30 Teams In 30 Days: Wolves Look To Continue Building Young Base

Like most summers in the NBA, the 2019 edition was chock full of trades , free agent news and player movement. From the defending-champion Toronto Raptors to just about every other team in the league, change was the most applicable word when it came to describing team rosters for the 2019-20 season.

With the opening of training camps just around the corner, NBA.com’s Shaun Powell will evaluate the state of each franchise as it sits today — in order of regular-season finish from 2018-19 — as we look at 30 teams in 30 days.

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Today’s team: Minnesota Timberwolves

2018-19 Record: 36-46, did not qualify for the playoffs

Key additions: Jarrett Culver (Draft), Jake Layman (trade), Jordan Bell (free agency), Shabazz Napier (trade)

Key departures: Tyus Jones, Derrick Rose, Taj Gibson, Dario Saric

The lowdown: The Wolves qualified as one of the bigger disappointments of the season, taking a step back from their playoff berth the previous season and seeing little to no growth among their young, reliable players. It’s always alarming when development hits a speed bump, and the Wolves studied the tea leaves and figured something was amiss. Chief among the concerns was the stagnation of swingman Andrew Wiggins.

Once considered the co-savior of the club and lavished with a max contract a year ago, Wiggins drifted and regressed in almost all areas: shooting, defense, impact and especially motivation. He simply did not radiate the intangibles a young player needs to become a star, and there’s realistic fear within the franchise that Wiggins, 24, will be nothing better than a support player.

On most nights, Minnesota mainly relied on Karl-Anthony Towns and the big man delivered more than not. He led the club in scoring (24.4 ppg), rebounds (12.4 rpg) and blocks (1.6 bpg) and shot 40% on 3-pointers. Still, he couldn’t carry the club. The Wolves also received a bounce-back season from Rose, who had a magical moment with his 50-point game in October against the Utah Jazz. Rose followed with three 30-point efforts and inspired hope that his hardship from injuries was finally in the past. He was a much better fit for the Wolves than Jimmy Butler, who was mercifully traded after 10 turbulent games.

In return, the Wolves received Dario Saric and Robert Covington, both decent pickups, from the Philadelphia 76ers. Still, the club’s troubles were problematic, and coach Tom Thibodeau paid the price. He was fired after 40 games and replaced by Ryan Saunders, son of the late Flip Saunders, the team’s all-time winningest coach. The Wolves initially responded positively from the change but soon relapsed and never seriously challenged for a playoff spot.

Since Thibodeau also was the club’s personnel chief, the Wolves immediately conducted a search for a basketball operations leader once the season ended, yet another sign of instability by a franchise that has reached the playoffs only once since 2003-04.

Summer summary: The Wolves entered the summer of 2019 cloaked in uncertainty, which is rather normal for them. It’s just that team owner Glen Taylor and Wolves fans figured the dark days were finally behind them, only to get an untimely visit last season. Which meant, changes were coming.

Taylor hired Gersson Rosas to lead the next era, and it was a decision that was applauded in NBA circles. Rosas, unlike Thibodeau, brings front office experience, having served 16 seasons with the Houston Rockets where he was tutored by Carroll Dawson and Daryl Morey, both respected GMs.

One of the first decisions was to retain Saunders as coach. This wasn’t an automatic decision as Saunders came to the job last season without any prior experience. Yet he held respect in the locker room, came from a solid bloodline and by keeping him, the Wolves maintained some sense of stability. Rosas and Taylor agreed that Saunders deserved more than a half-season.

Next, the Wolves moved up five spots in the Draft, sending Saric to Phoenix to do so, to get Culver. The Texas Tech guard, who boasts a mature game and decent shooting range, appears NBA-ready in terms of intelligence, toughness and size. Culver will compete with last year’s first-round pick, Josh Okogie, for the right to start at big guard.

Curiously, the Wolves saw the loss of not one, but two point guards when Rose signed with the Detroit Pistons as a free agent and the Wolves declined to match the Memphis Grizzlies’ $28 million offer sheet for fellow backup guard Jones. They added the journeyman Napier as a replacement, but Wolves will at some point have to look to upgrade the position significantly.

The other two additions were designed to improve the club’s front line depth. The athletic swingman Layman briefly flourished with the Portland Trail Blazers last season before losing ground in the rotation. Bell had a reasonable role in the Golden State Warriors’ rotation the last two seasons, but failed to show improvement … which led to diminished minutes. Both are still young and come cheap, so there’s not much risk in giving them a second chance.

What Rosas didn’t do was trade Wiggins. That in itself would’ve been welcomed by Wolves fans, who have grown impatient and frustrated with him. Wiggins would have takers on the market despite a contract that’ll average nearly $30 million the next four seasons. However, the return for Minnesota would be rather disappointing. Given the choice, Wiggins stays for now.

The greater concern for Rosas is Towns and the potential for the All-Star center asking for a trade. Suddenly, this is becoming commonplace among those elite players around the league who don’t see progress with their current team. Towns, therefore, is the most likely candidate, from an outsider’s perspective, to pull an Anthony Davis.

In the meantime, the Wolves hope to keep adding to a young base to build assets. That might mean more trips to the Draft lottery, a place the Wolves once thought was finally in their rearview mirror instead of staring them in the face.

Coming next: Los Angeles Lakers

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