

MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Timberwolves and Julius Randle reached an agreement on a new three-year contract worth $100 million, team sources confirmed Sunday.
The deal keeps the three-time All-Star in Minnesota and came on the last day Randle had to opt in or out of the final year of his deal. Randle’s new deal, which includes a player option on the final season, will begin next season.
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Randle’s agreement comes two days after the Wolves agreed to terms with sixth man Naz Reid on a five-year, $125 million contract. Now the entire starting lineup will return from a team that went to the Western Conference finals last season.
Randle’s acclimation to Minnesota was not an easy one following a surprising trade right before training camp opened. The Wolves acquired him and Donte DiVincenzo for Karl-Anthony Towns, the former No. 1 pick who spent his first nine seasons in Minnesota.
The timing of the trade caught everyone, including Randle, his new teammates and the Wolves fan base, off guard. The Wolves started the season sluggish while they tried to get on the same page, and as Towns flourished early in New York, the fans grew restless. By March, Randle looked much more comfortable playing with Anthony Edwards and Rudy Gobert, and the Wolves took off due in large part to that synergy forming.
“What Julius deserves all the credit for is he realized how he can be most impactful to the team’s success and he really dove into that with his playmaking, with his ability to draw two in the post,” president of basketball operations Tim Connelly said last month. “I thought he was a very underrated isolation defender and his overall toughness and positivity.”
Randle’s statistical output dropped significantly in his first season in Minnesota. He averaged 18.7 points, 7.1 rebounds and 4.7 assists for the Wolves, and it took him months to adjust to a new role as Anthony Edwards’ wing man as opposed to the center point of the New York Knicks offense.
After returning from a groin injury in February, he really found a groove. Settling into a role as a playmaking forward, Randle became the straw that stirred the drink for Edwards and the rest of the offense. The Wolves finished the regular season 17-4 once he came back, helping them avoid the Play-In Tournament and get into the West playoff field as the sixth seed.
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Randle found another level in the first two rounds of the playoffs. Few players in the field were better than Randle was in series victories over the Lakers and Warriors. He averaged 23.9 points on shooting splits of 51/34.5/89 to go with 5.9 rebounds and 5.9 assists. The numbers don’t do justice to his impact. Randle was also very effective defensively and dominated his matchup with Draymond Green in the second round.
Things did not go nearly as well for him against Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals. Randle scored just six points in Game 2 and five points in Game 4, and really struggled in the early going of a Game 5 wipeout that ended Minnesota’s season.
Despite the disappointing conclusion, the Timberwolves and Randle both expressed a desire to continue the relationship. He is one of coach Chris Finch’s favorite players, and the trust the two have built up dates back to their time together in New Orleans. Randle reached the conference finals for the first time in his 11-year career and formed a fast bond with Edwards.
“I will say that I love it here, and this is the most meaningful basketball that I’ve played in my career, and from how the organization has made me feel, from just my teammates and playing with Ant as our leader, I love it,” Randle said at the end of the season. “There’s a lot to be excited about.”
Randle and his family, including wife Kendra, two young sons and a newborn daughter who arrived during the playoffs, also took to Minnesota after spending the previous five seasons in New York. Randle said the pace of life was more their speed, and they enjoyed having more wide open space than they had in the big city.
“I definitely found a comfort level and got used to the cold and blizzards in March and all that different type of stuff,” he said in May. “So it was cool, man, and I enjoyed it, and I’ll probably spend my summer here.”
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With Reid and Randle in place, the Wolves will likely have to say goodbye to their other key free agent. Nickeil Alexander-Walker has likely priced himself out of Minnesota, which is trying to stay under the second apron to avoid repeater penalties on roster construction. Alexander-Walker is expected to land a deal for at least the non-taxpayer midlevel exception, which is too rich for the Wolves to go to and not go over the second apron.
The Wolves do have a few young guards and wings, including Terrence Shannon Jr. and Jaylen Clark, who the team believes are ready to step in and take Alexander-Walker’s minutes should he move on.
(Photo: Bruce Kluckhohn / Imagn Images)
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