Jaylen Clark one of many young Timberwolves awaiting their shot to contribute

The 2023 second-round pick didn’t play much as a rookie, but he believes the end of the bench is full of potential.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
July 4, 2024 at 8:35PM
Minnesota Timbwerwloves General Manger Tim Connelly (center) posed with draft picks Leonard Miller left and Jaylen Clark Monday June 26,2023 in Minneapolis,Minn.] JERRY HOLT • jerry.holt@startribune.com
Wolves boss Tim Connelly poses with Leonard Miller left and Jaylen Clark after the team landed both players through the second round of last year's draft. Neither one contributed much as a rookie, but Clark believes the young players on the roster can make a difference in 2024-25. (Jerry Holt, Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Jaylen Clark had attended Wednesday’s news conference to introduce Rob Dillingham and Terrence Shannon Jr., the first-rounders attained by the Timberwolves in last week’s NBA draft.

Clark, 6-4 guard, was a second-round selection out of UCLA for the Wolves a year ago. He was available late in the second round because of a torn Achilles suffered in the 2023 Pac-12 tournament.

He was the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year, and Wolves basketball boss Tim Connelly decided Clark was worth stashing for a year.

Clark was headed back to what basically has been his home for a year — the Wolves practice facility across the skyway from Target Center — on Wednesday. He was in a conversation about the mostly “yet-to-be seen by Wolves fans” young talent that Connelly has assembled.

Dillingham and Shannon Jr. now become the featured attractions.

Two second-rounders — lightly-used 6-8 Josh Minott (2022 draft) and 6-10 Leonard Miller (2023, acquired from San Antonio) — should be ready for playing time next season. Clark has been working out full tilt and could make it three second-rounders getting minutes. The Wolves do like their defense, you know.

Guarding people relentlessly was the No. 1 reason Nickeil Alexander-Walker originally got his chance to become a vital contributor.

“Lots of young guys who might earn some minutes,” was a comment to Clark.

He agreed, and then added another: “Don’t forget Dashien Nix as a guard. He only had a few minutes last season, but Dashien’s a player. I’ve seen it every day.

“And you know who else we just signed to a two-way contract? Edwards, that big center from West Virginia. He could be interesting, too.”

Jesse Edwards, 6-11 and from the Netherlands, is the probable center the Iowa Wolves will need now that Luka Garza has been upgraded to a two-year, one-way contract with the Wolves.

Bottom line: The Wolves in Summer League should be worth watching way more than usual this month.

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Patrick Reusse

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Patrick Reusse is a sports columnist who writes three columns per week.

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