The Wolves, by all accounts, still aren’t ready to give up that much.
The latest scenario presented to me is that the Wolves, with those back-to-back picks, are leaning toward taking Stephen Curry and Tyreke Evans.
Yet it also must be acknowledged that the Wolves are at the heart of numerous trade scenarios with the four first-round picks they possess.
It sounds as though virtually everyone on Houston’s roster is available. Teams report that the Rockets are trying to parlay Tracy McGrady’s expiring contract and Aaron Brooks’ newfound celebrity status into one of Minnesota’s lottery picks. Carl Landry and Shane Battier also were mentioned as possible trade pieces.
You’re gonna hear all kinds of things today, and who knows, a lot of it could come true…
I see a lot of mock drafts today have the Wolves drafting James Harden with one of their two top picks and Tyreke Evans dropping down in the draft.
No way, I say.
There are some in the basketball operations office who think Harden, Arizona State’s sophomore guard, might be the second best player in the draft, but I don’t think Kahn shares that opinion and that’s all that matters at this point.
— Kahn said the Timberwolves will not trade Kevin Love today. Kahn thinks Love is very young and has a huge upside.
Kahn, the Trail Blazers’ beat writer for the Oregonian for the late ’80s to early ’90s — pre law school/NBC/Pacers assistant GM/Development League owner of three teams — replicated his bravado by trading on-the-rise Randy Foye and multitalented Mike Miller for No. 5 and Darius Songaila, Etan Thomas and Oleksiy Pecherov.
Swan dive or belly flop?
No way of knowing until we hear the noise Kahn makes by either parlaying No. 5 or 6 with 18 for No. 2, or tip-toeing through the minefield using his collection of first-round choices. Then we’ll have to hide and check out how the higher ones develop over the next few seasons.
Minnesota began the week with three first-round picks (Nos. 6, 18 and 28) and added No. 5 to the coffers in a Tuesday trade with Washington. The Timberwolves, looking to build around Al Jefferson, are getting their ducks in a row to make a major move. The second choice is possibly Minnesota’s target.
“I would be really surprised if Minnesota kept all those picks,” a Western Conference general manager said.
Yes, I’m talking about the same team that finished 24-58 this past season, the team that lost its best player to injury, the team that is currently without coach.
But I am here to tell you there will soon be a lot to like about this team.
Look at the Timberwolves. Look at David Kahn. Unsentimental. Doing what he can. Working with what lot he’s left with. Love that. Admire that.
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