Round 2 of the NBA draft hadn’t started Thursday before the Wolves made another trade, this time dealing the No. 37 pick and guard Wendell Moore Jr. to Detroit while receiving the No. 53 pick in return.
Wolves trade Wendell Moore Jr. to Detroit and bail out on draft’s second day
The moves free up an open roster spot as the 26th pick in the 2022 draft departs Minnesota.
Later the Wolves moved to No. 57 by trading the 53rd pick to Memphis, then dealt the 57th to Toronto, leaving them with no picks in the second round.
The move appears to be a slight cost cutting move while freeing up an open roster spot by sending Moore to the Pistons. Moore was set to make a little more than $2.5 million next season and his departure will now take the Wolves down from 12 players currently under contract on the main roster next season to 11, giving them some more flexibility in free agency to re-sign their own free agents like Kyle Anderson, Jordan McLaughlin and Monte Morris.
Moore was one of the first draft picks President Tim Connelly made when Connelly arrived in Minnesota. He was the 26th overall pick of the 2022 draft out of Duke and the Wolves imagined him being someone who could play well alongside a talented group of players. But he never got the chance to crack the rotation on a regular basis.
The drafting of guard Rob Dillingham at No. 8 in the first round of the draft Wednesday spelled out the tea leaves for Moore in the third year of his deal — the Wolves expect Dillingham to contribute immediately, leaving little room for Moore to find a place to contribute in year three. He will end his Wolves tenure having played in 54 games, averaging 1.1 points per game.
The players communicated through a group text chain to pull themselves out of a four-game losing streak. But the thread is used for other ways to bond and build camaraderie.