While long-term salary cap considerations played a factor in Minnesota’s blockbuster trade with New York, Timberwolves sources tell Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic that majority owner Glen Taylor was only willing to sign off on a deal involving Karl-Anthony Towns if the front office believed it would improve the team entering the 2024/25 season. Last season, the Wolves made the Western Conference finals for just the second time in franchise history, and Taylor had no interest in taking a step back.
“First and foremost, I think it’s extremely important to recognize that this is not a money deal,” head coach Chris Finch said. “Glen and our ownership was and is committed to paying large amounts of tax for this team to be highly competitive. That hasn’t changed. This deal in totality checks a lot of boxes. We think it’s a great basketball trade.”
Sources tell Krawczynski that Taylor reiterated throughout the summer he was willing to a foot a significant luxury tax bill and would rather have kept Towns — and the four years and $220MM left on his contract — than make the team worse. As Krawczysnki writes, Taylor is in an ongoing ownership dispute with minority stakeholders Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez, and it behooves both sides to keep the Wolves as competitive as possible entering arbitration in early November.
It has been reported multiple times that the Knicks have wanted Towns for at least a couple years. But the timing of the trade was surprising, considering the regular season begins in a few weeks and training camps are already underway.
Team and league sources tell Krawczynski that the Wolves didn’t have many other options for moving Towns, especially for quality players in return, making the Knicks’ offer –headlined by three-time All-Star Julius Randle — appealing. However, according to Krawczynski, the Wolves only accepted the trade when the Knicks included Donte DiVincenzo in place of Mitchell Robinson, who is out until December or January as he continues recovers from ankle surgery.
Krawczynski also suggests the Wolves had some concerns that if they struggled to open ’24/25 or Towns got hurt, they would’ve had even fewer suitable trade options for the four-time All-Star due to his recent injury history and super-max contract. Still, it was difficult to deal away one of the top players in franchise history, a former No. 1 overall pick who had strong ties within the organization and the community.
Here’s more on the Wolves:
- Finch said Randle will be the starting power forward and lavished praise on his former colleague — he was an assistant with New Orleans during Randle’s lone season with the Pelicans in ’18/19. “Really, really enjoyed working with him,” Finch said, per Krawczynski. “Great pro. Loves being in the gym, comes in with a smile on his face every day. He’s hungry for feedback. Really pleasant.” For his part, Randle said he’s thrilled to reunite with Finch, calling him a “genius” who excelled with preparation, writes Jamal Collier of ESPN.
- Randle could hit free agency next summer if he declines his $30.9MM player option for ’25/26. He said he was initially shocked by the trade but after getting a night’s sleep, he had a different perspective, calling the deal “a breath of fresh air,” according to Collier. “You want to be somewhere where you feel wanted. I feel wanted here,” Randle said Thursday. “At this point in my career, I’ve accomplished a lot of great things on an individual level, but I want to win a championship. This is a perfect opportunity to do that.”
- Finch was also excited about the addition of DiVincenzo, saying he should be able to acclimate quickly, Krawczynski notes. “His basketball IQ and his ability to cut and move and play off the ball is something that we really need,” Finch said. “That’ll benefit us right away.”
- A recent report suggested that DiVincenzo may not have been thrilled with a potential reduced role with the Knicks, but a source tells Stefan Bondy of The New York Post that DiVincenzo had “embraced” the idea of coming off the bench and didn’t want to leave New York. “When you look at the big picture, my mind wasn’t on what teams were interested in me. When I was in New York, I was fully there. I wanted to be there. And when this kind of picked up, I realized it was an opportunity. And when it became an actual thing, my mind just completely went straight to Minnesota,” DiVincenzo said. “And I immediately thanked everybody from my time in New York. There’s so much love there. But once I realized this is a real thing and actually happened, my mind transitioned to Minnesota. And I’m 100 percent here and excited.”
- Towns recently sent out a tweet thanking the Wolves organization and the team’s fans.
Wolves definitely won that trade…
Often injured and overpaid out, good role players in…
Randle maybe a little injury prone himself and has just spent years playing for Thibs… But the difference in contracts makes him easier to move as this report shows… Most of the league didn’t want to pay KAT that money… Only the Knicks did…
There’s no winner. There’s positives and negatives for both teams but for Wolves it’s mostly financial. There not a better team than the one that went to the WCF. The reason they beat Denver was Towns’ defense on Jokìc, it allowed Gobert and Reid to float on defense and protect the rim. Towns also spread the floor so Edwards and Conley could operate. Randle doesn’t play defense and is an unreliable shooter. DiVencenzo can shoot but so can Alexander-Walker. The positives for the Wolves are they got another playmaker in Randle and they have long term financial flexibility to keep a competitive team around Edwards.
The Knicks got the better player and Brunson needed another scorer that compliments his game but this is their team for the foreseeable future. It’s going to tough for them to make moves without trading key players.
Let both teams play and see how they all mesh after a few months before trying to determine the “winner” of the trade, Chucktoad1. All we know for sure right now is the East is in desperate need of fielding a more competitive and entertaining product come playoff-time; I’m glad the Sixers and Knicks’ brass are especially giving it a shot.
I didn’t say there was a winner, in fact my first sentence stated that I didn’t think there was a winner. In the short term the Knicks are better and Wolves are worse. In the long term the opposite is true.
@chosen – maybe you’ve been been away too long and didn’t hear, but the Celtics won last year and they’re from the East.
Brutally horrible take
KAT is mostly theoretical…
He has to be able to stay on the court…
Getting off an overpay like that is a huge win…
This move single-handedly cooked the Knicks championship chances this year. KAT is not HIM.
Wolves might have gotten better from this deal. Especially if Donte continues to improve and Randle stays healthy.
If KAT can put up 20/10 with a couple of 3’s per game and a block out two, that’s all they’ll need from him. He’s done that consistently. The rest of the team is quite adequate to lift their chances and move on to the finals, with health in mind like any other team.
My thought is that KAT doesn’t have to be the guy for knicks. That’s not why the got him. I think this is similar to the Celtics getting Kristaps. It’s a great move to a great team but KAT is not expected to be the first or second best player
Completely agree with David
I think Randle gets traded at the deadline. The wolves can trade Randle for a rotation player, on decent contract, plus a draft pick. They move Reid to the starting power forward and they will be a better team back under the first apron, and they recover some of the draft picks they gave up for Gobert.
Exactly my thinking…
The Wolves aren’t more dangerous, their future is just brighter after this trade…