D'Angelo Russell was on the Target Center floor with five minutes to play in Game 6 of the Timberwolves' series against Memphis and the score tied at 97.
But with 4 minutes, 53 seconds remaining in the must-win game, coach Chris Finch sent Jordan McLaughlin in for Russell, who was 3-for-7 from the field with four assists and four turnovers, one of which had just led to a Memphis three-pointer.
Russell struggled most of the series against the Grizzlies and wouldn't return to the game, a 114-106 loss that ended Minnesota's season.
There was thinking that Russell wouldn't return to the Wolves at all.
A trade seemed likely. Russell was entering the final year of a maximum contract he signed in the summer of 2019, a contract which will pay him more than $30 million this season.
Before last season, Russell said he was treating that season like a contract year and was hopeful for an extension. He didn't get that, but the Wolves also didn't trade him, and chose to hang on to him after acquiring center Rudy Gobert from Utah.
And when the Wolves take the floor Wednesday night in their NBA season opener, Russell will be announced as the starting point guard.
"Every year my approach is the same," Russell said at the team's media day. "Nothing changes. You see guys approaching a contract year and doing it incorrectly, and it becomes magnified if you're doing it incorrectly. You might not be going about things the right way, or ways you would be going about it if it wasn't a contract year."