Julius Randle sounds pretty happy about Knicks trading him to Timberwolves: ‘A breath of fresh air’

As everyone is talking about Karl-Anthony Towns heading to the Knicks and what that means for New York as a title contender, there was, in fact, another part of this trade that isn’t getting nearly as much ink. Donte DiVincenzo and Julius Randle are now with the Minnesota Timberwolves — and the latter, who made three All-Star teams and one All-NBA team over the last four seasons, sounds happy to be out of New York. 

“You want to be somewhere where you feel wanted. I feel wanted here,” Randle said at his introductory press conference in Minnesota on Thursday, via ESPN. “At this point in my career, I’ve accomplished a lot of great things on an individual level, but I want to win a championship. This is a perfect opportunity to do that. … [The trade] was a breath of fresh air.”

To Randle’s point, he enjoyed tremendous individual success in New York, where he helped lead the Knicks to three playoff berths after six straight absences and a 17- and 29-win season in the two years preceding his arrival. During his three best years in New York, he averaged better than 23 points and 10 rebounds, and he did so despite seeing constant double teams and driving lanes that were clogged with cheating defenders entirely unconcerned with non-shooters like Elfrid Payton, R.J Barrett and Derrick Rose. 

Randle was overtasked as a No. 1 option. He made the best of it and showed up nearly every single night, playing in over 89% of Knicks games from 2020-23, but because he was, by default, the top guy, he was also the one who took the worst of the backlash when things didn’t go well. You can understand why he would feel something of a pressure release coming to Minnesota, where he can be the secondary option that he was always better suited to be without the New York fans and media breathing down his neck. 

To be fair, Randle did not play well in the biggest moments for the Knicks, and he was far from the perfect player in general. He was a ball-stopper and sporadically engaged defender. His limitations as a go-to guy showed up in the first round…

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