2017–18 Minnesota Timberwolves season

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2017–18 Minnesota Timberwolves season
Head coach Tom Thibodeau
General manager Scott Layden
Owner(s) Glen Taylor
Arena Target Center
Results
Record 47–35 (.573)
Place Division: 4th (Northwest)
Conference: 8th (Western)
Playoff finish First Round
(Lost to Rockets 1–4)

Stats @ Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
Television Fox Sports North
Radio WCCO
< 2016–17 2018–19 >

The 2017–18 Minnesota Timberwolves season was the 29th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

They clinched their first winning season since 2004 with a win over the New York Knicks on March 23, 2018. On April 11, 2018, the Timberwolves clinched a playoff berth for the first time since 2004 with a win over the Denver Nuggets, ending what was the longest post-season drought in the NBA at the time, at 13 seasons to pass the Sacramento Kings to currently make the longest postseason NBA drought. The last time the Wolves made the playoffs was during the Kevin Garnett era where he led them to the Conference Finals that year. The Wolves this season also signed free agent Derrick Rose, after he considered joining teams such as the Golden State Warriors, San Antonio Spurs, and Washington Wizards. The signing reunited Rose with former Chicago Bulls teammates Jimmy Butler and Taj Gibson, as well as coach Tom Thibodeau, all of whom were part of the franchise from 2011-2015. These acquisitions would earn the team the nickname “TimberBulls” from the media and fans.

They finished the regular season with a 47–35 record, which clinched the 8th seed. In the playoffs, the Timberwolves faced the top-seeded Houston Rockets in the first round, and lost in five games.

Until 2022, this was the last season that the Timberwolves made the playoffs or had a winning season.

Draft

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Round Pick Player Position Nationality College
1 16 Justin Patton C  United States Creighton

Entering the draft, the Timberwolves only held one first round pick at #7; their second round pick was forced to be traded away to the Boston Celtics due to a previous trade involving the Phoenix Suns (and former New Orleans Hornets) allowing the Suns (later Celtics) to acquire their 2017 second round pick if their lottery protected pick wasn't acquired by 2016. Exiting draft night, however, they traded away their #7 pick, which was the Finnish center/power forward Lauri Markkanen from University of Arizona, alongside last year's top selection (Kris Dunn) and Zach LaVine to the Chicago Bulls in exchange for All-Star shooting guard/small forward Jimmy Butler and the Bulls' own first round selection, which was #16 pick Justin Patton, a redshirt freshman center from Creighton University for the purpose of ending their 13 year long playoff drought.

Roster

2017–18 Minnesota Timberwolves roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB (YYYY–MM–DD) From
C 45 Aldrich, Cole 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 253 lb (115 kg) 1988–10–31 Kansas
F 8 Bjelica, Nemanja 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 230 lb (104 kg) 1988–05–09 Serbia
G 30 Brooks, Aaron 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 161 lb (73 kg) 1985–01–14 Oregon
F 3 Brown, Anthony (TW) 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 224 lb (102 kg) 1992–10–10 Stanford
G 23 Butler, Jimmy (C) 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 236 lb (107 kg) 1989–09–14 Marquette
G 11 Crawford, Jamal 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 185 lb (84 kg) 1980–03–20 Michigan
C 5 Dieng, Gorgui 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 251 lb (114 kg) 1990–01–18 Louisville
G 13 Georges-Hunt, Marcus 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 226 lb (103 kg) 1994–03–28 Georgia Tech
F 67 Gibson, Taj 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 235 lb (107 kg) 1985–06–24 Southern California
F 10 Jefferson, Amile 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 224 lb (102 kg) 1993–05–07 Duke
G 1 Jones, Tyus 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 184 lb (83 kg) 1996–05–10 Duke
C 24 Patton, Justin Injured 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 251 lb (114 kg) 1997–06–14 Creighton
G 25 Rose, Derrick 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 190 lb (86 kg) 1988–10–04 Memphis
G 0 Teague, Jeff 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 189 lb (86 kg) 1988–06–10 Wake Forest
C 32 Towns, Karl-Anthony (C) 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 248 lb (112 kg) 1995–11–15 Kentucky
F 22 Wiggins, Andrew (C) 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 202 lb (92 kg) 1995–02–23 Kansas
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) On assignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  • Injured Injured

RosterTransactions
Last transaction: 2018–04–11

Standings

Division

Northwest Division W L PCT GB Home Road Div GP
yPortland Trail Blazers 49 33 .598 0.0 28–13 21–20 9–7 82
xOklahoma City Thunder 48 34 .585 1.0 27–14 21–20 5–11 82
xUtah Jazz 48 34 .585 1.0 28–13 20–21 7–9 82
xMinnesota Timberwolves 47 35 .573 2.0 30–11 17–24 10–6 82
Denver Nuggets 46 36 .561 3.0 31–10 15–26 9–7 82


Conference

Western Conference
# Team W L PCT GB GP
1 zHouston Rockets * 65 17 .793 82
2 yGolden State Warriors * 58 24 .707 7.0 82
3 yPortland Trail Blazers * 49 33 .598 16.0 82
4 xOklahoma City Thunder 48 34 .585 17.0 82
5 xUtah Jazz 48 34 .585 17.0 82
6 xNew Orleans Pelicans 48 34 .585 17.0 82
7 xSan Antonio Spurs 47 35 .573 18.0 82
8 xMinnesota Timberwolves 47 35 .573 18.0 82
9 Denver Nuggets 46 36 .561 19.0 82
10 Los Angeles Clippers 42 40 .512 23.0 82
11 Los Angeles Lakers 35 47 .427 30.0 82
12 Sacramento Kings 27 55 .329 38.0 82
13 Dallas Mavericks 24 58 .293 41.0 82
14 Memphis Grizzlies 22 60 .268 43.0 82
15 Phoenix Suns 21 61 .256 44.0 82

Game log

Preseason

2017 pre-season game log
2017–18 season schedule

Regular season

2017–18 game log
2017–18 season schedule

Playoffs

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2018 playoff game log
2018 playoff schedule

Transactions

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Trades

June 22, 2017 To Minnesota Timberwolves
Jimmy Butler[1]
Draft rights to Justin Patton
To Chicago Bulls
Kris Dunn
Zach LaVine
Draft rights to Lauri Markkanen
June 29, 2017 To Minnesota Timberwolves
2018 first-round pick[2]
To Utah Jazz
Ricky Rubio

Free agents

Re-signed

Player Signed
Shabazz Muhammad[3] 1-year contract worth $1.6 million
Andrew Wiggins[4] 5-year contract worth $148 million

Additions

Player Signed Former Team
Jeff Teague[5] 3-year contract worth $57 million Indiana Pacers
Taj Gibson[6] 2-year contract worth $28 million Oklahoma City Thunder
Jamal Crawford[7] 2-year contract worth $8.9 million Atlanta Hawks
Anthony Brown[8] Two-way contract Erie BayHawks
Marcus Georges-Hunt[9] 1-year contract worth $1.3 million Orlando Magic
Aaron Brooks[10] 1-year contract worth $2.1 million Indiana Pacers

Subtractions

Player Reason Left New Team
Nikola Peković[11] Waived
Jordan Hill[12] Waived Nevada Desert Dogs
Omri Casspi[13] 1-year contract worth $2.1 million Golden State Warriors
Adreian Payne[14] Two-way contract Orlando Magic

References

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