Alright, I’m calling it right now. The 4–3 Minnesota Timberwolves, which haven’t been to the postseason since Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant, and the Lakers eliminated them in the 2004 conference finals, are soon going to have the NBA’s best 1–2 punch since those same Lakers won three straight titles from 2000 to 2002.
Timberwolves small forward Andrew Wiggins—the first overall pick of the 2014 draft—and center Karl-Anthony Towns—the first overall pick of last June’s draft—are both very special players. Both are two-way stars that should soon be locks for future All-Star teams as well as inclusion on the exclusive All-NBA teams. That Minnesota has both of them—neither of which are old enough to drink yet—is almost unfair.
Could they eventually both land on the league’s All-NBA first team like O'Neal and Bryant did three straight years from 2002 to 2004? Only time will tell, but they look like a good bet going forward.
Wiggins’s defense has been ahead of his offense since joining the league, yet he’s putting up 19.8 points per game through 6 games this year after averaging 16.9 last season. His all-around defense on the perimeter and his highlight dunks on the other end are the reason the Timberwolves were willing to deal Kevin Love in a trade for him—a deal that looks better with each passing game.
Towns has only played six NBA games, but the 7-foot center has made quite the impact, averaging 16.0 points, 10.4 rebounds, and 3.0 blocks per game thus far. His two-way production is a continuation from his year at Kentucky where he generally dominated the lane—at both ends of the court—in leading the Wildcats to a 38–1 record.