Only 27 years after he packed his relatively few belongings into his car and drove west from Boston toward his first NBA coaching job, Tom Thibodeau returned to the Timberwolves as their new coach and president of basketball operations Wednesday.
One week after the team announced it would do a search to fill both jobs, team owner Glen Taylor chose the former Chicago Bulls head coach as one man for the two jobs.
And Taylor did it — paying Thibodeau a reported $40 million over the next five years — on his 75th birthday.
The team also named well-respected San Antonio assistant general manager Scott Layden as the GM who will lead the front office under Thibodeau's supervision.
In a text message Wednesday night, Thibodeau said, "I started my NBA career with the Minnesota Timberwolves and it is an incredible opportunity to rejoin the organization at a time when they have what I believe is the best young roster in the NBA."
He added that with a "great owner" in Taylor and a "terrific basketball partner" in longtime friend Layden, he looks "forward to building a winning culture that Minnesota sports fans can be proud of."
In a news release, Taylor said he quickly identified defense-minded Thibodeau as the "best leader" to shape a team built around young stars Karl-Anthony Towns, Andrew Wiggins and Zach LaVine.
"Tom's résumé speaks for itself," Taylor said. "He is a proven winner, leader and one of the most well-respected NBA head coaches over the last decade."