Two-time All-Star forward Kevin Love brought a No. 9 Ricky Rubio figurine with him Tuesday night when he represented the Timberwolves at the NBA draft lottery, the league's annual game of chance that never has been kind to the franchise.
Maybe he should have brought a No. 1 uniformed Alexey Shved doll instead.
The Wolves stayed exactly where they were slotted — the ninth overall spot — renewing a springtime tradition of never faring better than they deserved. Cleveland, Orlando and Washington won the June 27 draft's top three picks.
If they wind up picking ninth, the Wolves could choose from a group that includes shooting guards C.J. McCollum from Lehigh and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope from Georgia, a player who drops such as injured Maryland center Alex Len or UCLA forward Shabazz Muhammad or a European prospect such as 7-2 French center Rudy Gobert or Croatian small forward Dario Saric.
Wolves president of basketball operations Flip Saunders said his team will get a "good player" with the ninth pick in a draft that is being called weak because it doesn't have a clear-cut No. 1 overall choice, but might have as much as quality with the 12th pick as it does at the sixth.
The Wolves on Tuesday sent a guy to the lottery who broke his hand not once but twice last season for good luck, and Love in turn tucked his Spanish teammate into his pocket for some good karma.
"He's the one that made that decision, not me," Saunders said from the New York City television studios where the drawing was held. "We went in as number 9, Ricky is number 9. We thought it was pointing in the right direction, but no such luck."
Saunders had a two-hour lunch conversation with Love in New York City before Tuesday night's lotto. It was the latest in a series of many discussions the two have had these past three weeks while Saunders tries to erase any doubt Love might have about the franchise's leadership and where his team is headed.