Rob Moor, chief executive officer of the Timberwolves and the man who hired David Kahn as president of basketball operations, said Kahn and coach Kurt Rambis will be back next year, even though the team has won 13 games this season, 15 last year and the overall record to date of the Kahn-Rambis era is 28-112.
"When we hired Kahn and Kahn hired Rambis, we promised them three years to develop a winning team," Moor said. "We figure it would take at least that long to turn the program around. We feel they are making progress despite their record."
Normally when a team is posting a horrible record like the Timberwolves have and the team is not drawing, the coach and the guy calling the basketball shots are in trouble. But that isn't the case here with a team that has gone through nine coaches since the franchise first began play in 1989-90.
The man with the toughest job in the Wolves organization is team president Chris Wright.
How would you like Wright's job of selling season tickets for 2011-2012 after the past two losing seasons the Wolves have experienced?
Believe me, the Wolves might be better next year but in the tough Western Conference, there is no chance they will even be a .500 team. Kahn is no miracle man.
Actually, the Wolves' slide started in the middle of the 2005 season when, after coaching the team to the Western Conference Finals in 2004 against the Lakers, coach Flip Saunders was fired.
The day Saunders was fired, my close personal friend Marty Davis and a group were returning from Ames, Iowa, after watching Bobby Knight's Texas Tech team play Iowa State. We turned on the radio in the bus to hear the unbelievable news that Saunders had been fired.