The Timberwolves made arguably the biggest trade of the offseason at the start of training camp when they sent Karl-Anthony Towns to New York in a deal that saw Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo head to Minnesota. That might not have been their last major move of the 2024/25 league year.
According to Tim Bontemps and Brian Windhorst of ESPN (Insider link), Minnesota is being viewed by rival decision-makers as a “potential player” on the in-season trade market.
As ESPN’s duo explains, one reason why the Timberwolves are considered a team with a move to make is that Randle and DiVincenzo haven’t been perfect fits in Minnesota so far. Windhorst notes that scouts and executives have pointed to Randle’s “ball-stopping” habit as a factor that has slowed down the Wolves’ offense, while Bontemps cites a scout who says DiVincenzo is being asked to be more of a play-maker with his new team, something he didn’t really do in New York.
“When you watch them you can see the guys who can be free agents (Randle and Naz Reid) get frustrated at times,” one scout told ESPN. “If they were winning more it probably wouldn’t be an issue, but it’s one of the things that happens when a team underachieves.”
“Just because you’re trading for talent, it has to be the right fit. They have to learn and adjust,” another scout said. “Making a trade that late (in the offseason) is hard. So I’m empathetic.”
Bontemps and Windhorst don’t specify exactly what the Timberwolves might be looking for or what sort of assets they’d be willing to give up, but it’s worth noting that both Randle and Reid can be free agents if they decline 2025/26 player options and it’s unclear if the team would be willing to extend both, given that the Towns trade was at least partly financially motivated.
Minnesota also has a lot riding on veteran point guard Mike Conley, an important connecting piece on offense who has had an up-and-down age-37 so far, making just 35.4% of his field goal attempts. It would make sense for the team to try to find another reliable point guard who could organize the offense when Conley sits and provide much-needed insurance for a player who missed a few games in November due to injury. The Wolves have been significantly better with Conley on the court (+7.4 net rating) than off it (+0.2) and went 0-4 in the games he missed.
Still, making a trade won’t be easy, given that the Wolves are operating above the restrictive second tax apron and don’t have any future first-round picks available to move. There are still two months to go until the 2025 trade deadline and Minnesota has looked good this week, with back-to-back blowout wins over the Clippers and Lakers, neither of whom scored more than 80 points. If the Wolves can keep playing like that, a deadline move may not be necessary.