Tom Thibodeau was back in Chicago this week, seeking out old friends and fresh prospects, dining at great restaurants, resting his voice for the hollering to come. He is in his element. The man loves teaching the nuances of basketball.
Nine months ago he was winning a gold medal in Rio, hearing Mike Krzyzewski and the best players in the world praising him and preparing for his first season as Timberwolves coach. With the NBA draft lottery set for Tuesday night, Thibodeau's tenure is not in trouble but his reputation is in need of bolstering.
He is a coach's coach, a workaholic who breaks down films and dissects games. What he'll have to prove in the next year is that he is a players' coach as well. Not necessarily a players' coach in general, but a coach who can get through to his current players in a way that will turn the Timberwolves into an organization to be envied instead of one to be ignored.
His first year on the job was a failure — not a disaster. There remains too much promise on the roster with a more professionally run organization to call it that. But Thibodeau inherited a mess from a coach who got fired for winning 29 games, and then went out and, with a more mature Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins and an improved Ricky Rubio, won 31.
He has a chance to add another talented player via the draft this summer, but another gifted youngster would not fix what ails the Timberwolves. A trade for a veteran player may help, depending on the veteran and the intelligence of the deal. What should concern Wolves fans is that in a market not known to attract free agents, Thibodeau could scare off the few who might be willing to join forces with Towns and Wiggins.
A starting-caliber free agent may have watched Thibodeau screaming at his players on every possession last season and decide that's not for him.
A free agent who projects to be a backup may watch the way Thibodeau rides his starters and figure there are few minutes remaining for him.
The Wolves might still be in position to take the best player available to them in the draft. That's convenient but telling. As Towns enters his third season, they should be fine-tuning their needs, not still searching for saviours.