Timberwolves move up to No. 8, draft Kentucky guard Rob Dillingham
The Timberwolves made a major splash on draft night on Wednesday, moving up to the No. 8 spot to acquire Kentucky freshman guard Rob Dillingham, a source confirmed to the Pioneer Press.
Minnesota made the deal with the Spurs after San Antonio selected Dillingham, and all it cost Minnesota was an unprotected 2031 first-round pick and a pick swap in 2030. Perhaps those picks will prove fruitful for the Spurs, but it’s rare for the No. 8 overall pick — even in a “weak” draft — to be dealt for a pick seven years down the road.
The Wolves even held onto their other first-round selection — No. 27 overall — in Tuesday’s draft.
And for Minnesota, which is about to be shackled by second-apron restrictions from a salary cap blown by — this was a chance to make some form of a big move. That 2031 first-round pick only became available to trade on Wednesday, and basketball boss Tim Connelly held onto it for all of a few hours.
Minnesota now has no first-round picks in odd years until 2033. It cannot trade its 2032 first-round pick as a result of the deal, but that was going to be true regardless because of the apron rules.
So this was the time to take a swing, and Minnesota took it by grabbing Dillingham.
The 19-year-old was a scoring phenom off the bench for the Wildcats last season. He was named the Southeastern Conference’s Sixth Man of the Year after averaging 15.2 points in just 23 minutes per game. He shot 44 percent on 3-pointers and has ability to get to the rim at will with lightning quickness.
In the short term, Dillingham could be the off-the-bench scoring burst that both Connelly and coach Chris Finch crave; it’s a role they hadn’t been able to fill in recent years. Jaylen Nowell was tried in that spot but didn’t work out.
The Wolves’ second unit last season did seem to lack a bit of scoring punch. And in general, Minnesota lacked perimeter playmakers outside of Anthony Edwards and Mike Conley.
Dillingham could fill both of those voids.
The question remains whether Finch will trust him with minutes on a championship contender next season. Minnesota is on the cusp of winning a title. Will Dillingham — who at 164 pounds was easily the slightest player in this draft class — be able to make the transition to defend and decision-make at the highest level to help the Wolves right away?
That remains to be seen. But even if he isn’t a playoff player a year from now, Minnesota had a major question surrounding its point guard of the future after Conley’s playing days are over, with very few ways to fill that void in the future.
Dillingham could grow into that role and will have the opportunity to learn from Conley in the coming years. And at the core of the move, if Dillingham hits in the way Minnesota hopes he will, he can be a high-level impact player in the NBA.