The Jimmy Butler mess has destroyed the start of the Timberwolves season on the court and in the eyes of the public. It will be resolved eventually with a trade in which the Wolves receive less than they gave to acquire him from Chicago in June 2017.
There is also consternation with the erratic play of center Karl-Anthony Towns, anointed prematurely as a superstar of the future. Towns turns 23 next week and as he matures as a competitor, there is hope for KAT to fulfill the $190 million contract that kicks in starting with the 2019-20 season.
There is a strong likelihood that the current chaos will bring down Tom Thibodeau as coach and president of basketball operations. The price tag for that move would be substantial for owner Glen Taylor — with what's now $22 million-plus remaining on Thibodeau's contract — but the perception of a train wreck is destroying the Wolves in ticket sales and presumably in TV ratings.
When is the last time you were having a beer and talking sports with friends and anyone in the group said something on the plus-side about the Timberwolves? Phil Fleck hears more positive feedback after a humiliation at Illinois than the Wolves do after a victory.
When this all shakes out — Butler is gone, Towns is having more dominating nights and a move has been made on Thibodeau — the Timberwolves still will be left to face the No. 1 question for a successful future:
What is to become of Andrew Wiggins?
The top priority in bringing in the next coach is to choose someone with the best plan to get to Wiggins — either by himself, or with someone on his staff who can convince Andrew that it will be much more satisfying to collect on a $148 million contract if you're actually earning it.
There was excitement when the Wolves were able to land Wiggins in the Kevin Love trade in the summer of 2014, and he was the NBA Rookie of the Year on a terrible team (16-66) in 2014-15.