In 2013, Tim Connelly took over as general manager of the Denver Nuggets and in his first draft, he officially selected center Rudy Gobert, who was on his way to the Utah Jazz via a draft-night trade.
Connelly has been on the job for the Timberwolves less than two months, but his first franchise-altering move in Minnesota — and one of the most seismic trades in recent team history — involved the 7-1 Gobert, as he dealt multiple players and multiple first-round picks to Utah to land one of the NBA's most decorated defensive players, a source confirmed.
As part of the massive deal, the Wolves are sending Malik Beasley, Patrick Beverley, Jarred Vanderbilt, Leandro Bolmaro, recent first-round pick Walker Kessler and an abundance of draft capital — four future first-round picks (unprotected 2023, 2025, 2027 picks and a top-five protected pick in 2029) along with a pick swap in 2026, a source confirmed.
The trade package was also significant for who was not included in it. Point guard D'Angelo Russell, who has been rumored to be on the trading block this offseason, is still with the Wolves, as is Jaden McDaniels, the promising young forward the Wolves see as a big part of their future and who has drawn interest from teams around the league.
The Wolves wanted to bolster their frontcourt, and they did so in about as big a way as they could. Gobert, a three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year, will be in the second year of a contract that pays his $205 million over five years and is signed through 2026. He will now pair with Wolves center Karl-Anthony Towns in a modern twin towers lineup. Towns agreed to his own large contract, a four-year extension that will keep him in Minnesota through 2028 and pay him an estimated $214 million.
The trade will slide Towns to the four while Gobert will primarily handle rim protection, something he excels at perhaps better than anyone in the league, though one of his new teammates had thoughts on that matter when they faced each other earlier this season.
"I don't get why we couldn't finish on Rudy Gobert," Anthony Edwards said after a Wolves loss to Utah in December. "He don't put no fear in my heart. I don't know why."
But Gobert usually makes players think twice as they head to the rim.