Possible lovely scenario if somehow Harden, Evans, Curry, and Holiday were all there at #6.
1. Clippers - Griffen
2. Grizzlies - Rubio
3. Thunder - Thabeet
4. Kings - Jennings
5. Wizards - Hill
6. Wolves - Curry
7. Warriors - Harden/Evans/Holiday/Flynn???
8. Knicks - Harden/Evans/Holiday
Wolves take Curry and trade him to the Knicks to get our one of the two guys the Warriors pass on. Assuming the Warriors need a big point guard like Evans, we'd get Harden or Holiday. Now I know it's doubtful that the Thunder and Wizards pass on Harden, but play along.

Flynn's rise up the board and lack of interest in defense plays along well with the Warriors passing on one of the guys we want.
I've heard conflicting stories about Mobley's contract being traded, if the new team benefits from the insurance since he actually retired, or not. I think since Jerome James is still "active" that's why teams would benefit from his insurance paid contract, but let's assume Mobley's contract is covered by insurance for his new team.
Trade:
Wolves get: #8(Harden/Evans/Holiday) and Cuttino Mobley
Knicks get: #6(Stephen Curry), Brian Cardinal, and Mark Madsen
Saves the Wolves 50k in cap space, and saves Glen Taylor 80%(???) of Mobley's deal, or $7.6mil. This hopefully entices Taylor to spend money in 2010. This also clears a roster spot for the Wolves. Trade also likely doesn't make us any better, thus no concerns about that Clippers pick.

Knicks do it to get their guy, plus they don't take on any post-2010 salary, so no concern for them.
We could also toss in the #28 pick or a 2nd rounder in order to save the $7.6mil and roster spot, if the Knicks need. Really in the end we get the guy we want, end up paying him less than what we would have if we took him at #6, clear the roster spot, and save a ton of money. Now of course doing that is scary because then we have to live with the Roy situation again if Curry blows up in New York.