Bulls, Wolves make Butler deal

Guard Jimmy Butler (right. will be reunited with former coach Tom Thibodeau after Chicago traded him to Minnesota for guards Zach LaVine and Kris Dunn on Thursday. The Bulls also received Lauri Markkanen, who was drafted No. 7 overall, while the Wolves got No. 16 pick Justin Patton.
Guard Jimmy Butler (right. will be reunited with former coach Tom Thibodeau after Chicago traded him to Minnesota for guards Zach LaVine and Kris Dunn on Thursday. The Bulls also received Lauri Markkanen, who was drafted No. 7 overall, while the Wolves got No. 16 pick Justin Patton.

MINNEAPOLIS -- The long-anticipated reunion between Jimmy Butler and Tom Thibodeau is on.

The Chicago Bulls traded three-time All-Star Jimmy Butler and the 16th overall pick Thursday night to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Zach LaVine, Kris Dunn and the No. 7 overall pick as the Wolves try to finally put an end to a 13-year playoff drought.

The trade brings together Butler and Thibodeau, the Wolves coach and president who coached the Bulls for five seasons before being fired in 2015. Butler gives Thibodeau the tough-minded scorer and hard-nosed defender that he has been searching for to complement a promising core of young talent.

The Wolves paid a price: Besides surrendering the lottery pick, they gave up a rising star in LaVine, who is coming off of a torn ACL and Dunn, last year's No. 5 overall pick.

Butler played for Thibodeau for four seasons in Chicago, developing from an unheralded late first-round draft pick into a perennial All-Star. The two clashed on occasion during their time together and Butler said during the Olympics in Rio last summer that it was "love-hate" relationship.

But he also said that his appreciation for Thibodeau's hard-driving style increased as time went on, especially when the Bulls struggled in their first season under the more player-friendly Fred Hoiberg.

Butler, according to sources close situation, welcomes the move to Minnesota to join his old coach and young talent like Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins.

The Wolves drafted Arizona sharpshooter Lauri Markkanen for the Bulls at No. 7 and the Bulls took Creighton forward Justin Patton at No. 16 for the Wolves. Patton, a 6-11 forward, was the Big East freshman of the year after averaging 12.9 points and 6.1 rebounds last season.

Thibodeau set his sights on bringing Butler to Minnesota as soon as he was hired as team president and coach last summer.

The two sides discussed a trade on draft night last year, nearly reaching a deal that would have included LaVine and Dunn, a player the Bulls were very high on coming out of Providence, for Butler. The deal could not quite be completed and Butler went through a frustrating season with the Bulls, who brought in Dwyane Wade and Rajon Rondo in hopes of squeezing some more immediate success out of the group.

LaVine was having a breakout third season in the league when he tore the ACL in his left knee February. His rehabilitation has gone well, but the injury certainly complicated the Wolves' re-engaging Chicago on Butler. Adding to the difficulty was Dunn's underwhelming first year in Minnesota, which diminished his trade value as well, even in the eyes of the point guard-needy Bulls.

The Wolves were forced to also offer up the No. 7 pick this season to push the deal over the top. But they did receive Chicago's first-round pick in return, offering them an opportunity to continue adding to their depth. The move, and the package they assembled to make it, signal an organization that is desperate to start winning now after 13 consecutive seasons of missing the playoffs.

Butler is not the most accurate three-point shooter, but he averaged career highs in points (23.9), rebounds (6.2) and assists (5.5) in his sixth season. He is also one of the league's top defenders, an absolute necessity for a young team that finished 26th in the league in defensive efficiency last season. He will turn 28 in September, right in the middle of his prime for a team in need of veteran leadership.

The move also represents the first significant steps toward an overhaul for the Bulls, who were eliminated by the Boston Celtics in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs after taking a 2-0 series lead.

Wade opted in for the final year of his contract, but that isn't stopping Chicago from pivoting to a new, younger nucleus that includes LaVine, Dunn, Markkanen and Denzel Valentine.

Wade, 35, could become a buyout candidate as the Bulls go into rebuilding mode.

Sports on 06/23/2017

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