Mike Conley is glad he could come back to the Timberwolves, even if his playing time will be minimal
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) β Mike Conley reunited with the Minnesota Timberwolves this week as if he hadn't ever left. That's about right, because he was barely gone.
The 38-year-old point guard was back at Target Center with the Timberwolves on Friday when they hosted the Dallas Mavericks, their first game after the All-Star break. Conley was off the roster for a mere two weeks, having been traded to the Chicago Bulls on Feb. 3, sent to the Charlotte Hornets on Feb. 4, and waived on Feb. 5.
He re-signed on Tuesday with the Timberwolves, whose maneuvering made it possible to cut about $20 million off their luxury tax bill, move below the first apron to gain the flexibility to acquire Ayo Dosunmu, and bring back the revered Conley on a prorated minimum contract. Though he briefly left the official text message thread with practice times and other logistics, Conley stayed in the players-only group chat.
βThe two weeks off, that was great. The first two days off, it wasnβt so great. It was a lot of β I call it β stress, but itβs a little crazy,β Conley said after practice on Thursday. βBut after that, once I heard that Iβd be bought out and be a free agent, I was like, 'Man, I wonβt have to come to work. Like, I donβt have to do a dang thing. Stay-at-home-dad for a few days, got out to go on All-Star break a little early, got to enjoy some time with the family.β
Timberwolves coach Chris Finch joked that Conley's absence left the team lost, because the 19th-year veteran usually leads the breakout from post-practice or in-game huddles with the, βOne, two, three, Wolves!β chant.
βWe had a few of those quiet moments,β Finch said, before transitioning his quip to praise. βHonestly, he's meant so much to us. We donβt have the success that weβve had without him. Itβs great to have him back for all the reasons β the leadership and the maturity and the experience that he brings. So fortunate.β
For the first time in his career, Conley had found himself in a reserve role before the trade, his on-court value diminishing even if the overall benefit of his presence has continued to be appreciated throughout the organization. Averaging just 18.4 minutes per game this season, Conley fully realizes his playing time down the stretch will be even less with the arrival of Dosunmu and the emergence of Bones Hyland. Jaylen Clark and a now-healthy Terrence Shannon are in the mix for backup guard minutes.
βAll these guys have earned their time and minutes on the court to get their opportunities and do what they do. Iβm going to be ready and be prepared for whatever role that is, whether itβs in the rotation or spotty, whatever it is. Iβm just thankful to be back around these guys,β Conley said.
As the Timberwolves reached the Western Conference finals in each of the last two years, players mentioned how badly they wanted to win for Conley, a four-time winner of the NBA Sportsmanship Award and a two-time teammate of the year honoree by the league. He's glad to get one more run at a title with this group, no matter his level of contribution over the next few months. The fact they're 149-92 in the regular season with him on the roster with four playoff series victories can't be discounted.
βItβd have been really unfulfilling not to be able to be a part of whatever happens, whether we win, lose or not,β he said, adding: βThis would be really awkward for me to go somewhere else, and have to leave that behind, you know? I kind of go all in wherever Iβm at.β
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