There were numerous messages received concerning the Timberwolves’ absence in the Turkey of the Year document revealed on Thanksgiving Day in the Star Tribune. There was an email arriving Friday from a reader that contained an opinion that already had been offered by others.
The sender, Daniel P., stated: “... I would have given Grand Turkey to the Timberwolves GM who traded away KAT. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. I’ll always wonder what the Wolves might have achieved if they’d been allowed to play one more year together.
“Would he still be eligible for the Grand Turkey next year?”
The “he” would be Tim Connelly, the Timberwolves president of basketball operations, and now finding himself taking a rapid 180-degree turn in popularity with an element of team followers.
It wasn’t long ago a popular belief being espoused in fandom was that Connelly was joined at the hip with Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez; meaning, if Glen Taylor were to win his ownership dispute with that tandem, the disastrous result for the Wolves would be losing Connelly, builder of champions (in Denver).
This is where traditionally we mention that Taylor is also the owner of the Star Tribune — and what can be offered here is that Taylor has expressed a strong faith in Connelly as the person responsible for on-court manpower.
Which is no longer the level of faith with a share of the fan base. The above Daniel P. has not been a lone wolf in suggesting Connelly was guilty of a substantial blunder in trading Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks for forward Julius Randle and off guard Donte DiVincenzo.
Know this: Connelly was acting in what he considered the best interests of the franchise, whether the arbitration decision on ownership (not expected until late January) comes down on the side of Lore/Rodriguez or Taylor.