The Rudy Gobert trade has long been one of the defining moves of Tim Connelly’s run with the Minnesota Timberwolves, and on the surface it still looks like a deal that delivered. Gobert has been a central piece for a Wolves team that reached the Western Conference Finals in back-to-back seasons and got out of the first round in three of the four seasons since he arrived.
But the Utah Jazz may have just changed the conversation.
On Wednesday, Utah completed a sign-and-trade with the Los Angeles Lakers that sent Walker Kessler to Los Angeles for a package that includes unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033, plus two first-round pick swaps, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania. Kessler is set to sign a four-year, $130 million deal with the Lakers as part of the transaction.
That return gives the Jazz a fresh twist in the fallout from the 2022 Gobert deal, and it may be the piece that lets Utah claim a late edge in a trade Minnesota has spent years trying to justify.
When the Timberwolves landed Gobert, they gave up Malik Beasley, Patrick Beverley, Leandro Bolmaro, Jarred Vanderbilt and Walker Kessler, along with unprotected first-round picks in 2023, 2025 and 2027, a 2026 first-round pick swap and a top-five protected first-round pick in 2029.
Minnesota also wound up with Mike Conley and Nickeil Alexander-Walker as part of the larger chain of moves, since Beasley and Vanderbilt were included in the three-team D’Angelo Russell trade in 2023.
For Minnesota, the results have been hard to dismiss. This is the franchise’s best stretch of success since Kevin Garnett was in town, and Gobert has been a major reason why. Still, Utah’s side of the ledger is looking stronger by the day.
Beverley and Bolmaro are out of the NBA. Beasley was indicted on federal charges tied to a betting scheme involving player props.
Vanderbilt played only 52 games for Utah before moving on. Kessler, meanwhile, put up 9.5 points and 9.3 rebounds across his four seasons with the Jazz.
The 2023 first-round pick that went to Utah also brought back Keyonte George, who is described as an emerging player. Even so, the Jazz may have found a better path than simply keeping Kessler and hoping for steady value. By turning him into a haul that includes two unprotected first-round picks, Utah has a chance to build something much bigger.
That matters in a league where the current collective bargaining agreement has made draft capital more valuable than ever, especially for teams dealing with apron restrictions. The Jazz can use those picks to add inexpensive talent, or they can package them in pursuit of a star. Utah has already moved some of its draft capital in the Jaren Jackson Jr. trade.
And because Utah is not a free-agent destination, the draft and the trade market may be the only realistic routes to landing another star if the Jazz don’t develop one themselves. If that happens, this whole deal starts to look very different.
It still may not be enough to convince Wolves fans that the Gobert trade was a bust, even if Minnesota eventually moves him in the next couple of seasons. But it does give Utah a new angle - and it adds another layer to a blockbuster that will keep unfolding over the next few years.
In Other News...
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Now Sam Amick of The Athletic has added another layer by reporting that the Wolves have at least been part of the broader conversation around LeBron James. It is the kind of idea that would have seemed far-fetched not long ago, and it remains very much in rumor territory, but Minnesota suddenly finds itself mentioned in a place reserved for teams with real ambitions and a willingness to swing big. [Read more 🡒]
Mike Conley Exit Leaves Wolves Losing More Than A Guard
Mike Conleys time in Minnesota gave the Timberwolves more than steady point guard play. Over 3.5 seasons, he brought organization, poise and a veteran presence that helped stabilize a roster built around Anthony Edwards and, more recently, LaMelo Ball. For a team that has valued continuity in the backcourt, losing Conley is about more than replacing minutes.
It also leaves the Wolves looking for another layer of depth behind their top guards, a need that becomes tougher when one of the leagues most reliable veterans is no longer in the mix. Conley is also set to join a remarkably small group by reaching 20 NBA seasons, a reminder that his next chapter is part of a career arc Minnesota got to see up close for a significant stretch. [Read more 🡒]
