Timberwolves coach and chief executive Flip Saunders gave his players Tuesday off after they played games on consecutive nights, but he went back to work hard himself instead by making two trades that reshape his team's present and, more notably, its future.
Consummating some late-night phone work done by General Manager Milt Newton this past week, Saunders traded guards Mo Williams and Troy Daniels to Charlotte for a 2019 second-round pick and guard Gary Neal. Then he turned around and sent a protected future first-round pick to Atlanta for rookie forward Adreian Payne, a power forward Saunders coveted in last summer's draft.
By trading Williams, the Wolves sent a veteran point guard with an expiring contract to an Eastern Conference playoff contender. In return, they received a nominal asset while they also dispensed of Daniels' contract for the rest of this season and the next so they could open a roster spot to obtain Payne.
In essence, they traded Williams for a distant second-round pick because both he and Neal will be unrestricted free agents this summer. Williams theoretically helps keep the Hornets in the playoff hunt while injured star Kemba Walker misses the next six weeks and then gives them a veteran backup come playoff time when Walker returns.
Saunders said Neal's presence, in addition to matching salaries, gives the Wolves a shooter with an NBA playoff experience back in return for the season's final two months. He said he has no plans to buy out Neal's $3.2 million salary and release him.
Only a month after he set a franchise record by scoring 52 points in a game at Indiana, Williams said goodbye to Minnesota and the Wolves on his Instagram account on Tuesday. He posted a photo of himself with his arm around Wolves owner Glen Taylor, whom he called a "great man" and conversationalist.
"I would say this, I was proud to be a wolf," Williams wrote. "Good luck wolf pack, I'm on to my next chapter."
The Wolves used part of a trade exception and the open roster space created with the first trade to make a bet with the second one on their talent-evaluation skills. Following their acquisitions of Shabazz Muhammad, Gorgui Dieng, Andrew Wiggins and Zach LaVine the past two summers, they traded for Payne, a player they contemplated with the 13th overall pick in last June's draft.