Saving KG: Rewriting T-Wolves History
Posted: 14 Jul 2026, 16:46

Born in the late '80s and raised in Arkansas, I never really had one NBA team that I called my team. Instead, I followed players. My earliest basketball memories are of Michael Jordan's second three-peat, but once Jordan stepped away, one player grabbed my attention more than anyone else: Kevin Garnett.
KG quickly became my favorite player, with Allen Iverson and Dirk Nowitzki not far behind. I followed him religiously throughout his career, and when he was traded to Boston in the summer of 2007, 20-year-old me instantly became a Celtics fan.
Over the years, one question has always stuck with me:
What if the Timberwolves had actually built a contender around Kevin Garnett?
For all of KG's brilliance, Minnesota's front office repeatedly failed him. Poor roster construction, questionable personnel decisions, and the infamous Joe Smith scandal squandered much of one of the greatest primes in NBA history.
This MyNBA is my attempt to rewrite that history.
I'm beginning in the 1995-96 season, Garnett's rookie year, with one goal: build a championship team the way Minnesota never did. That means no baffling draft-day blunders, no Joe Smith salary-cap fiasco, and no wasting the best years of a generational superstar.
After Minnesota's pitiful 11-35 start, my first order of business was to begin reshaping the roster. I wasn't interested in making blockbuster fantasy trades. I simply used NBA 2K's Trade Finder and selected offers that felt reasonably realistic while helping stockpile assets for the loaded 1996-98 drafts.
1995-96 Season
Minnesota receives: Eric Williams, Boston's 1997 1st-round pick
Boston receives: Isiah Rider, Minnesota's 1997 2nd-round pick
Minnesota receives: Donnie Boyce, Atlanta's 1996 1st-round pick (No. 19 overall – used to draft Samaki Walker)
Atlanta receives: Tom Gugliotta
Whether this ends with banners hanging in Target Center or another heartbreaking "what if," we're about to find out.




























