Even if the Timberwolves thrive for years because of Rudy Gobert, their trade for him will never be considered thievery. They gave up too much in the deal for that. They'll settle for Gobert playing well, as he is now, even if the long-term price they paid proves to be high.
The Wolves made another deal involving the Utah Jazz last year, a deal requiring no such patience or qualification.
On Feb. 9, 2023, the Timberwolves engineered a three-way trade. They dealt point guard D'Angelo Russell, who was shooting extremely well at the time, for veteran point guard Mike Conley and reserve Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and also got three second-round picks.
Initial reaction, in some quarters, especially the regions of Minnesotan fandom who felt burned by the Gobert trade and preseason hype, was skeptical at best. Why would you trade a 6-foot-5 point guard who can shoot the lights out for an old, beat-up, undersized point guard?
Then Russell got benched in a second consecutive postseason, by a different team, and now Conley and Alexander-Walker are two-ninths of the Wolves' primary rotation, and Conley has excelled in just about every way you would want a point guard to excel.
As a leader. An offensive organizer. A fierce defender. A thinker. A unifier. And a clutch shooter.
Wednesday night, the Wolves finished off a 4-0 homestand with a victory over New Orleans, a homestand that included a victory over the defending champion Nuggets and the previously undefeated Celtics. Gobert was excellent as a rim protector, a scrambling defender and a rebounder.
Alexander-Walker played strong defense and, offensively, proved he can be a valuable part of the Wolves' backup point guard by committee going forward — especially with Jordan McLaughlin out a month or more.