How does this mega deal impact the teams involved, the Rockets, and the rest of the NBA landscape?
The NBA experienced it’s first major news break in a post-Adrian Wojnarowski insider world on Friday night when Shams Charania announced that the Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks agreed to swap Karl Anthony-Towns for Julius Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a protected first round pick.
BREAKING: The Minnesota Timberwolves are nearing a trade to send All-Star Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks, sources tell me and @JonKrawczynski. pic.twitter.com/cFbrvj1c9l
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) September 28, 2024
This news came as a shocker to most as a transaction of this magnitude rarely happens this time of year, especially as most NBA training camps are set to kick off in the upcoming days. The shockwaves of this deal have sent ripples throughout the league and social media as many try to make sense of how this will fare out for two teams that should be considered contenders entering the 2024-25 season.
For the Knicks, it’s clear that Leon Rose and company have decided to go all-in after pulling off extensions for OG Anunoby and Jalen Brunson this summer to go along with the acquisitions of Mikal Bridges and Towns. As for the Wolves, things seem a bit murkier for a team that is coming off their second-best season in franchise history.
While it’s possible the triumvirate of Towns, Anthony Edwards and Rudy Gobert had already reached their peak, bowing out of the Conference Finals in five games, it’s still jarring to see them pivot so quickly from what was otherwise a spectacular season.
Minnesota’s double-big lineup, that also featured Naz Reid, seemed to be the only team capable of cracking the code against Nikola Jokic and the Denver Nuggets. Even with his highly-noted fluctuations throughout the playoffs, Towns looked to be Minnesota’s best mismatch against the Joker.
Now the Wolves will have to reinvent themselves as they insert the also-maligned Randle into their lineup. A front-court trio of Randle, Gobert and Jaden McDaniels won’t spark as much fear in opposing teams as they can now crowd the paint more than ever when that group is on the court.
While I am a fan of the DiVincenzo addition, there’s still a long ways to go in determining if this two-for-one swap was the right move for Minnesota.
As for the Houston Rockets and the rest of the Western Conference, this has to be considered somewhat of a positive, right? While it’s super feasible that Randle plays well for the Wolves, there’s still a lot of uncertainty in how a team that held the one seed out West for a good portion of the season will fare without the same continuity in place.
With Towns in the lineup, Minnesota held the one seed for all but five days between November 19 and March 4, the day Towns tore his left meniscus. The Wolves would go on to finish one game out of first place as KAT didn’t return until April 12.
The point being, even though the Wolves were a flawed team, their formula was working in regard to regular season success and matching up with the Nuggets. At the very least, this may open the door for the Rockets and other teams to leapfrog a Minnesota team that is now a candidate for regression.
Another angle from this trade that could potentially impact the Rockets is that the Knicks no longer seem to be in the market for a center. The Rockets boast one of the stronger center rotations in the league now that they have added Steven Adams to a group that already includes Alperen Sengun and Jock Landale. In theory, this makes Landale a luxury and a possible trade candidate.
It’s unlikely that New York would seek another big man after pulling this trade off, and cross off Minnesota as they also have a surplus of bigs between Gobert, Reid and Randle. Houston will need to pivot to other suitors should the time come to swap one of their centers.
There’s still more to process from this trade that has yet to be ideated, but thankfully for NBA fans, the wait to see the implications of this deal are only a few weeks away.