DENVER - In Chris Finch’s first full season as their head coach, the Timberwolves won 46 games and made the playoffs, losing to Memphis in the first round.
Then the Wolves started thinking big.
They lured president of basketball operations Tim Connelly away from the Nuggets with a lucrative contract.
Connelly went big in a more literal way, trading a large package of draft picks and players for the best defensive big man in basketball, 7-1 center Rudy Gobert.
Connelly and Finch placed Gobert alongside 7-foot All-Star center Karl-Anthony Towns.
Many NBA teams were featuring small lineups. The Wolves wanted to make them all look like Lilliputians.
After a season featuring significant injuries and a lesser version of Gobert, Connelly’s plans began to look prescient in 2023-2024. The Wolves competed for the top seed in a loaded Western Conference, settled for third, then produced the most dominant playoff performance in franchise history, sweeping a talented Suns team.
After three straight losses to the Nuggets and star center Nikola Jokic, now the Wolves have to worry whether their massive frontline is big enough, or dominant enough, to take them any farther than the conference semifinals.