The real action of the NBA draft lottery took place about an hour before what you saw Tuesday night on TV. After being told to surrender his cell phone, Wolves communications vice president Brad Ruiter was among the small group of people who witnessed the ping-pong balls being drawn for the NBA draft lottery. Ruiter wrote about what happened away from the cameras. (And, yes, he brought a good-luck charm.)
I had a really good feeling about things from the moment I woke up Tuesday morning. I can't explain why, I'm a Minnesota native so I've seen and endured past lottery disappointments. Something just felt different, it felt like a good day.
The NBA hosts a reception for all invited guests to the Lottery. I spent most of the reception visiting with our owner, Glen Taylor, and his wife, Becky. Small talk about family, growing up on farms (which we both did) and small town life.
At 6:15 p.m., about 90 minutes before the ESPN telecast, two representatives from the NBA arrived to walk me to the lottery room, which is essentially a meeting room on the lower level of the Hilton where the lottery was held. Inside the room there were about 50 people, including one representative from each team in the lottery, NBA representatives and select media members. All people in the room are sequestered until the conclusion of the televised portion of the lottery.
The actual method of drawing the ping pong balls is much different than most people realize. There are 14 ping pong balls, numbered 1 through 14. If you take all the possible combinations of numbers for 14 ping pong balls, there are 1,001 different outcomes. The Timberwolves received 250 of those combinations.
There are 286 combinations where the ping pong ball with number "1" is one of the four balls drawn. In essence, the ping pong ball with "1" pops up, we have over an 85 percent chance that we own one of the winning combinations.
At 6:30 p.m., all the team representatives are instructed to surrender their cell phones and mobile devices and take their assigned seats in the room. After explaining the process, the 14 ping pong balls are lowered into the drawing machine. The team holding the combination of the first four numbers drawn receives the first overall pick. The balls are all lowered back into the machine, and the process is repeated two more times for the second and third picks.
The first ball pops up. It's "1." Deep down, I knew already at that point, we had it.