Bob Stein was the first president of the Timberwolves and proudly declared that draft decisions would be made by consensus. There would be input from personnel director Billy McKinney and coach Bill Musselman. If they couldn't agree, Stein would break the tie.
The Wolves had the 10th selection in the 1989 draft. The internal debate centered on point guards Pooh Richardson, Mookie Blaylock and Tim Hardaway.
McKinney wanted Richardson. Musselman preferred Hardaway. The Wolves selected Pooh. Blaylock, the 12th selection, and Hardaway, the 14th, would have superior NBA careers.
The Richardson selection does not rate among the Wolves' all-time draft blunders. What it does, though, is remind us that this team's richest tradition -- almost always coming out of the first round of the NBA draft with the wrong player -- started from Day One.
The Wolves have made 17 first-round selections in their previous 19 drafts. They had two first-rounders in 1990 and 1999, traded the No. 1 in 2000 and lost their No. 1s in 2001, '02 and '04 because of the Joe Smith fiasco.
The track record is amazing: 17 tries in the first round and only once -- with No. 5 pick Kevin Garnett in 1995 -- did the Wolves absolutely choose the right player.
On two other occasions, they selected the right player, and then traded him before the draft was over: 1996 -- draft Ray Allen, trade for Stephon Marbury; 2006 -- draft Brandon Roy, trade for Randy Foye.
It took a few years for the NBA to figure out Allen was a better player than Marbury. It took a few games of their rookie season to figure out Roy was a star and Foye was nothing special.