Minnesota's newest pro sports team was on the ropes early. After two months, the team fired its coach and traded its top player.
A comeback followed, then a dramatic victory to make the playoffs. Finally, earlier this month, the team won the league championship.
"Congratulations to our guys @TWolvesGaming on getting the job done!" Karl-Anthony Towns, the Minnesota Timberwolves All-Star center, shouted out on Twitter to his colleagues on the team's video-game doppelgänger.
The Timberwolves, along with Minnesota United and the owners of the Minnesota Vikings, have plunged into professional video games, or e-sports, betting they will reach new fans and appeal to sponsors just as their real-life teams do.
The move into the virtual world is happening as sports teams at all levels face more challenges in the real one. The proliferation of streaming platforms, highlight videos and on-demand channels has made it harder to keep fans in the stands. Meanwhile, sports video games have become sophisticated replicas of real life. They lack physicality but possess speed, strategy and drama. The e-sports teams for the Wolves and United play electronic versions of their sports, basketball and soccer. The owners of the Vikings, the Wilf family, started a business called WISE Ventures Esports to field professional gamers playing "Call of Duty," a first-person shooter game that has an international e-sports league.
"If you look at e-sports in the macro, it's at a level that's not far off from what you see in traditional sports in terms of total viewers," said Brett Diamond, chief operating officer for WISE Ventures Esports.
Pro video-game leagues are big business in places like South Korea and China and are becoming so here. ESPN's website has a calendar of e-sports matches in various leagues. More than 130 colleges, including St. Paul's Concordia University, have a varsity e-sports program, according to the National Association of Collegiate Esports.
And last month, 19,000 fans filled the biggest stadium at the National Tennis Center in New York to watch the championship of "Fortnite," a battle game. The winner, a Pennsylvania teenager, took home $3 million.