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9/23/2018 0 Comments

Jimmy Butler trade scenarios: What makes sense for the Wolves?

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Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports
By: Dan Slaubaugh

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you know by now that Jimmy Butler wants out of Minnesota. 

In addition, here are the main things we seem to know:

-Jimmy Butler wants out of Minnesota so he can play in a large market. That, and he’s not getting along with Wolves building blocks Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins.

-Butler has his sights set on Los Angeles (Clippers), Brooklyn, or New York.

-No one knows who to call to make an offer on Butler. Reports have varied so much within the last 24 hours that we don’t know if Glen Taylor is making the deal alone, if Scott Layden is handling calls, or if they’re all working in unison. Literally no one has a clue, which is both asburd and hilarious.

-11 teams have reported being interested in acquiring Butler. That’s a lot of teams. But shouldn't that be expected when a top-10 player becomes available?

Now, let’s consider what those 11 teams have to offer. I’m going to be short and sweet because he could be traded any second and I don’t want to spend my entire Sunday afternoon going in vast detail on this, clicking post, then seeing he’s been traded. That would stink and I have better things to do (just kidding, I definitely don’t). 

All trades have been ESPN Trade Machine approved.

Los Angeles Clippers
 
Realistic offer: Tobias Harris, Lou Williams for Butler
 
Tobias Harris, 25, would be the key piece in the return and fits the development timelines of Towns and Wiggins to an extent. He was elite from deep last year knocking down 41.1 percent of his threes, but I doubt that’s sustainable. A return built around Harris wouldn’t be terrible, but with only one year left on his deal, he becomes expensive after this season.
 
Dan’s interest level: 6/10
 
Brooklyn Nets
 
Realistic offer: Allen Crabbe, DeMarre Carroll, Caris Levert, 2019 first round pick and 2020 second round pick for Butler and Dieng
 
Brooklyn is one of the least desirable trade partners with the Wolves. They have no great pieces to offer. Caris Levert is intriguing, but most of you probably aren’t familiar with him which probably says he isn’t worth biting the bullet for. Basically, anyone of interest that they have is on a one-year deal. With Butler, and in a weak Eastern Conference, the Nets would rack up enough wins to make their 2019 1st round pick (which would undoubtedly come to Minnesota in the trade) not all that appealing. No thanks. Actually, just no. 
 
Dan’s interest level: 1/10
 
New York Knicks
 
Realistic offer: Kevin Knox/Frank Ntilikina, Tim Hardaway Jr., 2019 first round pick for Butler
 
Knox (19) or Ntilikina (20) would be the key piece in the return. Given how young the two are, I doubt this would be Taylor’s top choice - and definitely not Thibodeau’s (though I doubt he has a say). Hardaway Jr. is a fine two-way piece, but he can’t shoot and is owed 18 million per year through 2020-2021. Personally, I would rather the Wolves trade for someone who fits the timelines of Towns and Wiggins rather than a first or second-year player still years away from being a winning player. Knox and Ntilikina do have exciting upside, however, and Wolves fans are used to waiting around for talent to develop. I’d be pretty content with a trade involving one of the two young guys, preferably Knox. 
 
Dan’s interest level: 5/10
 
Detroit Pistons
 
Realistic offer: There are none. 
 
Luke Kennard and Khyri Thomas are nice young pieces you could surround Towns and Wiggins with, but there’s absolutely no way to make the money work (Wolves aren’t taking back Reggie Jackson, Andre Drummond, or Blake Griffin) unless they get a third team involved. 
 
Dan’s interest level: Doesn’t matter. Not gonna happen. 
 
Miami Heat
 
Realistic offer: Josh Richardson, Kelly Olynk for Butler
 
The Wolves wouldn’t be interested in taking on the expensive contracts of players such as Hassan Whiteside or Tyler Johnson. That could mean sending away a package of still-developing talents like Bam Adebayo, Josh Richardson or Justise Winslow, a strategy that the team hasn’t been eager to pursue in the past. In a March piece, ESPN NBA Senior Writer Zach Lowe called Josh Richardson "Miami's best all-around player" and a "terror on defense", which is certainly encouraging to hear considering Miami has been actively discussing a trade with the Wolves over the past 24 hours.

Dan’s interest level: 7/10
 
Philadelphia 76ers
 
Realistic offer: Dario Saric/Robert Covington, Wilson Chandler; or Markelle Fultz, Robert Covington, 2019 first round pick for Butler
 
Trade #1: Saric struggles defensively, but his offensive game makes up for it. Covington is one of the game’s best perimeter defenders and would instantly make the Wolves better on that end. Wilson, on a one-year deal, would make the team better this season and come off the books next summer.
 
Trade #2: In all honesty, what the Wolves really need to mold into contenders is an all-star guard who can light up the scoreboard any given night. Fultz has that kind of potential, but any chance of this deal happening would mean the Timberwolves feel comfortable that Fultz’s shot has returned to form. Still, there's a reason Fultz went number one overall. I'd pull this trigger and not think twice about it. 

Trade #1 interest level: 9/10
Trade #2 interest level: 10/10

Houston Rockets

Realistic offer: Eric Gordon, PJ Tucker, 2019 first round pick and 2020 second round pick for Butler

According to recent reports, the Rockets are prepared to make a trade offer for Jimmy Butler in a package centered on Eric Gordon and some fillers. His catch-and-shoot three-point shooting with Towns and Wiggins as option 1 and 2 would be fun, but too short-sighted. This package doesn't help the future of the Wolves plus Gordon, 29, has been injury-prone his entire career. Their filler options aren't great and a pick is going to be late first round. No thank you.

Dan’s interest level: 1/10

Portland Trail Blazers

Realistic offer:
Maurice Harkless, Meyers Leonard, Gary Trent Jr., 2019 first round pick for Butler

Apparently, the Blazers are unwilling to include CJ McCollum in any deal. So, unless you want a bunch of bad contracts back, the Blazers have nothing of interest to offer in a Butler trade. Bye.

Note: I thought Portland might deal McCollum and hope to convince Butler to stay. Then, if he leaves, they’d have at least rid themselves of McCollum’s hefty contract and have the money to go out and sign someone who fits better with Dame -- because the two together aren't getting them to the championship.

​I thought wrong.

Dan’s interest level: 0/10
If McCollum was included: 10/10
 
Cleveland Cavaliers
 
Realistic offer: Cedi Osman, JR Smith, Tristan Thompson for Butler and Dieng
 
Do I really have to explain why the Cavs are a bad trade partner? None of those guys are future assets, if even current assets. Plus, much like the Nets, the Cavs - with Butler and Love - would rack up enough wins to make their 2019 1st round pick (which would undoubtedly come to Minnesota in the trade) not all that appealing. Their most intriguing players (which are still not all that intriguing) are wings who would block the development of Josh Okogie and Keita Bates-Diop. 
 
Dan’s interest level: 0/10
 
Milwaukee Bucks
 
Realistic offer: Khris Middleton, Thon Maker for Butler
 
This appears to be one of the more enticing deals out there. The Wolves would be getting one of the more underrated two-way players in the NBA. At 6' 8", Middleton has great size, length, is dead-eye from deep, and a good all-around defender. His skill set would allow Wiggins to get back to what he does best - attacking and slashing. He’s someone who doesn’t need the ball in his hands to be effective. Middleton's contract next year is a player option so my guess he opts out because he will earn more than the 13 million his player option is for. Even then, he's the kind of player worth throwing 20 million/year at. 
 
Dan’s interest level: 9/10

Washington Wizards

Realistic offer:
 Bradley Beal/Otto Porter Jr. and Markieff Morris for Butler and Dieng

This would allow the Wolves to move Dieng's contract. Plus, Morris could be movable later this season. Beal is a dream and Porter Jr. has proven to be a really good two-way player (signed through 2020-2021). Both are good fits next to Wiggins and make about the same money. Washington is stuck middling. This would give them the opportunity to shake things up. If Butler leaves, they gain cap flexibility. 
​
Dan's interest level: 9/10
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9/20/2018 0 Comments

The Jimmy Butler Chronicles

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By: Seth Toupal

After one of the most contentious off-seasons in franchise history, the Minnesota Timberwolves appear set to enter the post-Jimmy Butler era. Butler announced yesterday that he wants out, and wants to be traded to either the Los Angeles Clippers, Brooklyn Nets or New York Knicks. After 1 season (59 games to be exact) the Timberwolves are right back where they started. The only problem is that they are without Zach LaVine, Kris Dunn and Lauri Markkanen, who were all traded for Butler during the draft last year. But how did we get to this point? Travel back in time with me to examine the highs, lows, and the present of the Jimmy Butler Chronicles.

June 22nd, 2017: The Jimmy Butler Era officially begins after a draft night trade between the Timberwolves and the Bulls. The Wolves acquired Butler and the 16th overall pick (Justin Patton) in exchange for Zach LaVine, Kris Dunn and the 7th overall pick (Lauri Markkanen). Reaction to the trade gave the Wolves a tremendous win, and it was pretty clear that the national media viewed the Wolves as serious Western Conference contenders with the acquisition of Butler.

June 29th, 2017: Butler was introduced to Minnesota in a press conference at the Mall of America. Butler wowed the crowd, and even gave out his phone number at one point to provoke the doubters of his ability to lead the Wolves to the promised land. All seemed golden in Minnesota, and it seemed like the beginning of a new era in Timberwolves Basketball.

October 20th, 2017: Jimmy Butler plays his first home game at Target Center and is welcomed to the home crowd by this sweet introduction. The Wolves go on to win 100-97 over the Utah Jazz, in Ricky Rubio's first game at Target Center as a visitor. Butler scores 13 points in his home debut and Jamal Crawford leads the Wolves down the stretch for the win. Interestingly enough after the game Butler orders security to prevent Rubio from entering the Wolves locker room.

December 27th, 2017: Butler scores 39 points as the Wolves pick up a huge win at home against Denver. The win pushes the Wolves to 22-13. Butler late in the game taunts Denver saying that no one can guard him. At this point the sky was the limit for the Wolves. Everyone thought that a special season was imminent. 

December 31st, 2017: Buler scores 26 points in a 107-90 win over the Pacers. The Wolves end 2017 at 23-14.

February 18th, 2018: Butler sits out of the All Star game, citing the need for rest. Questions gravitate to whether or not Tom Thibodeau is working his players too hard

February 23rd, 2018: Butler injures his knee late in a loss to Houston. Players on the court say it doesn't look good. Fans panic. Doubt starts to creep in. The Wolves sit at 36-26 after the loss.

April 6th, 2018: Butler returns in a Wolves win over the Lakers, scoring 18 points in 23 minutes. The Wolves improve to 45-35 with the win. Days earlier, Butler calls out the Wolves for lack of effort and places blame for defensive woes on the team, not the coach.
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April 11th, 2018: Butler scores 31 points in the Wolves win against Denver to advance to the playoffs. Everyone celebrates. The drought is over! A game for the ages that actually went Minnesota's way.

April 25th, 2018: The Wolves are eliminated by Houston in the first round of the playoffs. A season that looked so promising fizzles at the end. Butler cites his appreciation of what the Wolves were able to do during his first season there. The core is still intact and the team should be able to match their production and make the playoffs again.

July 3rd, 2018: Reports from Chicago point to a rift developing between Karl-Anthony Towns and Jimmy Butler. Butler is apparently fed up with the lack of effort on defense. This comes amidst reports that Butler wants to pair with Kyrie Irving and head to New York to form a super-team in the East. Towns mulls his future with an extension looming in the offseason. Cryptic tweets and Instagram posts run wild.

July 13th, 2018: Jimmy Butler turns down a 4 year, $110 million extension from the Wolves. This move is not unexpected, as Butler would be able to earn more after his current deal expires. But with the rumors of a Towns rift, Wolves nation is understandably uneasy.

July 18th, 2018: Karl-Anthony Towns speaks to the media after comments made by Butler and doesn't give any definitive answers as to his future with the team. Tension mounts.

September 18th, 2018: Tom Thibodeau heads to Los Angeles to meet with Butler to discuss his future with the team. The meeting was originally scheduled to be in Minnesota, so signs point to something bad happening with the change in location.

September 19th, 2018: Jimmy Butler officially requests a trade from the Timberwolves. Butler lists the Clippers, Nets, and Knicks as his desirable destinations according to league sources. Social media goes nuts as Timberwolves Twitter, Nick Wiggins, Stephen Jackson and Jimmy Butler ignite a free for all with all sorts of mud being thrown by all sides.

There is still more to come in this situation as Butler hasn't been traded yet and Wolves media day is Monday. So needless to say get your popcorn ready for more fireworks over the next few weeks. The Butler Era brought the Wolves to the playoffs for the first time in 13 years, But now it is time to build around Towns and Wiggins and hopefully it doesn't take another 13 years for the next playoff trip.



Seth is host of The Scoop on KLGR Radio out of Redwood Falls, Minnesota. Listen to episodes of The Scoop here.

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