Andrew Wiggins came up biggest when the Warriors needed him most.

Warriors' Andrew Wiggins with Stephen Curry and Steve KerrJonathan Kuminga was a late scratch due to knee tendinitis. Draymond Green was ejected less than four minutes after tipoff for extended arguing with official Ray Acosta. The Orlando Magic were playing on three days of rest, while the Golden State Warriors faced the second leg of a tough back-to-back on the road. None of that mattered in the end, though, as Andrew Wiggins led the shorthanded yet invigorated Dubs to an absolutely massive 101-93 victory over the Magic on Wednesday night.

Wiggins scored a team-high 23 points on 8-of-17 shooting, draining half of his six three-point attempts while adding six rebounds and two blocks. Those impressive numbers don’t come close to doing the on-court gravity of his performance justice. Not only did Wiggins drop 13 of his points in the fourth quarter to help stave off Orlando’s hopes of a slow-building comeback, but he also played a pivotal role—especially with Green watching from the Kia Center locker room—in forcing Magic stars Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner into 29 total points on 31 field goal attempts.

The 10th-year veteran has been solid since finally beginning to shake off dire early-season struggles in mid-January. On Wednesday, though, Wiggins reverted back to the two-way force of unyielding aggression and confidence who outplayed Boston Celtics superstar Jayson Tatum as Golden State won the 2022 NBA Finals.

“Wiggs was fantastic. Just stepped up and made one big play after another at both ends,” Steve Kerr said on the postgame podium. “Had the big block near the end on Wagner, made big shots, got to the line, attacked. Yeah, Wiggs was fantastic.”

Andrew Wiggins, suffocating defense sparks victory for ‘desperate’ Dubs

Golden State Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins (22) takes a three-point shot against the LA Clippers during the first half at Chase Center
Wiggins dominated when it mattered most, but played like the Warriors were fighting for their postseason lives from the opening tip in Orlando.

He soared through an open lane for a thunderous two-handed dunk. He pinned a would-be Wagner layup against the glass in transition. He fought like hell on the glass, routinely throwing his weight around against the Magic’s ultra-physical front line. He drained a pull-up triple in inverted ball-screen action when Jonathan Isaac went under Stephen Curry’s pick, spun past Cole Anthony for a slick, lefty and-1 from the same look, then blocked Wagner in the lane once again to seal Golden State’s win.

This Wiggins, leveraging his athletic tools to their fullest as a primary scorer, is the player of two years ago.

Wiggins was hardly the only Dubs role player who stepped up with Kuminga out and Green letting his emotions get the best of him. Curry’s game-long struggles—until he put the Magic away for good with five straight points late, at least—only made the dogged contributions of his less-heralded teammates all the more significant.

Gary Payton II changed the game upon initially entering midway through the second quarter, wresting momentum back from Orlando with a pair of highlight-reel steals and three finishes at the rim. Moses Moody gave the Dubs major life, playing with palpable force—most notably on the offensive boards—en route to 12 points, five rebounds and three assists. But it Brandin Podziemski and Trayce Jackson-Davis led Golden State’s onslaught on the offensive glass, combining to grab nine of their team’s misses. Even Gui Santos impressed in limited action.

The win moves the Warriors to 38-34, keeping them within one-and-a-half game striking distance of the Los Angeles Lakers in ninth-place out West. But far more important than surpassing the Lakers is Golden State fending off the Houston Rockets, a reality Wiggins and his teammates clearly understood while facing long odds in Orlando.

“Just trying to stay aggressive, trying to do whatever I can to get over that hump and get this win,” Wiggins said of his big night. “We’re desperate and we need every win we can get

Andrew Wiggins is the first Canadian NBA player to reach 1000 career 3-pointers made

Andrew Wiggins is about to shoot the ball during the game against the Miami Heat at Kaseya Center. An opposing player’s arm reaches to block him. The Warriors are wearing their white jerseys.

Since leaving Minnesota for Golden State in 2020, Andrew Wiggins, first overall pick of the 2014 NBA Draft, has experienced a career renaissance. On Sunday, versus his former team, Wiggins became the first Canadian-born NBA player to reach 1000 three-pointers.

Wiggins, born in Toronto, lived in Canada before moving to West Virginia in high school and playing for Kansas University for one year. Wiggins is the second Canadian to be picked first overall in the draft, following Anthony Bennett in 2013, who would become his teammate on the Minnesota Timberwolves. Since 2014, no other Canadians have been drafted first overall.

For the first six years of his career, Wiggins was stuck on a floundering Timberwolves team struggling with its identity. Wiggins found his footing with the Warriors upon being traded to Golden State in 2020. In the 2021-22 season, Wiggins received his first All-Star selection and won his first NBA championship. Reaching this historic three-point milestone against the Timberwolves is beyond poetic, especially considering the Warriors’ rocky relationship with the Wolves in recent matchups.

Wiggins signed a four-year, $109 million extension with the Warriors in 2022. This season, Wiggins has been averaging 12.7 points per game. He is shooting 35.6% from three, down from last year’s career-best 39.6%, but still impressive for a forward nonetheless. He has been a bright spot in the Warriors’ tumultuous 2023-24 season — and hopefully, he will continue to break records for his home country for years to come.

The 10th-year veteran has been solid since finally beginning to shake off dire early-season struggles in mid-January. On Wednesday, though, Wiggins reverted back to the two-way force of unyielding aggression and confidence who outplayed Boston Celtics superstar Jayson Tatum as Golden State won the 2022 NBA Finals.

“Wiggs was fantastic. Just stepped up and made one big play after another at both ends,” Steve Kerr said on the postgame podium. “Had the big block near the end on Wagner, made big shots, got to the line, attacked. Yeah, Wiggs was fantastic.”

Andrew Wiggins, suffocating defense sparks victory for ‘desperate’ Dubs

Golden State Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins (22) takes a three-point shot against the LA Clippers during the first half at Chase Center