Ten weeks after they fired their coach, the Timberwolves on Wednesday officially introduced a new one who believes in many of the same basic basketball philosophies as the old one did.
Whether you call it a "triangle" or "corner" offense, Rick Adelman is a proponent of the same sort of flowing motion offense that Kurt Rambis preferred.
But this time Wolves President David Kahn -- who with owner Glen Taylor interviewed seven candidates in search of a coach more committed to embracing fast-break basketball than the last one -- is getting more than a probable future Hall of Fame coach who owns a .605 winning percentage in 20 seasons as a NBA head coach.
He's also getting a 65-year-old man whose words and résumé suggest he will tailor his system to fit the Timberwolves' many highly drafted pieces -- as painfully young and possibly mismatched as they are -- and not the other way around.
"I have to adjust to this talent that fits it best," he said, "and not force a system on it."
He brings that sparkly career winning percentage and instant credibility to a franchise that hasn't made the playoffs since it beat Adelman's Sacramento team in Game 7 of the 2004 Western Conference semifinals at Target Center.
He is known largely as a coach who likes big men who can pass -- Kevin Love, anyone? -- in a position away from the basket. He is known as that largely because he possessed Vlade Divac and Chris Webber in Sacramento.
"Well, we played like that because those were two pretty good people to put the ball in their hands," he said.