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Chris Finch criticized the NBA's inconsistent awards eligibility after Anthony Edwards was ruled ineligible, highlighting the spotlight on Cade Cunningham and Luka Doncic. Finch's remarks aimed to address perceived unfairness in the league's decision-making process.
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Chris Finch has questioned the NBA’s consistency on awards eligibility after Anthony Edwards was ruled out, a decision that inevitably put Cade Cunningham and Luka Doncic back in the spotlight.
The frustration is not simply about Edwards missing the cut. It’s about the league approving other extraordinary-circumstances appeals while leaving Minnesota’s star on the outside.
That is why Finch’s comments landed the way they did, because they were less about attacking other players and more about exposing a process that now looks uneven.
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Speaking in comments shared via Jon Krawczynski, Finch made it clear he wanted more transparency from the league.
“It sure would be nice to hear an explanation as to why Anthony was denied his 65 games, particularly when you look at the history of Anthony, who plays all the time and has played all the time,” Finch said.
He added, “I’m not sure why we have a rule if we have an appeals process that is overturned in two-thirds of the cases that were held before it. It feels more like a suggestion than a rule.”
The key issue is the contrast. Edwards was denied after finishing short of the threshold, while other appeals succeeded under the same broader framework.
That is what turned this into a league-wide talking point, because once exceptions are granted, every denial demands a clearer explanation.
Anthony Edwards was ruled ineligible for NBA season awards due to the league's decision-making process regarding extraordinary-circumstances appeals.
Chris Finch questioned the NBA's consistency in awards eligibility, suggesting that the process appears uneven and unfair, especially regarding Anthony Edwards' situation.
Cade Cunningham and Luka Doncic were brought back into the spotlight as Finch's comments highlighted the inconsistency in the NBA's awards eligibility, contrasting their situations with Edwards'.

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Finch did not name either player directly in a critical way, but the comparison was obvious after Cade Cunningham and Luka Doncic both received the go-ahead through the extraordinary-circumstances process.
“Again, those guys are super deserving and their injuries are legitimate. It has nothing to do with them, but so are Anthony’s and Anthony’s situation. We’ve never rested him,” he continued.
Finch concluded, “That’s not how he’s been. It just feels a little unfortunate that he was the only one left out.”
Cunningham was cleared after his season was interrupted by a collapsed lung, while Doncic was approved after finishing one game short and citing time missed around the birth of his child. Edwards, by contrast, remained ineligible after his case was denied.
That does not make Finch’s point reckless. It makes it straightforward: once the league opens the door for exceptions, the burden shifts to explaining why one player qualifies and another does not.
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