Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Going for Broke

REPORT: The Timberwolves are on the verge of trading Kevin Garnett to the Phoenix Suns in a three-way deal that would land the Wolves the #3 and #11 pick, along with F/C Zaza Pachulia, presently of the Hawks.

As you know, yours truly has been awfully hard on Kevin McHale -- as recently as yesterday I said his tenure as GM has landed poor draft picks, poorer free agents, and hardly a single trade of note.

That could all change VERY quickly. If the Wolves pull the trigger on this deal, one that would send Amare Stoudamire to Atlanta for the bevy of picks headed to Minnesota, tomorrow evening would become Kevin McHale's new signature moment. He made his mark early in his career as a GM by signing the first high schooler since Moses Malone and that player has become the face of a franchise, earning MVP honors along the way. But this would give McHale and the Wolves three picks in the top 11 of what is seen as the deepest draft in many a year. In fact, if you rule out the first two obvious picks of Greg Oden and Kevin Durant, it in fact gives them three of the "first" nine picks on what would still remain a deep pool of talent. This team would be young, and three years from now will be one hell of a negotiation session to resign everyone, but, if done right, they could cement their spot as a young, talented team for years to come.

Just count on one thing NOT happening, and that's drafting Chinese 7-footer Yi Jianlian with that third pick. Yi has indicated, with the backing of the Chinese government, that he will not go to anything other than a major market. How can the Chinese government back him, you ask? They are his employer -- if he doesn't go to the team that drafts him, they pay him for one more year and he goes back into the draft as a potential number one pick just months before the Beijing Olympics. They can do that -- therefore, despite the lure of selling 1 billion t-shirts, he won't be a Wolves' player next year.

So, that means either Al Horford of Florida or Mike Conley, Jr. of Ohio State with the third pick and likely Jeff Green of Georgetown or Joakim Noah, also of Florida, with the seventh. Frankly, although they project to the same position in the NBA, something has me drooling about the possibility of keeping two players who earned back to back national championships (Horford and Noah) together and adding a third SF/SG type (Corey Brewer, a third Gator, for example) with pick #11. Add a young player in Pachulia who can shoot and rebound and continues to develop (offensively, at least), match them up with the talent of Randy Foye, and although it begs the what-if questions for Mark Blount and Craig Smith if they do draft big, and... well... let's just say McHale is making or breaking his career in just two days.

It's not just better than nothing. It's three lottery picks and the start of a brand new era, for better or worse.

5 comments:

John said...

Cory,

Here's my question about this - if you're the Wolves, wouldn't you rather have Stoudamire than the 3 and 11. He's 24, right? And he's got to be one of the top 15 players in the league right now. Wouldn't you rather have him than the chance of getting someone as good as him?

Anonymous said...

That's a really good question and one that, obviously, the Hawks and Wolves have different answers to. Stoudamire is not much of a defensive player, as Phoenix is looking for in Garnett.

If I had to guess, I'd think McHale feels he needs picks in this draft because it is so deep (as a result of it being the first draft after the NBA's "at least one year of college" rule) and to have three lottery picks in 2007 may be worth more than ever again. He might be right. Or maybe he's just afraid of Stoudamire's health being a guy who played an entire career on bad knees. I have no idea what's in the Ostrich's head sometimes.

Cory

John Sharkey, Esq. said...

I would agree that Amare > 3/11, but I wonder if the Suns are reluctant to trade Stoudemire within the conference. They would rather move Marion, but maybe they agreed on Stoudemire on the condition that he heads east.

There might be something to Cory's theory on Amare's knees, too. But in any case, I can guarantee that a Horford/Brewer/Law trio (for example) would make me mighty interested in the Wolves awfully quickly.

John said...

I can guarantee that a Horford/Brewer/Law trio (for example) would make me mighty interested in the Wolves awfully quickly.

You aren't alone. I think that's most fans feelings, and I think it is what behind the interest in moving Garnet. Not that it will necessarily make the team better, but it will be different, and it will bring hope.

But ultimately, I think this is a better team with Stoudamire than two more picks. What's more, I think they're better positioned to take advantage of some cap space when they get to the point where they can pay for a free agent.

John Sharkey, Esq. said...

You know, I've been pondering the Wolves + Amare, and I wonder how well it would really work. I know he's a fantastic player, but without a dominant point to run the pick and roll with, he's not going to be as effective, is he? That seems to be a lot of his game (not that I'm knocking him). Minny would have to go find an above-average PG to make this all work.

In ATL, Stoudemire and Joe Johnson can get something going, and it could work out nicely. I wonder if doing the three-way isn't actually the best way for everyone.

But then again, I could be overthinking this and forgetting that Amare rocks hard.