July 21, 2020 

Glen Taylor explores selling Lynx, Timberwolves franchises

Taylor, the Lynx and Timberwolves' majority owner, intends to keep the two franchises "under one house," per The Athletic.

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Glen Taylor has served as the Minnesota Lynx’s majority owner since 2002. Photo credit: NBA Central Twitter Page

Tuesday afternoon was rather momentous for Minnesota basketball fans.

Sportico’s Scott Soshnick reported at 1:17 p.m. that billionaire Glen Taylor had retained The Raine Group to sell the Minnesota Timberwolves franchise.

Soshnick’s article stated Taylor was seeking at least $1.2 billion for the NBA franchise but made no mention of Taylor’s majority ownership of the Minnesota Lynx and whether or not he intended to sell the Minneapolis-based WNBA franchise.

At 4:39 p.m., The Athletic’s Jon Krawczynski tweeted Taylor’s intention to keep the Timberwolves and Lynx “under one house should a sale happen,” and Taylor’s official statement, which mentioned the Lynx, was shared on the Lynx’s official Twitter page at 6:27 p.m.

Taylor also told Krawczynski keeping the two franchises in Minnesota would be a requirement for interested buyers.

Taylor has consistently been under fire for his handling of the Timberwolves, a franchise that has only qualified for the playoffs once in the past 15 seasons. The Athletic’s reporting that soon-to-be NBA Hall of Famer and beloved, former Timberwolf Kevin Garnett has shown interest in exploring a bid to buy the Timberwolves from Taylor has only ignited the fanbase’s excitement to replace Taylor.

https://twitter.com/thedailywolf/status/1285683406366531590

However, the Lynx have seen much more success under Taylor’s ownership.

According to the Lynx’s website, Taylor became the majority owner of the Lynx in 2002 after serving as the Lynx’s operating owner for the previous four seasons of the team’s existence.

Taylor went on to appoint longtime WNBA assistant coach Cheryl Reeve as the Lynx’s head coach during the 2009 offseason, and the Lynx went on to win four championships in the first eight seasons of Reeve’s head coaching career. The Lynx have also qualified for the WNBA playoffs for nine straight seasons.

This is a developing story, and The Next will provide updates to this article as they unfold.

Written by Katie Davidson

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