Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman celebrated his 66th birthday two weeks ago and has two years left on the contract he signed in September, two reasons that might explain why his team on Tuesday traded the 18th pick in Thursday's NBA draft for Houston swingman Chase Budinger and a European prospect.
Swapping the future's promise for today's known, the deal reunites Adelman with an athletic, three-point shooter who played for him for two seasons with the Rockets.
It's a deal that -- if followed by bigger moves either on draft night or in the NBA's free-agency period that starts Sunday -- is intended to end eight consecutive losing seasons and help the Wolves reach the playoffs this coming season.
It's also a deal that will make Thursday night's draft-viewing party at Hubert's in Target Center a bore if the Wolves don't make another trade before then.
The Wolves passed up the prospect of drafting yet another young player, such as Iowa State's Royce White, Kentucky's Terrence Jones or St. John's Moe Harkless, and instead chose a player with whom Adelman knows just what he is getting, even if Budinger probably isn't the answer as the team's starting small forward or shooting guard.
"A guy who can shoot the ball incredibly well, a very good slasher, athletic enough to get into the lane and finish around the rim," the 6-7 Budinger said Tuesday, describing himself. "Very well-rounded, passes the ball very well, I do a little bit of everything. That's why I think Rick Adelman really likes me."
The feeling is mutual, apparently.
"I've very excited," Budinger, 24, said from his home in San Diego, where he grew up. "Rick Adelman was a great, great coach for me. I have much respect for him. I love his system. I feel I fit it very well."