Wolves Chemistry Called Best Ever
Team president Chris Wright has
been with the Timberwolves franchise since one season after its
inception and he’s impressed with the attitudes on this year’s young
team. Although the Wolves have the second worst record in the NBA,
11-42, Wright is encouraged by the demeanor and talent of a team he
thinks can be in the playoffs in a couple of years.
“Right now we have the best chemistry and
the best locker room that we have had in our franchise history,” Wright
told Sports Headliners. “Have the results on the court been what
we want them to be? No, but these guys are 21, 22, 23 year old guys.
“Kevin McHale (vice president of
basketball operations) reminds us every day that experience wins games.
In the end, these guys have got to grow. They’ve got to mature.
They’ve got to gain the experience that’s necessary to win games. …”
The way Wright sees it, Wolves management
will use good judgment in further shaping its talent and roster. “The
next move has got to be a very careful move because you don’t want to
necessarily upset the chemistry and the progress that we’re making with
this younger team that we have," he said. "We have some really, really nice pieces
here. Now the trick is going to be how do you complement the pieces that
we already have in place. …”
Wright thinks the Wolves will be a “much
better team” next season. What that translates into regarding wins and
losses is anyone’s guess, although he speculates a season that
produces 40 or some wins could be two years away.
Eventually Wright sees the nucleus on this
team, led by 23-year-old star center Al Jefferson, having the
potential to be “something special.” He said Glen Taylor, owner
since 1995, is committed to having a winning team and will spend the
necessary money.
“As long as Glen has been here he has not
been afraid to sort of maximize opportunities with players and spend
what he has considered to be the right amount of money on players,"
Wright said. "I
think that going forward, I don’t see that Glen would change that. I
think, like all owners, Glen does really, really want to win. …”
Taylor made Kevin Garnett the highest paid player in the league.
A few years ago he stretched the payroll, too, to acquire veterans
Latrell Sprewell and Sam Cassell, two stars who along with
Garnett almost took the Wolves to the NBA finals. Taylor told Sports
Headliners in December he expects to lose $10 to $15
million on the franchise this season and forecasts more losses next season.
Wright said the Wolves have sold less than
6,000 full season tickets. He said that’s not the lowest total in
franchise history but the most minimal since the mid-1990s when the
total was “just over 5,000.”
Through last weekend’s NBA All-Star break
and weekend, the Wolves ranked 25th among 30 franchises in league attendance, averaging 14,380. On Sunday the Wolves will play to their fourth home
sellout crowd of the season against Dallas.
Wright said league representatives were in
Minneapolis this week and expressed a “wow” with the attendance success
the franchise has had, given the team’s record and recent past that
includes no playoff appearances since 2003-2004.