Well, this sure is different. In past years, I’ve sat down to write and discuss offseason strategy, and it was always pretty easy. The Minnesota Timberwolves have always just needed to select whoever was (literally) the number one player on their draft board. That was basically the only thing that really mattered, because the team was so bad and in dire need of an infusion of talent.
Coming off of a 46-win season and a playoff appearance, with a young, legitimate star in the making in Anthony Edwards paired with their All-NBA Big, things are different. The Wolves have a good core in place.