[外電] Rivals move up, but Wolves stay stuck in place
http://www.startribune.com/wolves/story/1200487.html
Timberwolves fans should get a chance to see Greg Oden and Kevin Durant on a
regular basis next season at Target Center. Unfortunately, they will be
wearing visitors' jerseys.
The NBA draft lottery was held Tuesday in Secaucus, N.J., and for a Wolves
franchise that has never had much luck in these things, the result came as a
double whammy.
The Wolves, represented by Randy Foye, stayed put at No. 7 for the June 28
draft, the pick they were most likely to get. It was the 11th time in 11
tries the Wolves have failed to improve their lot in the lottery. But that's
not the end of it.
Two teams did buck the odds and move up, and both are in the Northwest
Division, along with the Wolves: Portland, which had the same chance (5.3
percent) as the Wolves of winning, finished No. 1. Seattle, which had the
fifth-worst record, moved up to No. 2, with Atlanta moving up one spot to No.
3.
"Huge, unbelievably huge," Trail Blazers General Manager Kevin Pritchard told
the Associated Press. "Franchise making."
The losers? Memphis, which had the worst 2006-07 record and a 25 percent
chance of finishing with the top pick, tumbled to fourth. "It's about as
disappointing as you could ever hope for," Grizzlies boss Jerry West told the
AP.
Boston fell from No. 2 to No. 5, and Milwaukee dropped from No. 5 to No. 6.
And then came the Wolves.
The Wolves had a 5.3 percent chance of winning and a 6.0 chance at No. 2,
which would have given them the opportunity to get either Oden or Durant, the
consensus top two picks in the draft. Oden would have given them a
much-needed shot-blocking, glass-cleaning center, and Durant would have
offered instant scoring punch. Now those two likely will be doing so for
Portland and Seattle.
"As expected, we ended up with the seventh pick, our pre-lottery draft
position," Wolves Vice President of Basketball operations Kevin McHale said.
"This is a talented draft class, and we will be able to get a solid player to
add to our nucleus with this selection."
If there is any consolation for Wolves fans, it is that this year's draft is
considered to be very deep. And, after the top two, there isn't a lot of
separation between the next handful of picks. Wolves assistant GM Fred
Hoiberg echoed McHale.
"We can sit around and feel sorry for ourselves or we can go to work,
continue doing our homework and go out and find the best available player at
No. 7 who can come in and help us," Hoiberg said. "It will be a good pick."
McHale has said he wants the team to get bigger at forward and center, and
there should be a player available to fill that role, though none as ready to
play as Oden or Durant.
Among those who could be available are Yi Jianlian, the 7-footer from China
whose game is polished if not powerful; power forwards Brandan Wright (North
Carolina) and Al Horford (Florida); forwards Joakim Noah and Corey Brewer,
both from Florida; Georgetown center Roy Hibbert; and Ohio State point guard
Mike Conley Jr.
The league will hold a predraft camp in Orlando that starts May 29, and
Wolves coach Randy Wittman and the entire basketball operations staff will
attend. Starting June 5, teams can bring in players for workouts.
"Starting [today] we'll be calling agents, scheduling individual workouts,
where we can work the players out against other players who might expose any
weaknesses they might have," Hoiberg said.
Note
‧ Wittman said Tuesday that he and the Wolves were close to agreeing on a
contract to bring him back as coach. The deal could get done as early as
today.
AT THE NO. 7 PICK
The Timberwolves have the
No. 7 pick in NBA draft June 28. Here is a glance at recent No. 7s:
Year Player Team
'06 Randy Foye Portland
'05 C. Villanueva Chicago
'04 Luol Deng Chicago
'03 Kirk Hinrich Chicago
'02 Nene Hilario Denver
'01 Eddie Griffin Houston
'00 Chris Mihm L.A. Lakers
* Foye was traded to Minnesota for the Timberwolves' No. 6 pick, Brandon Roy
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