Forty-seven years after 100,000 hippies converged on San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, the Summer of Love is back.
This one isn't a psychedelic stew of politics, sex, music and drugs. This Summer of Love will bring rampant media speculation and countless rumors involving the Timberwolves and their All-Star forward that won't end until they finally trade Kevin Love, whether it's by the June 26 NBA draft or not.
Wolves General Manager Milt Newton last week said the team will only trade its discouraged star if such a deal makes the franchise better. That doesn't happen often by trading your best player, but the Wolves' best chance is to spark a bidding war before the game's best power forward chooses to walk away from the Wolves and an extra $26.5 million with nothing in return in July 2015.
Here are some of the many possibilities.
FRONT-RUNNERS
Golden State

Why he'd sign there
The Warriors are built to win, new coach Steve Kerr needs a stretch power forward for his offensive system and Love finally could find out what it's like to play with Stephen Curry, a fellow All-Star whom the Wolves infamously bypassed in the 2009 draft. And it might not be L.A., but it is California for a West Coast kid.
What they have to offer
• Promising young players Klay Thompson and Harrison Barnes — each could be foundations at the wing positions for a Wolves team that's never had one at either the shooting guard or small forward positions. The Warriors might deem Thompson untouchable, but it's probably the price of milk if they want to deal.
• If it's draft picks the Wolves want, the Warriors have little or nothing.
Salary-cap implications
• The Warriors will have to find someone to take David Lee's $15 million salary for the next two seasons but take back Kevin Martin's remaining three years and $21 million if they do.