In February 2020, the Timberwolves drummed up all the fanfare they could to welcome D'Angelo Russell to Minnesota. There were several dozen people from the organization to greet his plane at an airport hangar, and the next day the Wolves held a public news conference at City Center downtown to welcome him.
Former President Gersson Rosas had made it his mission to acquire Russell and swung a deal with Golden State to bring him in, convinced this was the Wolves' point guard of the future.
Three years and one day after that news conference, the D'Angelo Russell era in Minnesota was over. On Wednesday, the Wolves struck a deal to send Russell to the Lakers in a three-team trade that will bring veteran Jazz point guard Mike Conley to Minnesota, a source confirmed. The trade was not yet official before Thursday's deadline, but the teams had agreed on terms.
The other part of the trade is a pair of former Wolves — Jarred Vanderbilt and Malik Beasley, both of whom were traded together to the Wolves the day before Russell and were traded out in the Rudy Gobert deal last summer — were part of a package going from Utah to the Lakers. The Jazz are getting former MVP Russell Westbrook and a first-round pick from the Lakers.
The Wolves are also receiving Jazz shooting guard Nickeil Alexander-Walker and three of their second-round picks in 2024, 2025 and 2026. The Wolves, coincidentally, were in Utah to face the Jazz on Wednesday though neither Conley nor Alexander-Walker was available to play.
The trade will reunite Gobert with Conley, the point guard who was with him in Utah for the past three seasons as the Wolves try to maximize their roster around Gobert, Anthony Edwards and Karl-Anthony Towns. In a recent interview with the Star Tribune, Wolves President Tim Connelly said there were "plenty of scenarios" where Russell was the Wolves' point guard moving forward.
But their future will likely include having a point guard who is more facilitator than shooter, and Conley would represent that, especially as the offense shifts to featuring Edwards as its focal point.
"He has poise on the floor, he understands time and score. He's played in a lot of big games," Jazz coach Will Hardy said before Wednesday's game. "He's been in a lot of big moments as a point guard and so he's somebody that's a real stabilizer."