Before he skipped town on his five-day All-Star break, Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman was asked what he wanted from the upcoming Thursday trade deadline when he returned to work.
"Anything I want to see?" he asked back. "I don't know ... LeBron, Kobe."
There he goes, starting trade rumors, although it wasn't immediately known whether his two were legit or some of those trade rumors Denver coach George Karl recently admitted he used to concoct with his coaching brethren just to see who could get theirs published by a gullible press first.
If this season had gone differently, the Wolves probably would have been buyers at Thursday's trade deadline.
With former No. 2 overall pick Derrick Williams or one of their guards to dangle, the question is whether they will be buyers, sellers or neither in a season that has all but slipped away from them while they wait for Kevin Love to return from his broken hand in late March.
"I think we have to look at all possibilities," Adelman said. "Anything to improve our team we should be looking at, we have to look at, not only for right now, but for the future, too, if it fits for the future. If we ever get our guys together, we think we have a pretty good core group."
The danger here: The Wolves get tempted by a desperate, short-sighted deal they think will get them within sniffing distance of the playoffs in a season that started with them promising their fans nothing but that.
With Los Angeles Lakers star Pau Gasol and Cleveland's Anderson Varejao both out injured until well after the trade deadline passes, those temptations aren't quite calling as much as they might have been.