The Timberwolves apparently weren't swayed by D'Angelo Russell's protracted shooting surge. The organization chose logic over emotion and recency bias. Smart move.
Those once-rosy visions of Karl-Anthony Towns and Russell becoming a dream pairing and backbone to a championship contender have long since been rendered a mirage. The Wolves are ripping up another blueprint by trading Russell to the Los Angeles Lakers in a three-team pact that will bring veteran point guard Mike Conley and other assets to Minnesota.
In doing so, the Wolves shed an expensive point guard whose streakiness provided a constant tease but ultimately made him untrustworthy as a long-term answer at that critical position.
The enduring image of Russell's unfulfilling time in Minnesota will be coach Chris Finch benching his point guard in the fourth quarter of a playoff elimination game last season because he didn't trust him to be on the floor.
The Wolves didn't trust Russell in that important moment, and they didn't trust him to be their floor leader in the future. Russell did not earn that trust. He didn't deserve it.
His replacement is 35 years old and fading into the twilight of his career. Conley has a history with Rudy Gobert and is likely a better fit for what the Wolves want at point guard, but swapping Russell for Conley is not an upgrade that solves a problem.
Conley should be viewed as a stopgap option — he has another season remaining on his contract – who will allow the Wolves to remain competitive while the organization formulates a new plan at point guard.
People will debate whether Wolves President Tim Connelly got enough value in return, fueled by full-blown skepticism and concern over Connelly's acumen as a dealmaker.