Changing of the guard: Wolves trade Rubio, have deal with Jeff Teague

Trade of veteran Ricky Rubio opens the door for Wolves to hand reins to Jeff Teague.

July 1, 2017 at 10:42AM

Eight days after they acquired three-time All-Star Jimmy Butler, the Timberwolves kept right on going Friday, when they swapped one starting point guard for another and plunged into the NBA's late-night free agency by targeting Atlanta star forward Paul Millsap, too.

In the afternoon, the Wolves and coach/president of basketball operations Tom Thibodeau traded fan favorite Ricky Rubio to Utah for a protected 2018 first-round pick. Then when the clock struck 11 p.m., they agreed to terms with Indiana's Jeff Teague on a reported three-year, $57 million contract and pursued Millsap, 32, to fill a power forward spot beside Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins.

To do so, the Wolves will have to clear more cap space even after their trade with Utah freed Rubio's $14.1 million salary for this coming season.

They still have more than $14 million to add a player(s) who can improve either their shooting, defense, depth and leadership, or all four. That's not enough to land a player such as Millsap, a four-time All-Star.

He would give the Wolves another two-way star to go with Butler, but to add him they will likely have to renounce the rights to restricted free agent Shabazz Muhammad and trade center Cole Aldrich. They could dangle that first-round pick they acquired Friday to a team willing to take Aldrich's contract that has two years remaining.

ESPN late Friday night reported the Wolves also are aggressively chasing Los Angeles Clippers free-agent shooter J.J. Redick.

Friday's trade with the Jazz is contingent on Rubio passing a physical examination in Utah.

Teague just turned 29 — two-plus years older than Rubio — and was an All-Star himself in 2015.

The Jazz will send Oklahoma City's lottery-protected, first-round pick in 2018 to the Wolves and in turn absorb Rubio's salary into their cap space. Just hours later, the Thunder acquired superstar Paul George in a stealthy trade with Indiana that could impact the Wolves' new pick's worth.

Utah had $16 million in available cap space that it had to use or lose by midnight Friday. Jazz center Rudy Gobert's big contract extension began Saturday, thus gobbling up any extra space the Jazz had.

The trade ends Rubio's six uneven seasons in Minnesota after the team and newly hired basketball boss David Kahn drafted him fifth overall in 2009 and waited two seasons for him to come from Europe to the NBA.

He became something of a matinee idol in those six seasons because of his flashy passing and unselfish play as well as his good looks and charming Spanish accent. But his career was sidetracked by a suspect jump shot that only recently noticeably improved, as well as a torn knee ligament that ended his rookie season and disrupted the next and by a serious ankle injury that cost him much of his fourth season, in 2014-15.

Rubio finished last season strong, showing both that improved shot and a newfound offensive assertiveness after February's All-Star break.

Last week, Rubio tweeted farewell to younger teammate Zach LaVine after the Wolves traded LaVine to Chicago in the Butler deal, saying he was going to miss him.

"Sad part of this business," Rubio tweeted then.

Now he is headed to a Jazz team that reached the playoffs' second round this season, while Teague will join his third team in two years.

Thibodeau presumably is making the player swap because he considers it an upgrade at point guard. He repeatedly has said his team needs better outside shooting to create more court space for Towns, Wiggins and now Butler to work offensively.

Teague has proven more durable than Rubio throughout his career, never playing fewer than 70 games in any of his eight seasons. He also is a better shooter by the percentages than Rubio across the board, but averages less than one three-pointer made a game. He also is not considered the active team defender that Rubio is.

Teague is, however, a speedy scorer and passer as well as skilled pick-and-roll guard who helped the Hawks to a 60 regular-season victories and the Eastern Conference playoffs three years ago.

He played his first seven seasons in Atlanta until Dennis Schroder took his starter's job and played this past season with Indiana.

"He's very talented. I loved playing with him," said Atlanta forward and Roseville's own Mike Muscala, who played his three NBA seasons with Teague. "Great passer, real fast, real quick. He has gotten better moving without the ball. He'll defend. He created a lot of steals for us."

NBA teams cannot officially sign players until Thursday.

Indiana Pacers' Jeff Teague, right, drove past the Wolves' Ricky Rubio during a game in January. Now, hours after Rubio was traded to Utah, Minnesota is poised to add Teague as its point guard.
Indiana Pacers' Jeff Teague, right, drove past the Wolves' Ricky Rubio during a game in January. Now, hours after Rubio was traded to Utah, Minnesota is poised to add Teague as its point guard. (Associated Press/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Ricky Rubio is headed to Utah.
Ricky Rubio is headed to Utah. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Minnesota Timberwolves Ricky Rubio
Minnesota Timberwolves Ricky Rubio (Colleen Kelly — Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Minnesota Timberwolves guard Ricky Rubio (9) and Minnesota Timberwolves center Karl-Anthony Towns (32), left, dispute a call during the second half. ] (Leila Navidi/Star Tribune) leila.navidi@startribune.com BACKGROUND INFORMATION: The Minnesota Timberwolves play the Los Angeles Clippers at Target Center in Minneapolis on Monday, December 7, 2015. Los Angeles won the game 110-106. ORG XMIT: MIN1512072218180839
Not quite No. 1 Ricky Rubio leaves the Timberwolves after six seasons, ranking in second place among the team’s all-time assists and steals leaders. But his career statistics do compare favorably with the team’s best point guards. Career assists leaders Rank, player No. Games Avg.  1. Kevin Garnett 4,216 970 4.35  2. Ricky Rubio 2,991 353 8.47  3. Pooh Richardson 1,973 246 8.02  4. Terrell Brandon 1,681 202 8.32  5. Stephon Marbury 1,393 167 8.34 Career steals leaders  1. Kevin Garnett 1,315 970 1.36  2. Ricky Rubio 747 353 2.12  7. Terrell Brandon 386 202 1.91  8. Pooh Richardson 383 246 1.56 21. Stephon Marbury 200 167 1.20 (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Jerry Zgoda

Reporter

Jerry Zgoda covers Minnesota United FC and Major League Soccer for the Minnesota Star Tribune.

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