The NBA champion Miami Heat returned to the Twin Cities on Monday for the first time since late December 2011 when the Wolves pushed them to overtime before losing by two points.
LeBron James and Dwyane Wade gushed about the future of the Wolves that night.
"I think Timberwolves fans will have something to cheer about for a while here," Wade said.
Said James: "They're going to be a really good team. If it's not this year, soon."
Wolves fans are still waiting, their patience tested by injuries and extended losing streaks to the point that any optimism requires a leap of faith. This is not a team on the rise, as anticipated. If anything, the organization feels like it's approaching a critical crossroads, its future path determined by decisions that require action this offseason.
The Wolves must decide Nikola Pekovic's value and whether the bruising center is worth $12 to $14 million annually. They must figure out what to do with former No. 2 overall pick Derrick Williams. And they likely will own another Top-10 pick in the upcoming draft.
Can the team really afford to let David Kahn oversee those decisions?
The answer to that is obvious. They must know it internally, too. Lampooning Kahn's draft history has become a cottage industry and this is not intended to pile on, but the Wolves desperately need a new basketball boss to tackle the big-ticket items that await this summer, whether it's Flip Saunders — as reported by Sid Hartman over the weekend — or someone else.