Only seven days after they announced they would search to fill their two most important jobs, the Timberwolves on Wednesday moved swiftly and decisively, giving three titles to Tom Thibodeau and Scott Layden.
It was a sweeping decision that transitions the franchise from October's tumultuous death of Flip Saunders, its coach and president of basketball operations, to a new day that won't include prominently or at all the two men — interim coach Sam Mitchell and General Manager Milt Newton — who guided the team through such a trying time these past six months.
Wolves owner Glen Taylor — who also owns the Star Tribune — discussed where his team has been and where it is headed, now that it has hired former Chicago Bulls coach Thibodeau as coach and president of basketball operations and San Antonio Spurs assistant GM Layden as general manager.
Q Happy belated 75th birthday. Was the timing a coincidence or a present to yourself?
A Thank you. I'm really happy with this. This was my birthday present, one of them, a big one. I had talked to quite a few people, had all my work done. Then I called these two guys [Wednesday] morning and said, 'OK, this is the day, let's finish it today or not, one way or the other.' So they knew it. We worked on it all day, got it done kind of late but we got it done.
Q Why is [Thibodeau] the right guy?
A There's never one reason. I liked his answer to one of the first questions I asked: What are the things most important to you? The first thing he said was, 'I want to be the coach of an NBA championship team. That's my goal in life.' Then we talked about his life and how it's so much about basketball, how hard he works at it. He has friends and all that, but he just said this is very important to him. So I say, 'OK, we start with that. This guy is probably going to outwork anybody else I know.'
Q When Flip took over both coaching and management jobs, you were reluctant. Has your opinion on that changed or did doing that again get the deal done?