The Commercial Appeal

Timberwolv­es pick Towns No. 1

Russell surprise No. 2 by Lakers

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NEW YORK — The Minnesota Timberwolv­es got their man in the middle. The Lakers got a playmaking partner for Kobe Bryant.

Knicks fans just got mad, although not for long.

Minnesota selected Kentucky’s Karl-Anthony Towns with the first pick in the NBA draft on Thursday night, the first of three straight freshmen chosen before New York chose Latvian forward Kristaps Porzingis, triggering loud, long boos from their fans inside Barclays Center.

They were cheering later in the first round when the Knicks acquired the rights to Notre Dame guard Jerian Grant from Atlanta for Tim Hardaway Jr.

Before that, the Timberwolv­es went for a center in their first time owning the No. 1 pick. They added Towns to a young roster featuring Rookie of the Year Andrew Wiggins, who was picked first last year by Cleveland and later dealt to Minnesota in the trade for Kevin Love.

Towns’ selection wasn’t a surprise, though he said he didn’t know until it was announced.

“When Mr. Adam Silver came out, I saw him, and he said, ‘with the No. 1 pick’, I was racing,” said Towns, who was sitting with Kentucky coach John Calipari.

“I told Coach Cal before when he first came out that I was trying to drink the water and I was shaking uncontroll­ably, and I told him, ‘Coach, don’t give me the ball right now for the lastsecond shot. I wouldn’t make it.’ ”

The Los Angeles Lakers then took guard D’Angelo Russell of Ohio State, who was wearing a red jacket, bow tie and shoes that matched the Buckeyes’ school colors.

Russell drew huge cheers when he was announced, but his crowd was dwarfed by Towns’. The New Jersey native said he had more than 50 family and friends in attendance.

“This is home to me,” he said. “Been able to come here and have all my closest friends and love ones come out here. It’s the most special moments in my life.”

The 6-11 Towns averaged 10.3 points and 6.7 rebounds in just 21 minutes per game, as Kentucky used a platoon system in winning its first 38 games and reaching the Final Four.

Towns was Kentucky’s third No. 1 overall pick in the last six years, joining Anthony Davis in 2012 and John Wall in 2010. The Wildcats were hoping to have a record seven players picked and were well on their way when Sacramento took center Willie Cauley-Stein with the sixth pick, Utah grabbed Trey Lyles at No. 12 and guard Devin Booker followed one spot later to Phoenix. They tied the record when Andrew Harrison went 44th to the Suns, who sent him to the Grizzlies for Jon Leuer.

Booker, at 18 the youngest player in the draft, gave the Wildcats a record-tying four players among the top 14 selections. Duke in 1999 and North Carolina in 2005 also had four lottery picks.

“Just shows our team was special. Unlike any other,” Lyles said. “Still got three other guys going to go tonight.”

It was the sixth straight year a freshman was the No. 1 pick.

For weeks, Towns and Duke’s Jahlil Okafor had been considered the top two selections. But the Lakers instead decided on backcourt help with a player who can step in and play alongside Bryant in what could be the superstar’s final season.

“Kobe’s a great dude,” Russell said. “Not knowing how much he has left in the tank is the scary thing. I’m really looking forward to him taking me under his wing if possible and feed me the most knowledge he can and use that as fire against my opponents.”

Okafor fell to the Philadelph­ia 76ers at No. 3, becoming the 19th lottery selection and 29th firstround pick — most in NCAA history — under coach Mike Krzyzewski. Those numbers increased when Miami drafted Justise Winslow 10th.

The Knicks ended the run of one-and-dones when they took Porzingis with the No. 4 pick. The 19-year-old forward had been surging up draft boards, but Knicks fans, who haven’t forgotten the drafting of Frederic Weis and were underwhelm­ed by the acquisitio­n of Andrea Bargnani, wanted no part of him, booing lustily after his name was called by Silver.

“Lot of fans weren’t happy they drafted me,” Porzingis said. “I have to do everything in my hands to turn those booing fans into clapping fans. I was happy about it. Want to be part of this organizati­on. The fans are harsh sometimes, that’s how it is in New York and I’m ready for it.”

Another internatio­nal player followed, as Orlando took Croatian Mario Hezonja at No. 5, and Emmanuel Mudiay, born in Congo, raised in Texas and a profession­al last season in China, went seventh to Denver. Detroit took Arizona’s Stanley Johnson eighth before national player of the year Frank Kaminsky went to Charlotte at No. 9.

The Lakers later added Wyoming’s Larry Nance Jr. with the No. 27 pick, while Boston used its two first-round selections on Terry Rozier of Louisville (16th) and R.J. Hunter of Georgia State (28th).

The NBA champion Golden State Warriors used the 30th and final pick of the first round on UCLA forward Kevon Looney.

The Heat picked Tennessee shooting guard Josh Richardson with the 40th pick.

Richardson was a four-year college player and averaged 16.0 points as a senior for the Volunteers. He shot 36 percent from 3-point range this past season and had some of his best games against ranked teams, averaging 17.5 points in six contests as a senior against teams that were in the AP Top 25.

Richardson was an All-SEC player as a senior and is among Tennessee’s all-time leaders in games played (third, 136), minutes played (ninth, 3,802), games started (ninth, 110), steals (10th, 147), blocks (16th, 88) and scoring (28th, 1,252).

The 6-6, 200-pound Edmond, Okla., native is not guaranteed a contract. He is expected to participat­e in the NBA summer league, where he will try to secure a roster spot.

The 21-year-old is the 46th Vol to be chosen in the NBA draft, and the fourth in five years. Former UT forward Jarnell Stokes and guard Jordan McRae went in the second round last year.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Karl-Anthony Towns, a freshman out of Kentucky, was drafted first overall by the Minnesota Timberwolv­es on Thursday in New York. He goes to a young roster that includes Rookie of the Year Andrew Wiggins.
JULIE JACOBSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS Karl-Anthony Towns, a freshman out of Kentucky, was drafted first overall by the Minnesota Timberwolv­es on Thursday in New York. He goes to a young roster that includes Rookie of the Year Andrew Wiggins.
 ?? KATHY WILLENS
ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kristaps Porzingis wasn’t fazed by booing fans after being selected fourth overall by the New York Knicks. “I’m ready for it,” the Latvian forward said.
KATHY WILLENS ASSOCIATED PRESS Kristaps Porzingis wasn’t fazed by booing fans after being selected fourth overall by the New York Knicks. “I’m ready for it,” the Latvian forward said.

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