This may be a grand moment in Minnesota Timberwolves history.
They may have stumbled upon a decision they cannot mess up.
The Kevin Love trade? Oh, that could be a disaster.
The coaching search? At this point, Flip Saunders could blindfold himself, listen only to Glen Taylor, and pick a candidate from scraps of paper in Crunch's mouth, and find a good one. In other words, the Wolves might feel free to follow their standard operating procedure.
As devastating as the news appeared at the outset, the fact that the Timberwolves will be forced to trade Love could prove liberating, if the current brain trust is capable of building a team from scratch.
The Wolves have been so horrid throughout their history that they have been forced to treat their only two franchise players, Kevin Garnett and Love, as if they were saviors.
The rest of the NBA considers saviors to be players who carry their teams to postseason success. Garnett's end-to-end dominance led to victories in exactly two playoff series. Love never has participated in a playoff game. The idea that the Wolves are dependent on star players is silly. When you've been as bad as the Wolves have been for as long as they have been bad, you're not dependent on anyone.
The Wolves need to build a successful franchise brick by brick, and hoping that Love will change his mind and decide that wintering in Minnesota is wonderful is no way to accomplish that. Love's departure will give team president Saunders an opportunity to prove he's savvy enough to trade Love for value, and to build the team through the draft, the way it should have been built all along.