#CrystalBasketball: Ranking the Minnesota Timberwolves for 2019-20

How does every NBA player stack up heading into 2019-20, based solely on the level at which we expect them to play during the upcoming season?

That’s the question NBA Math staff members and a select group of site friends are seeking to address, ranking each and every player in the sport’s premier league on a 1-to-12 scale and then seeing who emerged with the highest averages. The distant past was irrelevant. Long-term potential doesn’t matter. Only what could come to pass in 2019-20 is factored in, assuming health for those currently healthy and full recoveries from those presently injured. For example, Kevin Durant will still be included in this analysis; we just assumed he’d already completed his rehab for the ruptured Achilles and now has that as a prior portion of his overall injury history.

All players were graded on the following scale by each evaluator, and ties between players with identical averages were broken by sorting the scores from best to worst and propping up the men who had the highest mark at any point in the top-down progression:

  1. Shouldn’t Get Minutes
  2. End-of-Bench Pieces
  3. Depth Pieces
  4. High-End Backups
  5. Low-End Starters
  6. Solid Starters
  7. High-End Starters, Non-All-Stars
  8. All-Star Candidates
  9. All-NBA Candidates, Non-MVP Candidates
  10. Lesser MVP Candidates
  11. MVP Frontrunners
  12. Best Player in the League (only one player could earn this grade on each ballot)

Journey with us team by team as we unveil the entirety of these rankings, culminating in a look at every player set to suit up for the 2019-20 campaign.

Today’s featured squad? The Minnesota Timberwolves.

Shouldn’t Get Minutes: 1.00 to 1.49

21. Lindell Wigginton, 1.07 (Not graded after 2018-19)

T19. Kelan Martin, 1.14 (Not graded after 2018-19)

T19. Jordan Murphy, 1.14 (Not graded after 2018-19)

18. Jordan McLaughlin, 1.29 (Not graded after 2018-19)

17. Tyus Battle, 1.36 (Not graded after 2018-19)

16. Jaylen Nowell, 1.36 (Not graded after 2018-19)

End-of-Bench Pieces: 1.50 to 2.49

15. Naz Reid, 1.5 (Not graded after 2018-19)

14. Tyrone Wallace, 2.13 (0.23 down)

13. Keita Bates-Diop, 2.27 (0.09 down)

12. Treveon Graham, 2.4 (0.24 down)

Depth Pieces: 2.50 to 3.49

11. Jordan Bell, 3.07 (0.24 up)

10. Jake Layman, 3.07 (0.47 down)

9. Gorgui Dieng, 3.13 (0.54 down)

8. Shabazz Napier, 3.13 (0.12 down)

High-End Backups: 3.50 to 4.49

7. Jarrett Culver, 3.73 (Not graded after 2018-19)

6. Josh Okogie, 3.8 (0.38 up)

5. Noah Vonleh, 3.93 (0.07 down)

Low-End Starters: 4.50 to 5.49

4. Andrew Wiggins, 4.73 (0.19 up)

3. Jeff Teague, 4.87 (0.37 up)

Solid Starters: 5.50 to 6.49

2. Robert Covington, 6.07 (0.31 down)

High-End Starters: 6.50 to 7.49

None

All-Star Candidates: 7.50 to 8.49

None

All-NBA Candidates: 8.50 to 9.49

  1. Karl-Anthony Towns, 9.47 (0.32 up)

Lesser MVP Candidates: 9.50 to 10.49

None

MVP Frontrunners: 10.50 to 12.00

None

Many thanks to Adam Fromal, Adam Spinella, Andy Bailey, Arjun Baradwaj, Ben Leibowitz, Dan Favale, Eris Spyropoulos, Jacob Bourne, Jordan McGillis, Josh Eberley, Matt Way, Mo Dakhil, Rory Bresail, Ryan Blackburn and Tom Rende for their grading contributions.