The Timberwolves and coach/personnel boss Tom Thibodeau had a couple different basic directions they could have gone this past offseason.
Option one was to make minimal moves to the roster, trusting that Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins were the franchise and that things would fall into place around them as they grew older and better.
Option two was to decide this was the time to infuse the roster with a better supporting cast to hopefully enhance what those two players already offered.
Thibodeau and the Wolves clearly chose the second option. The centerpiece of the overhaul was a draft night trade with the Bulls. Jimmy Butler and draft pick Justin Patton came to Minnesota, while Zach LaVine, Kris Dunn and draft pick Lauri Markkanen went to Chicago. Adding someone of Butler's caliber, combined with a good amount of salary cap space, allowed the Timberwolves to add Taj Gibson, Jeff Teague and Jamal Crawford as well.
The Bulls will judge their trade in the long-term. LaVine is still young and coming off a torn ACL. Dunn is in his second year and Markkanen, of course, is a rookie. On the Wolves side, Patton is an unknown whose season is just getting started in the G-League after an early injury.
Butler, though, allows us to judge the Wolves' part of the trade in the short-term. One third of the way into this season, Minnesota's remade roster is 16-11 and in first place in the Northwest Division. The Wolves sit fourth in the Western Conference, meaning if the season ended today (one of the worst phrases in sports because it always means the season does not, in fact, end today) they would have home-court advantage for a first-round playoff series.
For a franchise that has missed the playoffs for 13 consecutive seasons, this is tangible progress.
We can discuss the aesthetic of this version of the Wolves all we want. They often win "ugly," and games against seemingly inferior opponents seem to require more effort and longer minutes than they should. The team's depth is such that Thibodeau has taken to playing just eight guys lately. Sunday's 97-92 win over Dallas was an example of all those things.