Timberwolves agree to trade Towns
to Knicks for Randle, DiVincenzo, 1st-rounder, AP source says
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[September 28, 2024]
By DAVE CAMPBELL and TIM REYNOLDS
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Timberwolves are sending
Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks in exchange for Julius
Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a first-round draft pick in a
franchise-altering deal for both sides, a person with knowledge of
the deal said Friday night.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity
because the trade, which was first reported by The Athletic, had not
been finalized.
Towns, a four-time All-Star entering his 10th season who's one of
the best outside shooting big men in the NBA, never hinted at any
discontent with the team that drafted him first overall in 2015
despite several lean years preceding the run to the Western
Conference finals last spring.
Active in the Twin Cities community, willing to defer the alpha role
to young star Anthony Edwards, and unbothered by the move to a
stretch power forward role following the acquisition of center Rudy
Gobert two years ago, Towns did not appear to see this move coming
three days before the beginning of training camp.
In an interview with the AP earlier this week about a youth center
he’s helping build in the Dominican Republic — the homeland of his
late mother, Jackie — Towns spoke with nothing short of excitement
about the season ahead and Minnesota’s outlook coming off the
2023-24 breakthrough that ended in a five-game loss to Dallas in the
conference finals.
“We showed our merit last season,” Towns said. “We showed our
growth, and I think more importantly we showed maturity. We found a
way to show we belonged. I’m just so proud of what we were able to
do last year. We’re not going to be surprising anyone. I think we’ve
shown that we’re a team that you definitely have to take into
consideration. When you see us on the calendar, you’ve got to bring
your best.”
The Wolves will most definitely have to bring their best on Dec. 19,
when they host the Knicks. Minnesota plays an exhibition game at New
York on Oct. 13 and in the regular season at Madison Square Garden
on Jan. 17.
Towns posted an ellipsis on the social platform X Friday night,
without a single word.
Towns grew up in Minnesota in a big way, entering the league at age
19. He played for five head coaches and had seven heads of
basketball operations over his nine seasons with the Wolves. The man
who drafted him out of Kentucky, Flip Saunders, died of cancer four
months later.
Towns got caught up in a personality struggle in 2018 with former
teammate and fellow All-Star Jimmy Butler, who requested a trade
after one season and used a scorched-Earth method of forcing his way
out. Towns found the injury bug more recently, too, with a strained
calf limiting him to 29 games in 2022-23. And his mother's death
from COVID-19 complications in 2020 took a personal toll.
[to top of second column] |
New York Knicks forward Julius Randle looks to shoot a free throw in
the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Denver
Nuggets, on Jan. 25, 2024, at Madison Square Garden in New York. (AP
Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)
The upside for the 7-footer is a return to his
roots, having grown up in New Jersey. He'll also be reunited with
coach Tom Thibodeau, who spent 2 1/2 seasons with Minnesota after
being hired in Towns' second year.
Minnesota president of basketball operations Tim Connelly has never
been afraid of a bold move, as he proved by going big — on the court
and off — in the Gobert deal. This decision was even bigger, as the
Wolves prepare for the challenge of trying to make it two steps
further in the playoffs while the top teams in the West show no
signs of letting up around them.
The Wolves get a three-time All-Star power forward in Randle, plus a
sharpshooter in DiVincenzo coming off a career-best season and a
first-rounder to offset some of the draft capital they sent to Utah
in the trade for Gobert.
Randle's health will be a storyline to watch during the preseason.
He had shoulder surgery in April and was absent for New York's run
to the Eastern Conference semifinals. The Knicks said then that
Randle would be re-evaluated in five months. Asked last week if
Randle would be fully ready for camp, Thibodeau said, “Uh, yeah, I
think so.”
With a recent maximum contract extension for Edwards, the
acquisition of Gobert and other expensive commitments, the Wolves
with Towns were headed for the second apron of the luxury tax that
comes with stiff restrictions under the new collective bargaining
agreement. Their ownership situation is in flux, too, with longtime
owner Glen Taylor's attempt to halt a protracted sale to partners
Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez scheduled for arbitration later this
year.
With the Knicks, Towns can slide back to his original center spot
and fill a major need. Mitchell Robinson will be out for at least
two months, recovering from ankle surgery. Isaiah Hartenstein signed
with Oklahoma City this summer. That was the only position of
weakness on a deep roster led by All-Star Jalen Brunson.
___
Reynolds reported from Miami. AP Basketball Writer Brian Mahoney in
New York contributed to this report.
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