The Minnesota Timberwolves just wrapped up their most successful season in decades, and while the way it finished wasn’t how they wanted, it’s hard to be disappointed in the overall body of work
It did become wildly apparent against the Dallas Mavericks, however, that the Timberwolves have some offensive deficiencies they need to iron out, especially late in games, if they want to be an NBA Finals team next season.
Anthony Edwards needs more backcourt help. A partner who makes it impossible for defenses to focus all of their attention on stopping him. In theory, Karl Anthony Towns was supposed to play Robin to the Wolves’ Ant-Man. But as a front court player, he’s often taken out of games way too easily.
Throughout the duration of the Wolves’ first round series against the Phoenix Suns, none of that was an issue. Minnesota swept Kevin Durant, Devin Booker, Bradley Beal and the Suns like they were an overpriced lampshade that had just shattered on the floor.
For most of the series, storylines revolved around Anthony Edwards taking the torch from Kevin Durant as a face of the National Basketball Association. The Timberwolves’ 22-year-old blossoming superstar has made it well known just how much he looks up to the future Hall of Famer and, by the end of the series, Durant was crowning Edwards too.
So as both teams look to shuffle their roster and navigate separate but dire luxury tax situations this offseason, it’s worth taking a look at just how much sense it might make for the Timberwolves to try swapping some very expensive pieces with their 2024 first round foe.
Will Phoenix Suns trade Kevin Durant this offseason?
The Phoenix Suns are in a similar position to the Minnesota Timberwolves in that they are living in luxury tax hell. I take that back, the Suns’ situation ($126 million projected luxury tax bill) is much, much worse than the Wolves’ ($51 million projected luxury tax bill).
Not only does Phoenix have double the projected tax payment in 2024-25 (easily highest in the NBA), but they are working with a roster that clearly needs to be revamped following an embarrassing showing in the Playoffs.
No doubt, the plan is to break up their current “big three” of Durant, Booker and Beal. The problem with trading Beal is that he has a full no-trade clause. It’s also unlikely they move the 27-year-old Booker, who’s become the face of that franchise. And that leaves the 35-year-old Durant as the most likely star to go.
So, when the Suns start shopping their stars this summer, is it possible the Wolves make sense as a partner? Yes… a lot of sense. Let’s dig into why. Let’s start with talent. Could the Suns get a player-for-player trade offer that lands them more talent than Karl-Anthony Towns? Good luck.
Does trading Karl-Anthony Towns for Kevin Durant make sense?
Because the Suns and Wolves are both in the 2nd apron of the luxury tax, any trade for either team this offseason will have to match nearly dollar for dollar and player for player.
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