without turning it over. The âfifth guyâ becomes a playoff swing factorâeither a target you must protect or a connector who keeps the hunt alive.
What This Means Strategically
McDanielsâ comment is a snapshot of where the league is headed, not just a moment of bravado. The playoffs increasingly punish any two-way leakâwhether itâs a guard who canât contain, a big who canât survive in space, or a star who must conserve energy. Minnesotaâs path is built on forcing that leak to appear and then refusing to stop pressing it.
For the Timberwolves, the strategic question is whether they can marry this hunting offense with their defensive identity without compromising either. If Edwards is generating advantages consistently, Minnesota can win the math battle: rim attempts, free throws, and corner threes. If opponents succeed in muddying the first action, Minnesota has to prove it can score on the second and third reads without devolving into late-clock isolations.
League-wide, the trend is clear: âgood defenseâ is becoming less about individual stoppers and more about five-man solvencyâno one to hide, no rotation to exploit. What to watch next is the counter-counter: do opponents force the ball out of Edwardsâ hands with aggressive blitzes, and can Minnesotaâs short-roll decision-makers (especially the screener) turn those traps into four-on-three efficiency?
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