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Winners in KG Deal: Guess Who?
Two
organizations benefited immediately from this week’s trade sending
Kevin Garnett to the Boston Celtics and bringing two future No. 1
draft picks and five players to the Minnesota Timberwolves. Guess who
those organizations are?
The
Celtics? Hard to find anyone except for perhaps Al Jefferson’s
family who disagrees with that. If your second guess is the NBA, take a
seat at the front of the class.
In
recent years the NBA’s mega east coast teams in Philadelphia, New York
and Boston have been lousy. That’s bad business for the league since
those areas offer huge upside in merchandising and TV ratings. Among
the reasons this spring for the NBA’s dismal television ratings was the
absence of large market glamour teams such as Philly, New York, Boston
and the Los Angeles Lakers.
The
league will jump start its marketing next season with a Celtics lineup
that includes three superstars--Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray
Allen. The Celtics, who won 24 games last season, are possible
future NBA champions.
Perhaps one day the Garnett trade will be a win-win-win for the Celtics,
NBA and the Wolves. For the
Wolves to ultimately be in the winner’s circle, a couple of
acquired players, led by promising 22-year-old forward Al
Jefferson,
plus a draft pick or two, must become star players. That’s
speculation, but spinning a promising future for the Celtics and an upswing
in NBA popularity is based on past performance.
I
wanted to see a Timberwolves lineup (at least occasionally) with Garnett
starting at center, forwards Craig Smith and Corey Brewer,
and guards Ricky Davis and Randy Foye. That’s a small but
athletic lineup with ability to push the ball up the court, cause
mismatches on offense and pressure teams on defense.
That
lineup would win more games than the one the Wolves will offer up
for the 2007-2008 season. The Wolves roster is now loaded with
inexperienced players, plus veterans who have been unproductive. The
Wolves have 10 players 25 years old and under including Jefferson, Gerald Green,
21, Sebastian Telfair, 22 and Ryan Gomes, 25, all who
joined the team as part of the Garnett deal.
More
youth is coming, likely to include a top pick in the 2008 NBA draft.
The Wolves will probably have one of the league’s worst records next
season and could luck into a top three pick in the draft.
That
can be seen as a positive and so is the result of freeing up more
money on the team’s payroll by unloading Garnett’s big salary and
eventually that of Theo Ratliff, the one veteran player who came
here in the trade. Next year the Wolves will have the
opportunity to add free agent talent to mix with their youthful players.
The
Wolves were in a rut with Garnett and the situation was screaming for
change. The Wolves have missed the playoffs three consecutive seasons
with Garnett. Management hadn’t been able to improve the team. The
last gasp at moving this franchise out of despair probably was the
failed attempt to bring Allen Iverson from Philly to Minneapolis
last winter. Two superstars would have brought the Wolves closer to the
other contenders in the Western Conference and boosted box office
interest in the team.
Now
the Wolves are searching for one superstar.
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