Regardless of how this playoff run ends, I’m really curious about the direction the organization will take under Tim Connelly and Finch’s vision. Recently, I rewatched some games, and the first thing that caught my eye was TJ Shannon’s performance as a big wing when Randle and Gobert were out. He was flying in transition, attacking from the corners, grabbing rebounds — and, most impressively, he was very physical, aggressively attacking matchups.
This is the first must-have trait of a successful small-ball identity: be physical and aggressive when attacking matchups.
IMO Edwards still has a lot of room to grow here if we compare him to guys like SGA, Doncic, or Jokic.
Against LAL, TJ went off after Edwards was ejected. A few of his fast break possessions came directly off defensive rebounds by DDV, who was effectively playing a small-ball big role and initiating the outlet pass. That sequence really stood out to me, considering MIN ranks dead last in transition offense.
This leads to the second must-have small-ball trait: 100% effort on the boards and pushing the break immediately.
Finally, I started thinking about what MIN needs to successfully adopt OKC’s defensive identity. IMO the biggest gap is wing depth and physicality.
OKC’s wings — Dort, JDub, Caruso — are significantly more physical than McDaniels or NAW.
This is why I’m encouraged by the development of Jaylen Clark and TJ Shannon.
I also recently asked about Nique Clifford — a tough, tenacious rebounding guard with developing ball skills. (Other potential targets: Carter Bryant, Adou Thiero.)
As for bigs: I like Maxime Raynaud. (Alternatives: Danny Wolf, Thomas Sorber, Alex Condon, Yaxel Lendeborg, or CMB.)
Drafting both Clifford and Raynaud might not sound sexy, and let’s say this is the floor outcome from the 2025 draft, but in terms of fit and identity, there’s a lot to like.
Klomp wrote:minimus wrote:I saw many comparison for Nique Clifford as Josh Hart thanks of his elite rebounding numbers (9.6RPG). But after watching him, he reminds me of Derrick White. How comfortable you would be drafting him with DET pick considering our logjam at SG position? Can he play SF?
I'd be pretty satisfied with that pick. I think he would be a guy who could work his way quickly into Finch's rotation.
shangrila wrote:Klomp wrote:minimus wrote:I saw many comparison for Nique Clifford as Josh Hart thanks of his elite rebounding numbers (9.6RPG). But after watching him, he reminds me of Derrick White. How comfortable you would be drafting him with DET pick considering our logjam at SG position? Can he play SF?
I'd be pretty satisfied with that pick. I think he would be a guy who could work his way quickly into Finch's rotation.
I like him as a player but the fit just isn't there. Unless either him or TSJ can play the 4 with the idea being to play a Clark-Shannon-Clifford lineup at the 2-3-4 spots.
shangrila wrote:minimus wrote:If Maxime Raynaud is available with 31th pick, would you draft him? My idea behind is that he is french bigman who can learn from Gobert, improve his body (like Garza did). He reminds me Hartenstein, which obviously would be an ideal outcome.
He reminds me more of KAT than Hartenstein.
Similar style as a stretch 5 that can also put the ball on the floor. 3pt% wasn't there this season but he was over 40% last season and his form isn't broken (needs to move his off hand from the top of the ball). Not a great defender, although there's something there just by virtue of being a 7fter.
I think he fits offensively what Finch likes in bigs and as a 7fter with range offers us something we don't currently have. Not sure if he'd be my main target at 31 but if we got him I wouldn't be disappointed.
Basically, by drafting both, MIN could replace Randle with Reid as the PF next to Rudy, and replace Garza with a full-sized stretch 5 backup.
In my opinion, Garza’s biggest issue isn’t defense — it’s the combination of his 27.8% from deep (he often bricks wide open threes) and his lack of passing/playmaking.
Clifford, meanwhile, gives us a big-bodied guard who can rebound, protect the rim, pass, and (hopefully) hit open threes.
Assuming:
- Reid and NAW are re-signed
- Randle is traded
- Conley retires
Then:
- NAW moves from McDaniels’ backup to more of an Edwards/Rob backup
- TJ and Clifford add toughness as backup wings
Playing time and role — compared with OKC:
- Edwards – 34 min | three-level scorer (SGA)
- Gobert – 28 min | drop big (Hartenstein)
- McDaniels – 30 min | weak-side rim protector (JW)
- Clifford/TJ – physical 3&D wings (Dort)
- Clark/NAW – 3&D guards (Caruso)
- Reid – 30 min | stretch 4 & backup 5 (Aaron Wiggins???)
- Dillingham – 20 min | bench scorer (Isaiah Joe)
Rotation:
- Gobert (28) / Raynaud (15) / Reid (5)
- Reid (25) / McDaniels (15) / Minott (5)
- McDaniels (25) / TJ (15) / Clifford (8)
- Edwards (34) / NAW (15) / Clark (9)
- DDV (25) / Dillingham (20) / NAW (3)
As I said, this might be close to the lowest realistic outcome from the 2025 draft. But in my opinion, the highest outcome would be landing Danny Wolf and Adou Thiero. If these guys are as good as advertised, I am happy to give them all Minott, Garza and Miller minutes
- Gobert (28) / Wolf (15) / Reid (5)
- Reid (25) / Thiero (18) / McDaniels (5)
- McDaniels (25) / TJ (15) / Clark (8)
- Edwards (34) / NAW (15) / Clark (9)
- DDV (25) / Dillingham (20) / NAW (3)
This version of the roster could elevate the entire lineup to a new level of physicality, matchup hunting, and positional versatility.