There was a theory being expressed on local sports media outlets as Timberwolves training camp approached last fall that, by the time the All-Star Game arrived, we would be hearing reports that Karl-Anthony Towns wanted out.
This was upgraded to "KAT will demand a trade in the offseason" in early November, when his account liked a #FreeKAT hashtag on a Tweet. Towns' explanation that this had to be the villainous work of a hacker produced only up-to-date versions of "Oh, sure'' with Minnesota's sporting public.
That tidbit of drama came in the early part of a stretch — Oct. 30 to Nov. 15 — when the Wolves would lose eight of nine games. That put their record at 4-9.
Same old, same old. Right?
Not really. The Wolves are 23-16 since then as they enter Sunday's home game against Detroit.
Towns was named a Western Conference reserve for the All-Star Game on Feb. 20 in Cleveland. This is his third All-Star selection, and first in three seasons.
He was a teenager for his first few games in the NBA and we all appreciated that talent, that potential for greatness. There was the Jimmy Butler chaos, and there were injuries, and the KAT disillusionment was strong … with me, anyway.
COVID-19 did hit him like a boulder, with the death of his mother and other relatives. He played 35 of 64 games and 50 of 72 games in the two COVID-shortened seasons (combined Wolves' record: 42-94).