Jaden McDaniels is heading into a season that could push his game even further, and one Timberwolves assistant coach sounds convinced the wing is ready for more.
James “Flight” White, who has been a player development assistant coach for Minnesota since last season, spoke about McDaniels when Andrew Dukowitz of Zone Coverage asked him about the forward’s outlook.
“I’m super excited, I mean he’s been waiting on this,” White said. “We talk about it all the time, just having a bigger role, and I think he’s ready, he’ll be ready.
He’s working hard, getting back in the groove. He’ll be ready, he’ll be ready for any role they need him to take.”
That kind of confidence only adds to the growing buzz around McDaniels entering the new season. Timberwolves president of basketball operations Tim Connelly already said earlier this offseason that he believes McDaniels has another gear to reach, and White’s comments fit right into that same line of thinking.
McDaniels’ path to a bigger offensive role looked a little different a short time ago. For a brief stretch, it appeared he might become Minnesota’s second scoring option after Julius Randle was traded to the Brooklyn Nets. That picture changed once the Timberwolves later traded for LaMelo Ball.
Even with Ball and Anthony Edwards expected to command plenty of shots, McDaniels still has room to grow on that end. In 2025-26, his sixth NBA season, he posted his best scoring year yet, averaging a career-high 14.8 points while also setting personal bests with 51.5 percent shooting from the field, 41.2 percent from 3-point range, and 83.5 percent at the foul line.
And he did it without a true lead guard next to him in the starting lineup. Ball has always been a shot-heavy player, though he was less so with what was probably the most talented Charlotte Hornets team he’d been part of last season. Now he’s set to help steer a more explosive offense in Minnesota, which should open more clean looks for McDaniels if he keeps running the floor.
That fits with the way McDaniels has been talked about all offseason. He’s discussed wanting a larger role, and there’s little reason to think he isn’t ready for it. Confidence has never been the issue, either, as shown by his trash-talking about the defense of most of the Denver Nuggets’ key players.
At 26 years old for the entirety of the 2026-27 season, McDaniels still looks like a player with more room to climb. With Ball now in the mix, the Timberwolves may have the setup to help him keep rising into a true two-way force.
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