During an introduction amplified four levels skyward at the Mall of America and transmitted across the globe, new Timberwolves star Jimmy Butler gave out his cellphone number Thursday for anyone — haters or otherwise — wanting to call him.
At the same time, he promised he will be the first one to pick up that phone and call when the NBA's free agency period begins late Friday.
Welcomed publicly to the Wolves a week after they acquired him from Chicago in a draft-night trade, Butler gives them a three-time All-Star, a proven veteran and an adult in the room on a team that hasn't made the playoffs since he was a teenager in Tomball, Texas.
He also purportedly gives them credibility when Wolves President of Basketball Operations and coach Tom Thibodeau and General Manager Scott Layden go shopping with more than $18 million available to spend on shooters, defenders and maybe even a new starting point guard. The NBA free-agent market opens for business at 11 p.m. Friday.
Butler's Olympic teammate, Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry, is available, as are forwards Gordon Hayward of the Jazz, Blake Griffin of the Clippers and Paul Millsap of the Hawks.
Just how high the Wolves can successfully aim remain to be seen, but it's likely noticeably higher than two weeks ago now that Butler is lobbying Lowry and others on his new team's behalf.
"I'll be talking to a lot of really good players — much better than myself, I will tell you that — and get them here to join what we have," Butler said to a couple thousand people, including new teammate Karl-Anthony Towns in the front row, gathered at the Mall of America's rotunda. "I know that, with the support I've already felt from this city, they're definitely going to love it. Getting here, with this young core, winning these games, anybody's going to want to be a part of that.
"Now it's all about getting the right fit to fit with these guys."