Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor said that while different media sources were speculating about trade possibilities for Kevin Garnett for some time, the only trade that even came close before the actual deal was made was an earlier conversation with the Celtics before the June NBA draft. "Had the Celtics being willing to give up their fifth pick in the first round and the player we wanted [Florida's Al Horford] been available, plus Al Jefferson, we might have considered that trade," Taylor said. "But they didn't agree to that. Furthermore, at the time, Kevin's agent said he wouldn't go there. They didn't want to make a commitment to him unless he was committed to them." Taylor said a trade with the Los Angeles Lakers was never close because there was a third team, Charlotte, involved, and the Bobcats never agreed.
Taylor said he did take some calls from NBA owners who had an interest in Garnett, and when that happened, he called Garnett and "just told him that it could leak out in the paper or someplace like that, that he didn't get upset or worried about it."
Taylor said he and Garnett had a number of conversations about Garnett's future, and those conversations eventually led to Garnett wanting to be traded to a team that had a chance to win an NBA title.
"I told Kevin that I had a responsibility to tell him that I think we're going to go younger," Taylor said. "We've tried this free agency three years in a row, you know, bringing veteran guys in. It hasn't worked. ...
"And I said, 'I want you to think about it.' I think over a period of time, certainly about a week or two before the trade, you know, he really came to the conclusion that probably [it] was best for him to move on. When I called him and said that the trade was going to go through, it was a very friendly, cordial talk. But by that time he had talked to people from Boston."
More changes
Taylor said there are no plans to spend money to sign free agents this year even though Garnett's big salary is off the books and that he will seek to trade more veterans to free up salary for 2008-09. The Wolves were fifth in the NBA in total payroll last year.
"We were way over the luxury tax to start out with," Taylor said. "So we'll still be a pretty high payroll team, but I think I'm lining us up that starting next year and thereafter, that we will have flexibility. But this year we're going to be a fairly young team."