To hear Glen Taylor and Flip Saunders tell it, Friday's announcement of the Timberwolves' next head coach had both nothing and everything to do with Kevin Love's uncertain future.
In essentially naming himself that next coach while remaining the team's president of basketball operations, Saunders said, "With every team, there's a right coach at the right time in the right situation, and I believe that's where we are right now, that I'm the right guy for this team in this situation."
That doesn't necessarily mean, though, that he will do both jobs for at least one season because it's the best way left to convince Love that he belongs here beyond June 2015.
Instead, Saunders and team owner Taylor agreed he's the right guy because he's experienced and adaptable enough to lead the team no matter what happens.
Both men said Love's situation didn't affect the decision to name Saunders coach after he interviewed such NBA coaches as Dave Joerger, Lionel Hollins, Sam Mitchell and Scott Skiles and pursued TV analyst Jeff Van Gundy and college coaches Tom Izzo and Fred Hoiberg, as well.
Love can leave the Wolves without compensation in July 2015 and has given no indication so far that he plans to do anything but that.
But on Friday, both men also began to change the narrative, with Saunders pushing the merits of team unity and equality over what he called the attributes of the "lone warrior." Taylor, meanwhile, acknowledged the possibility of forthcoming change even as he noted the stability he expects Saunders to bring.
"When you have a team, you never know what trade opportunities might happen in the future, no matter what coach you bring in," Taylor said. "You get the best coach you can get with the team you have, and you move forward and you make the other decisions as you move along."