Tag Archives: Timberwolves

WATCH: Jamal Murray throws heat pack onto court during first half of Nuggets vs. Timberwolves Game 2 – CBS Sports

  1. WATCH: Jamal Murray throws heat pack onto court during first half of Nuggets vs. Timberwolves Game 2 CBS Sports
  2. Jamal Murray tosses heat pack, Michael Malone screams at officials as Nuggets frustrated in Game 2 The Associated Press
  3. Renck: Oh Baby! Even without Rudy Gobert, Timberwolves leave Nuggets crying in frustration. The Denver Post
  4. Nuggets Coach Michael Malone Is Blowing Up Online After Wild Interaction With Referee Athlon Sports
  5. Watch furious Nuggets coach Michael Malone SCREAM in referee’s face as defending NBA champions fall in playoff Daily Mail

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Report: Kevin Durant Expected to Return from Ankle Injury for Suns vs. Timberwolves – Bleacher Report

  1. Report: Kevin Durant Expected to Return from Ankle Injury for Suns vs. Timberwolves Bleacher Report
  2. Suns practice notebook: Kevin Durant could return against Minnesota, bench play encouraging Monty Williams Bright Side Of The Sun
  3. Kevin Durant injury update: Suns star to return from sprained ankle on Wednesday vs. Timberwolves CBS Sports
  4. Report: Kevin Durant (ankle) to RETURN from injury vs. Timberwolves | NBA Today ESPN
  5. Kevin Durant will reportedly return to Suns on Wednesday, make long-awaited home debut Yahoo Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Luka Doncic, Jason Kidd ejected as Mavericks slip below .500 in loss to Timberwolves

USATSI

The Dallas Mavericks have had perhaps the most frustrating season of any team in the Western Conference this season, and things just went from bad to worse on Monday in a loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves. That defeat, their 16th of the season, dropped the Mavericks below .500, but it wasn’t just the loss itself that will bother Dallas fans. It was the way in which it came.

With the Mavericks trailing in the third quarter, Luka Doncic tried to draw a foul by initiating contact with defender Jaden McDaniels before a shot. He didn’t get the whistle. When Doncic complained, he was quickly issued two technical fouls and ejected. Coach Jason Kidd came to his defense, and he too was ejected. 

Doncic has been noticeably frustrated with officials all season, but the numbers suggest he’s getting plenty of calls. He’s averaging a career-high 10.3 free throw attempts per game this season. Of course, he also has a career-high 38 percent usage rate, but even once that is adjusted for, his 45.3 percent free throw rate is also a career-best. By that measure, Doncic is getting more calls than ever.

He needs them, because the team Dallas has put around him is otherwise incapable of generating offense. The absence of Jalen Brunson, who is thriving in New York, has put an enormous burden on Doncic’s shoulders. Doncic is feeling that burden, and he let his frustration get the better of him on Monday. With the Mavericks now tied for 10th in the Western Conference, it’s hard to blame him. 

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Timberwolves’ Rudy Gobert ejected for tripping, tussling with Thunder’s Kenrich Williams

Rudy Gobert got a bit frustrated during Saturday’s Thunder-Timberwolves game. (AP Photo/Andy Clayton-King)

Rudy Gobert’s tenure with the Minnesota Timberwolves is not going according to plan. He might have hit a low point on Saturday.

In the second quarter of the Timberwolves’ game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Saturday, Gobert received a flagrant 2 foul after a run-in with Thunder wing Kenrich Williams.

The kerfuffle began when Gobert tripped over a fallen Williams while jumping for a rebound. Gobert fell to the ground himself, at which point Williams pushed his legs out of the way to get up and run down the court. Gobert responded by clearly sticking his legs out to trip Williams.

Williams reacted as you would expect, and soon a crowd was trying to break up an off-balance shoving match.

The result of the play: an ejection for Gobert and a technical foul for Williams. Williams made one of two free throws, while D’Angelo Russell made a lone free throw for the tech.

Gobert exited the game with six points on 3-of-3 shooting with four rebounds in nine minutes played. He entered Saturday averaging 13.6 points on 64.5% shooting from the field, 11.8 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game.

The Timberwolves bet big on Gobert this summer, trading four first-round picks, a pick swap and a bevy of players for the three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year. It was hoped that Gobert and Minnesota star Karl-Anthony Towns could be the rare big men to co-exist on the court, but the result so far has been an 11-11 record and ninth place in the Western Conference before this weekend.

Towns is currently out several weeks with a calf injury. That figured to give Gobert some more space to operate, but the Timberwolves ended up having to figure out how to navigate with neither on Saturday.

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5 things we learned from the Timberwolves’ win over the Lakers

The Minnesota Timberwolves defeated the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday night and there were more clues to how this team will look this year.

With another monster night from Rudy Gobert and a big second half from Anthony Edwards, here are five things that we learned in the win over the Lakers.

Rudy Gobert is worth the price of admission

Gobert had another big night for the Timberwolves, putting up 22 points and pulling down 21 rebounds. The seven-footer was particularly effective on the offensive end, pulling down eight offensive boards – including one on an Edwards miss with 57.6 seconds to go that put the Wolves ahead 107-99.

Gobert’s presence also caused problems while Anthony Davis sat out with lower back tightness, holding the Lakers to 41.6 percent shooting over the course of the game.

There are moments where the Timberwolves appear to be forcing looks on Gobert offensively, but that’s a work in progress. After six games, Gobert is averaging 15.0 points and 15.2 rebounds, which is helping the Timberwolves so far.

KAT is settling in at the four

It hasn’t been an easy ride for Karl-Anthony Towns to adjust to playing beside Gobert but Friday was a step in the right direction.

Towns went off in the fourth quarter, scoring 14 of his 21 points in the final frame while shooting 6-for-9 with two 3-pointers. Towns also finished with eight rebounds and seven assists while backing his transition to power forward after the game.

“I don’t got no ego in this. I just want to win,” Towns said. “I’ve said that since Day 1. People question it, and I don’t know why. I think I’ve proved it in my actions and the way my career has played out so far. I’ve always put this team and this organization first, even when it wasn’t the cool thing.”

Gobert also praised Towns’ willingness to make the switch work, which could be a benefit as the two get comfortable in the Timberwolves’ new offense.

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Anthony Edwards is on a mission this season

The first half didn’t go well for Edwards but the second half was a continuation of his hot start to the season.

Edwards scored 23 of his 29 points in the second half and missed a free throw in the final seconds that would have given him his fourth 30-point game of the season.

Through six games, Edwards is averaging a career-high 23.8 points, 6.8 rebounds and 4.2 assists. He’s also shooting 47 percent from the floor while knocking down 35.3 percent of 3-pointers.

If Edwards continues to play like this, it could be a breakout season for the No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 NBA Draft.

The pick-and-roll game needs work

While Towns, Edwards and Gobert all had solid nights, the same can’t be said for D’Angelo Russell.

The Timberwolves point guard shot just 4-for-15 on the night and 2-for-7 from 3-point range. Although he found other ways to get on the scoresheet with seven assists and six steals, there is more to be expected from his offensive game, which left him with just 11 points on the night.

One reason could be the Timberwolves’ ironing out the kinks on offense, where Russell needs to find the pick-and-roll game he had with Jarret Allen during his time in Brooklyn. We’re six games into the season, so we can assume Russell will get comfortable with Gobert in due time and eventually start performing better offensively.

The Lakers are as bad as advertised

Sometimes the national media can blow things out of proportion but Friday’s game made it perfectly clear: the Lakers are a bad team.

LeBron James scored 28 points with seven rebounds and five assists, but his supporting cast is crumbling at the seams. Russell Westbrook came off the bench and shot just 6-for-17 from the field and as we mentioned earlier, Davis missed Friday’s game as he continues to battle injuries.

This is all good news for the Timberwolves, who are looking to move into the upper tier of Western Conference contenders, but as for right now, the Lakers don’t appear to be a team they have to worry about.



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Free agent Austin Rivers agrees to 1-year deal with Minnesota Timberwolves, agents say

Free agent guard Austin Rivers has agreed on a one-year deal with the Minnesota Timberwolves, his agents, Dave Spahn and Aaron Mintz of CAA Sports, told ESPN on Thursday.

Rivers joins the Timberwolves after playing 67 games for the Denver Nuggets a season ago. New Minnesota president of basketball operations Tim Connelly signed Rivers in consecutive seasons as the Nuggets’ president and now has landed him on a third straight deal with the Timberwolves.

Rivers, 29, arrives in the wake of the Rudy Gobert trade with the Utah Jazz that cost the Timberwolves some of its bench depth, including guard Patrick Beverley. The Timberwolves also signed forward Kyle Anderson on a two-year, $18 million deal in free agency.

Rivers averaged six points in 22 minutes a game for the Nuggets a year ago. Rivers has played 10 NBA seasons, including stops with the New Orleans Pelicans, LA Clippers, Houston Rockets, Washington Wizards, New York Knicks and Nuggets.

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Gobert calls joining Timberwolves ‘most exciting situation’ for career

A few days before the Timberwolves and Jazz agreed to send Rudy Gobert to Minnesota for a cache of players and draft picks, Gobert told his agent, Bouna Ndiaye, that he wanted a little time to think over the move.

“I told him I needed one or two days to think about it,” Gobert said. “After one day, I told him it was probably the best, most exciting situation in terms of basketball for me.”

A day later, Gobert said, the trade was done, and on Wednesday, the 7-1 center was in Minnesota, posing for all the photographs and shaking all the hands he could at Target Center.

The trade represents a massive shift for both Gobert and the Wolves organization. Out the door went some of the players who helped turn the Wolves into a playoff team last season — along with four future first-round picks and another pick swap.

Gobert now joins only the second team he has ever played for in his 10-year career.

“So it’s just a very unique core of young guys and a really good coach [Chris Finch] that complained about my screens all the time,” Gobert said to laughter. “So now we’re on the same side. I’m excited.”

Gobert was also excited about the potential pairing he and Karl-Anthony Towns will form. Two of the biggest questions about this trade are just how much they will fit together, and can the Wolves play two big men on the floor in an NBA that has gone smaller and quicker over the past decade.

Gobert said he took some time to think about his fit with Towns.

“When I was going to bed, I was thinking about it more and more,” Gobert said. “And actually that was probably the best, most exciting challenge for me, to pair with a guy like KAT.”

Towns’ ability to shoot, handle the ball and pass should complement Gobert on offense — and make teams decide which player they want to double in the post — while Gobert’s ability to protect the rim will allow Towns more freedom defensively and potentially keep him out of foul trouble.

“If you would’ve told me that a year ago, I would’ve told you I didn’t think it could happen,” Gobert said. “But now that it came to life, I’m super excited and just allow him to be himself even more, be even more dominant.”

The Wolves paid a premium, and maybe even more than a premium, to get Gobert to Minnesota. National analysts and reporters largely panned the trade and what the Wolves gave up for the 30-year-old Gobert, who has four years left on a $205 million deal. President Tim Connelly initially said, “I don’t know,” when asked what he might say to people who felt the Wolves paid too steep a price.

“In this industry it’s very public and I think we deserve all the praise and criticism, it’s the fun part about being a fan,” Connelly said. “Time will tell. When you make a trade, you hope it’s a win-win. You’re not trying to get over on teams. … We gave up a lot to get a lot and ideally it’s the trade that will work well for the Jazz and the T-Wolves.”

“So it’s just a very unique core of young guys and a really good coach [Chris Finch] that complained about my screens all the time. So now we’re on the same side. I’m excited.”

Rudy Gobert

But the opportunity to get Gobert was too good to pass up.

“It’s an inexact science,” Connelly said. “But when you look at players of Rudy’s abilities, they don’t become available very often.”

The timing worked well for where the Wolves are as an organization and with the Jazz looking to turn the page after not getting out of the second round with a Gobert-Donovan Mitchell core.

“It seemed more of a dream than a reality,” Connelly said of acquiring Gobert. “As the discussions ramped up and we thought there was a chance we could add Rudy, the excitement level collectively for Chris and the front office was, ‘Wow, we got to get this done.'”

There’s a lot more yet to do. Gobert said he noticed the Wolves were beginning to build a winning foundation last season. That was one reason he felt comfortable with the trade. The pieces are in place for a winning team to take off.

“Their will to win was different, their culture and the way they were approaching the games, I felt like something had changed,” Gobert said.

The Wolves are changing again, and Gobert is hoping everybody will get to a place neither he nor his teammates have reached in their careers.

“The goal is to win a championship and I came here for that,” Gobert said. “I didn’t come here just to be a good team. I came to try and take this team to the finals and accomplish that.”

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Utah Jazz trade Rudy Gobert to Timberwolves

Intrigue had been building all of Friday that the Utah Jazz had a big move coming, that league executives had begun to believe that the team might be trending toward a teardown and rebuild.

When the move finally came it was not merely big. It was seismic.

The Jazz are trading one of their foundational pieces, All-NBA center and three-time Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert, to the Minnesota Timberwolves, according to a report from ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

In return, Utah will get two-way wing Malik Beasley, defensive-oriented guard Patrick Beverley, forwards Jarred Vanderbilt and Leandro Bolmaro, rookie center Walker Kessler (the No. 22 pick in the 2022 NBA Draft), and four future first-round picks.

Those picks will be unprotected selections from the Wolves in 2023, ’25, and ’27, plus a top-five protected pick in 2029. The Jazz can also elect to exercise a pick swap in 2026, should Minnesota finish with a worse record.

Gobert and star guard Donovan Mitchell have been Utah’s centerpieces for the past half-decade. However, although the Jazz have qualified for the NBA playoffs the past six seasons, the team has never made it past the second round.

The team blowing a 2-0 series lead in the 2021 Western Conference semifinals to a Clippers team playing without injured superstar Kawhi Leonard, and then this year’s first-round ouster to a Dallas Mavericks team that went without All-NBA guard Luka Doncic for three games had the effect of making Utah’s future uncertain.

Would the team try to swap out the pieces around Gobert and Mitchell? Or opt for a more drastic change?

The moves of the past month now spell out the latter option.

In the beginning of June, head coach Quin Snyder opted to resign after eight years at the helm, saying he felt it was time for the team to have a new voice.

Earlier this week, the Jazz agreed to a five-year contract with Celtics assistant Will Hardy — a deal considered unusually long for a first-time head coach, and having the effect of generating speculation that the team was showing to commitment to him with big change about to arrive.

On Thursday, with the opening of free agency, Utah’s front office sent starting forward Royce O’Neale — a strong 3-point shooter and the team’s best perimeter defender — to the Brooklyn Nets for a 2023 first-round pick. CEO Danny Ainge and general manager Justin Zanik also opted against retaining Juancho Hernangomez, and declined to make qualifying offers to Eric Paschall and Trent Forrest.

On Friday morning, ESPN personality and NBA insider Brian Windhorst went on a lengthy and mysterious televised tangent indicating that league executives were wondering, “Why would the Jazz do that?”

Hours later, the answer came.

Gobert, a three-time All-Star, three-time DPOY, one-time All-NBA Second Team honoree, and three-time All-NBA Third Team selection, has been with the Jazz since 2013.

He was selected with the No. 27 pick in that year’s draft by the Denver Nuggets, who sold his draft rights to Utah. The Nuggets’ general manager that year was Tim Connelly — the man who just a short time ago took a new position as the Timberwolves’ president of basketball operations.

For his career, Gobert has averaged 12.4 points, 11.7 rebounds, and 2.1 blocks per game, on 65.3% field-goal shooting. However, he has developed into one of the league’s best players in recent years. In the 2021-22 season, he led the NBA in rebounds (14.7) and FG% (71.3%) while also averaging 15.6 points and 2.1 blocks.

While he became beloved among the team’s fans for almost single-handedly propping up a defense devoid of perimeter stoppers, for his year-over-year development and improvement, and for his feisty, underdog attitude, his time in Utah was not without its controversies.

He and Mitchell famously feuded in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. The NBA went into a months-long hiatus after Gobert became the league’s so-called “Patient Zero” — the first player to test positive for COVID-19. Mitchell became irate when he became the second to test positive the next day, accusing his teammate of being flippant and careless.

Though the two eventually mended what The Athletic infamously called an “unsalvageable” relationship, the premise of tension between them never fully went away.

Indeed, this past season, as the Jazz struggled with injuries, a COVID outbreak that rendered most of the month of January a lost cause, and a series of blown double-digit leads which all combined to hang over the team like a black cloud, there became additional signs of strain.

As Gobert returned from his COVID-related absence, he blasted the team’s defense without him, taking a thinly-veiled shot at Mitchell by noting that Phoenix Suns counterpart Devin Booker was “playing his ass off” defensively. Less than two months later, Mitchell returned the favor following a loss in Dallas. With Gobert having missed the game due to a leg injury, the guard pointedly went on to praise the “guys that suited up.”

So, where do the Jazz go from here?

There may well be more moves to come soon. In the interim, the team now has a haul of future first-round picks, plus a moveable piece in Beverley, some young talent in Beasley and Vanderbilt, and fliers on young and unproven Kessler and Bolmaro.

Getting draft picks back as the primary return of such a trade is a risky move, considering that Gobert’s addition to a Minnesota squad already considered an ascending, young team (it features All-NBA big man Karl-Anthony Towns, and electric former No. 1 overall pick Anthony Edwards) could perhaps ensure that none of those picks will wind up better than mid-20s selections.

And yet, Ainge’s history as GM and president of the Celtics has illustrated his preference for amassing such picks, in the hope that they can become valuable assets.

As for the players …

Beverley is a 33-year-old, 6-foot-1 defensive nuisance who formerly played at an All-Defensive Team level, but is perhaps below that now. He has career averages of 8.8 points, 4.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists, and 1.1 steals who has shot 37.8% from 3-point range.

Beasley is a 6-4 wing who averaged a career-high 19.9 points in 2020-21, but who dipped to 12.1 points per game this past season in going from a starting role to one off the bench. The 25-year-old is a career 38.6% shooter behind the arc.

Vanderbilt is a 6-9, 214-pound power forward who started 67 games for the Wolves this past season. The 23-year-old averaged 6.9 points and 8.4 rebounds on 58.7% shooting from the field.

Bolmaro was a first-round pick in the 2020 draft, going No. 23 overall. The Argentine wing (6-6, 200) did not come over to the NBA this past season, however, and played sparingly — 1.4 points and 1.1 rebounds per game in 35 mop-up appearances that averaged 6.9 minutes per.

Kessler, meanwhile, was regarded as the best defensive center in college basketball this past season. After playing a limited role as a freshman at North Carolina, he transferred to Auburn, where he had a breakout performance, averaging 11.4 points, 8.1 rebounds, and 4.6 blocks per game. While the 7-1, 245-pounder is considered an excellent drop-big rim protector, he is not thought to have much switching capability.

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Minnesota Timberwolves, Taurean Prince agree to 2-year, $16 million contract extension, sources say

Minnesota Timberwolves forward Taurean Prince has agreed on a two-year, $16 million contract extension, sources told ESPN on Tuesday.

Prince established himself as a solid rotational player on a Timberwolves team that returned to the Western Conference playoffs this past season, averaging 7.3 points and 2.5 rebounds a game in 17 minutes.

Prince landed with the Timberwolves after playing parts of the 2020-21 season with the Brooklyn Nets and Cleveland Cavaliers. Prince could have entered free agency, but joins guard Patrick Beverley in signing extensions ahead of the offseason. New Timberwolves president of basketball operations Tim Connelly and coach Chris Finch valued keeping Prince as part of the team’s core, and management completed terms on an extension with Prince’s representatives at CAA Sports on Tuesday night, sources said.

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Western Notes: Looney, Payton, Timberwolves, Mavs’ Targets, Rockets Roster

The Warriors have made re-signed center Kevon Looney their top free agent priority and are expected to meet with his agent, Todd Ramasar, in the early hours of free agency, according to Anthony Slater of The Athletic.

Gary Payton II profiles as their second-most important priority but he’ll have other suitors, with the Mavericks among them. Juan Toscano-Anderson and Damion Lee are the players most vulnerable to losing their roster spots, Slater adds.

We have more from the Western Conference:

  • The Timberwolves wound up with two first-round draft picks but it won’t alter their plans for free agency, according to Chris Hine of the Minneapolis Star Tribune. GM Tim Connelly said they’ll be looking for players who can make an immediate impact. “I don’t think it has a huge impact,” Connelly said. “Again, the draft is for the next two, three, four, five, six, seven years.”
  • While re-signing Jalen Brunson looms as their top free agent priority, the Mavericks could go shopping for other free agents. Callie Caplan of the Dallas Morning News looks at some other potential targets, including Gary Harris, Otto Porter Jr. and Goran Dragic.
  • By reaching a buyout agreement with John Wall, the Rockets now have 18 players on the roster, Bobby Marks of ESPN tweets. They’re $30MM below the luxury tax threshold, with Eric Gordon — a prime trade candidate — as the lone player earning more than $10MM.



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