New Timberwolves President Tim Connelly has been on the job for less than a month, but he is already arriving at the first crucial stretch of his tenure. The Wolves have four picks in Thursday's NBA draft, including No. 19 overall and three second-rounders.
After all the picks are made comes free agency, when the Wolves will have to address needs on the roster, including finding upgrades in the frontcourt to bolster their rebounding. Connelly chatted with the Star Tribune recently about all this. (Answers were edited for clarity and brevity.)
Q When you have a playoff team already and are building toward being a contender, how do you view an asset like the No. 19 pick? Does it become more valuable as a trade chip to find a veteran more ready to contribute?
A We'll beat up all the different possibilities pretty good. We're also very content and pretty excited about if we're going to get a good player at 19. It's going to be hard for any player we draft to have a huge role with the team that just had the success they had. We're not drafting for June 24, we're drafting for, hopefully, to add a person that can be a part of sustained success and a person who can grow into a role. I think things are on the table, but we do feel pretty convinced that 19 is going to yield a good player.
Q The eternal question is always do you draft for need or draft the best player available. How does need fit into the equation? More of a long-term need?
A I think I'm generally a best player available [guy]. When that becomes really close, then you have to factor in need. … Teams change so dramatically. Some of the times I've screwed up the most is when I was too tunnel-visioned trying to address needs and the team looks different two weeks later in free agency, looks different a year later after a trade. Then you look up and say, "I'm such a moron for not just taking the guy we had higher on the board. We liked him." I think generally, really good players find their way regardless of the roster. We'll be a best-player available team and if it's really close in the discussion, we'll be a bit more nuanced. I think generally, it's the best approach to take.
Q Karl-Anthony Towns is eligible for a supermax extension. How much thought have you given that? Do you envision him as a franchise cornerstone?
A I hope he's here forever. I hope we have the type of team success that would allow us to look up and see Karl's jersey being hung up in the rafters. I reached out to a bunch of these guys, but I don't want to force relationships. You have to develop those things naturally. So, I've heard so many great things about him. I know how great a player he is on the court, but off the court it's been so consistent, just an unbelievably sweet guy that treats everyone in a really classy manner. I think he's been through so much, so many different faces and different chairs, from the front office to the coaching staff. So I think with continuity with Finchy [coach Chris Finch], you're going to see a better version of Karl and he's already a great player. … I know he's good enough to win at a high-high level, and I know how much he cares about this city and this team, so I think that would be an unbelievably cool thing for Karl and this team that he only wears one jersey and we win a ton of games and we're old and fat and watch the jersey being hung in the rafters. I'm already old and fat, but older and fatter.