Jeff Teague arrived in Minnesota with a three-year, $57 million contract and a reputation for being a solid point guard who could score and distribute while potentially being a defensive liability. He's been pretty much as advertised through the Wolves' first 35 games, and while they owe their 22-13 record more to a handful of other players Teague has been a meaningful contributor.
He's also been put in two unenviable positions of comparison.
One is to departed point guard Ricky Rubio, a fan favorite even as he polarized the Timberwolves' rooting base by being quite good at everything except one very important thing: shooting the basketball. It was that deficiency that led coach/basketball boss Tom Thibodeau to move on from Rubio in an offseason unloading trade to the Jazz and to bring in Teague — a much better shooter but a much less flashy passer, among other things.
The second comparison is to backup point guard Tyus Jones — an improving third-year player and astute floor general who also happens to hold a trump card of being a Twin Cities native.
There are Wolves fans who can't stop wondering what this team would have looked like if Rubio was still here with the improved supporting cast Thibodeau built in the offseason. And there are Wolves fans who have watched Jones and Teague this year and wondered if Jones should be playing more minutes than he has — or even more minutes than Teague.
They will get what they asked for on that second front, albeit under the worst circumstances of a Teague knee injury sustained late in Wednesday's dramatic overtime win over Denver. Teague has a sprained knee and will miss an unspecified amount of time.
The question now becomes: Is Jones ready for an expanded role?
A quick look at the numbers would seem to suggest he is.