The five teams at the top of the 2008 NBA draft were Chicago, Miami, the Timberwolves, Seattle (now Oklahoma City) and Memphis. The Bulls obtained the first choice by winning the lottery with 1.7 percent of the Ping-Pong balls.
Three years later, there are close followers of the local NBA team that insist -- if the Wolves had landed the top spot -- basketball boss Kevin McHale would have taken Kansas State's Michael Beasley over Memphis' Derrick Rose.
There were occasions when I joined in questioning the wisdom of McHale's personnel moves, such as when he chose to use a late choice in the 2003 first round to select high schooler Ndubi Ebi rather than Josh Howard, the ACC Player of the Year from Wake Forest.
Still, I would never be party to a rumor as scurrilous as one suggesting McHale -- our Hall of Famer from Hibbing -- would have taken a player other than Rose, if the Wolves would have had first choice in June 2008.
As it turned out, the draft went like this: Bulls-Rose; Heat-Beasley; Wolves-O.J. Mayo; Thunder-Russell Westbrook; and Grizzlies-Kevin Love.
McHale promptly traded Mayo and much dead wood to Memphis for Love. Three years later, McHale's last important act with the Wolves rates as his second best. The first, of course, was in 1995, when he used the fifth pick in the draft to select high schooler Kevin Garnett.
Certainly, those bookend decisions -- Garnett and Love -- were outstanding, and it was merely those 13 years of personnel decisions in between that leaves a blot on McHale's résumé.
But if you go around stating McHale would have preferred Beasley, now an unrepentant Wolves gunner, over Rose in that draft ... well, Kevin could hire the smartest attorney on the Range and sue for slander.