You don't need to tell Flip Saunders that his first draft as the Timberwolves new president of basketball operations appears, um, underwhelming.
His Twitter feed will tell him that after he entered a draft that became more wacky and unpredictable than even expected and came away with UCLA scorer Shabazz Muhammad and Louisville shot-blocking big man Gorgui Dieng without addressing his team's two biggest needs.
"I'm sure it's blown up and I'm sure it's not real good," he said. "Hey, that's why you're in this position. You have to own up to the picks you make. … I know people probably aren't happy. We've got to fill a roster and there are a lot of ways to fill it."
Wolves fans had hoped their team would fill it Thursday by adding pure shooters and a legitimately sized shooting guard, those two aforementioned needs.
They did neither in a draft that started with a shocker — Cleveland took UNLV's Anthony Bennett No. 1 overall in a move nobody expected — and continued when Charlotte took Indiana's Cody Zeller fourth overall.
By the time the Wolves' pick came up at No. 9, shooting guards Victor Oladipo, Ben McLemore and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope all were gone. Saunders tried but couldn't move up to take either Oladipo or McLemore after the selection of Bennett and Zeller upset the draft order.
"It was chaotic from the first pick," Saunders said. "The guy that was not talked at all about going No. 1 went No. 1. That tells you."
When Detroit took Caldwell-Pope eighth, Saunders improvised, turning to the fourth and final draft scenario for which they had planned. Rather than select Lehigh combo guard C.J. McCollum, he chose Michigan point guard Trey Burke and traded Burke to Utah for the 14th and 21st picks.