The NBA draft is less than two months away and free agency begins two months from Sunday, and the Timberwolves have not named a permanent head of their basketball operations.
Since the Wolves fired former President Gersson Rosas in September, executive vice president Sachin Gupta has run the day-to-day operations without a bump in title.
Gupta has negotiated a one-year extension for Patrick Beverley, inked coach Chris Finch to an extension and led the Wolves in preparation for the draft, in which they hold the No. 19 overall pick and three picks in the second round.
But Wolves ownership hasn't made any announcements about the state of the basketball operations moving forward. Gupta deflected a question about his contract status at Saturday's exit interviews.
"I won't comment on that, but I'm in this role now and it's a big summer for us and I'm focused entirely on that," Gupta said. "Coach and I and our staffs are excited to put this team together for a bigger year next year."
Will Glen Taylor, Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez go outside the organization for a potential big name to come and run the show, as some around the league think they might? Or will they keep the continuity of Gupta and Finch together? Both have spoken about the strong partnership they have had running the team since Rosas was fired. That kind of symbiotic relationship between the front office and coaching staff can be a rare commodity in the NBA.
Finch stumped for Gupta to get the job and has communicated his feelings to ownership.
"They know my feelings about Sach," Finch said. "They know that I think he's outstanding and he's been a huge reason that we have stability in this organization right now. He's very smart. We have complete alignment. The players love him. He's appropriate in his presence around the team. He's not heavy-handed with the coaching staff. He does his job.