Wolves Press Clippings
Date: 2/15/2016
Outlet: CBS Sports
Author: James Herbert
Wolves' Ricky Rubio 'readily available' before trade deadline
Minnesota Timberwolves guard Ricky Rubio is in the first year of a four-year, $55 million contract extension, but the New York Daily News' Frank Isola reported that he could be on the move already:
Zach LaVine was nothing short of spectacular in winning his second straight Slam Dunk title on Saturday and by the end of this week he may win something else; the starting point guard job for the Minnesota Timberwolves.
Incumbent Ricky Rubio is readily available and the feeling is that the Spanish guard could be moved prior to Thursday's NBA trade deadline.
A few thoughts:
1) Zach LaVine's potential is great. I don't think there has ever been a better dunker. He's a dangerous scorer and, especially after this weekend, there are plenty of reasons to be excited about him. But he's not a starting point guard, at least not yet, and the Wolves looked extremely disorganized when Rubio was injured last season.
2) It's kind of funny that this came out a few days after Rubio had 18 points, eight assists and eight rebounds in a 117-112 win over the Toronto Raptors. Rubio even went 3-for-6 on 3-pointers in that game. It's not as if he's been struggling lately, and he's been underrated for years now. The jump shot remains a work in progress, but he affects the game in so many other ways.
3) There's no reason to rush a Rubio deal. As long as he stays healthy, his contract is going to look just fine over the next few years. Maybe Minnesota will grab a point guard in the draft or LaVine will become a more polished floor general, but until either one of those things happens, what is the point? Someone has to get Andrew Wiggins and Karl-Anthony Towns the ball, and he's good at that.
4) If Rubio is dealt, it'd be nice if it was to a playoff team. This is his fifth year with the Wolves, and he's desperate to make the postseason. If he's not going to be around when Wiggins and Towns become stars, here's hoping he won't be stuck in a less promising rebuilding situation.
You can find more trade rumors in our live blog, which will be updated continually.
Wolves Press Clippings
Date: 2/15/2016
Outlet: NBC Sports
Author: Dan Feldman
Timberwolves interested in Tom Thibodeau
It’s apparently not difficult to find a young Timberwolves player who questions Sam Mitchell. At this point, Kevin Garnett‘sendorsement seems unlikely to save the interim head coach.
So, who’s next in Minnesota?
How about Tom Thibodeau?
Brian Windhorst of ESPN:
Source are telling me that there’s already been some cursory contact between – either backchannels or whatever – between the Wolves and Thibodeau.
Thibodeau should come up for every job opening. His 255-139 record in five seasons with the Bulls and defensive chops dictate that.
From there, it gets more complicated.
Thibodeau would instill a strong culture of defense and hard work in Minnesota. That has value for a young team.
But he’d also put plenty of physical strain on Andrew Wiggins and Karl-Anthony Townsthrough big minutes and grueling practices. That’s how Thibodeau believes he can accomplish those previously stated objectives.
There might not be another available coach capable of succeeding as much as Thibodeau, but he can also be divisive.
Wolves Press Clippings
Date: 2/11/2016
Outlet: NBA.com
Author: Ian Thomsen
For Canada, pushing U.S. for Olympic gold is a process
The target year is 2020. The Olympic Games will be played that summer in Tokyo, and by then the old contenders will be expiring. The Gasol brothers of Spain, Pau and Marc, will be 40 and 35, respectively. Tony Parker of France will be 38. The stars of Argentina's greatest basketball generation -- Manu Ginobili, Luis Scola, Andres Nocioni -- will be retired or close to it.
The rest of the world continues to provide talent to the U.S., but those high draft picks are now being scattered among a wider variety of countries. The old powers -- Spain, Argentina and France -- are not developing reinforcements at the same high rate of previous generations. Over the last five NBA drafts, the half-dozen lottery picks that Canada has produced outnumber the combined total from Spain, Lithuania, Argentina, France, Serbia, Russia, Turkey, Brazil, Greece, Australia, Croatia, Slovenia, China, Angola, Puerto Rico, Iran, Dominican Republic, Mexico and Germany.
Those nations - No. 2 through 20 in the current FIBA world rankings -- have combined to produce as many lottery picks as Canada since 2011.
International basketball will be undergoing a transition over the next several years, and the young Canadians -- currently ranked No. 26 in the world -- appear most likely to emerge as the main challenger to the U.S. Consider this potential Canadian lineup for 2020, made up entirely of NBA first-round draft picks:
Center: Tristan Thompson (No. 4 pick in 2011), 29 years old
Power forward: Kelly Olynyk (No. 13 in 2013), 29 years old
Small forward: Andrew Wiggins (No. 1 in 2014), 25 years old
Shooting guard: Nik Stauskas (No. 8 in 2014), 26 years old
Point guard: Cory Joseph (No. 29 in 2011), 28 years old
They will be coached by Jay Triano, currently an assistant with the Trail Blazers. The program will be headed by Canada Basketball GM Steve Nash, the greatest player his country has produced.
Beyond the Paint: Oh Canada
As the NBA takes it's All Star weekend to Canada for the first time, Matt Winer takes a look at why some of the game's best young talent is coming from north of the border and how it is affecting the fortunes of Canada's National team program.
"Steve and I talked about that when we started putting this team together," says Canada coach Jay Triano. "We're too competitive to not try for this Olympics (to be held this summer in Rio de Janeiro). But the reality is those Olympics in 2020 are when our best players are going to be at their best. You reach your potential as a basketball player at 27, 28, 29 years old. They'll still have enough balance and energy, but they will be seasoned a little bit. We don't have that right now, but that's part of the process we'll be going through."
The Canadians realized what they were lacking last summer at the FIBA Americas tournament in Mexico City. After losing the opening game to Argentina, they had won seven straight games by 25 points or more. In the semifinal, with a place in the 2016 Olympics going to the winner, they would be re-matched with Venezuela, which Canada had beaten 82-62 in the opening round. More crucial, however, was the disparity in experience: The average age of the Canadian starters was 22, while the Venezuelans were into their 30s.
"We were rolling offensively, and we were locking teams up defensively," Triano says of the lead-up to their stunning 79-78 loss. "And I was never comfortable."
Apart from Olynyk, who generated 34 points and 13 rebounds, Canada sputtered long before they wasted a 75-71 lead in the final minutes. They would complain of a phantom call with three-tenths of a second remaining that would enable Venezuela to score the winning free throw, but the Canadians had already made too many mistakes to keep the game close.
I think we are definitely going to be better next summer. Just having that experience together and knowing each other's games. From the top down -- coaching staff, training staff, players -- being together in situations like that just helps you get better.
– Boston Celtics forward Kelly Olynyk
Virtually all of the top contenders in the NBA or FIBA have experienced similar losses in big games as they learned how to win at the highest level. Will the Canadians' disappointment ultimately bring out the best in them?
"I think we have to approach it that way," says Nash. "We don't know how transformative the experience will be. We do know that we didn't have the experience to handle that moment. The moment was big for a new group like that that hadn't been in that type of situation before. You can't cheat experience. The only way to gain experience is to go through it."
"I likened it to 1999 when we surprised the Argentinians in the qualifying tournament," says Triano. "On that team was a young Luis Scola and a young (Francisco) Oberto and a young (Manu) Ginobili. We knocked them out of the Olympics, but that team stuck together and they were about to be very good four years later."
2014-15 Highlights From Canada's Best
Argentina would go onto win silver at the 2002 FIBA World Championships in Indianapolis, and gold at the 2004 Olympics in Athens.
Canada can still earn one of the last spots in Rio by beating France and Turkey at the final qualifying tournament in the Philippines. In its favor is the fact that the best young Canadians are continuing to ascend in the NBA. Not only will the team figure to be improved since last summer, but it also promises to involve Thompson (who could not afford to play as he pursued a new contract with the Cleveland Cavaliers), Utah Jazz rookie power forward Trey Lyles, who was the No. 12 pick in the 2015 Draft, and Milwaukee Bucks' point guard Tyler Ennis, who went No. 18 in 2014.
"I think we are definitely going to be better next summer," says Olynyk. "Just having that experience together and knowing each other's games. From the top down -- coaching staff, training staff, players -- being together in situations like that just helps you get better."
The partnership of Nash, Triano and Canada Basketball executive VP and assistant GM Rowan Barrett had its beginnings in the 2000 Olympics. Nash and Barrett were players who helped lead Canada to fourth place in Sydney, and Triano was their coach. Triano was fired, unexpectedly, in 2004, and thereafter Nash declined to play for his country. But they were reunited when Nash washired as GM in 2012.
Triano, 57, played in two Olympics for Canada in the 1980s. He became the first Canadian native to serve as an assistant coach in the NBA when he joined the Raptors in 2002, and from 2008-11 he served as their coach. Triano also has assisted Mike Krzyzewski at USA Basketball.
"Sometimes the losing stings enough that it brings you together, and that's part of our goal is to have our team compete this summer as well," says Triano. "But if not, we get more and more experience so that we can play in the next Olympics."
The ultimate aim in 2020 will be to challenge the U.S. in a gold medal game. "It's a long way away," says Triano. "But I'm a believer that you have to have your long-term goals, your short-term goals, your daily goals and your practice-day goals. Why not dream for the highest and most ultimate? For our country and the growth of basketball, that might be it."
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