Uncommon Knowledge
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Veteran NBA forward T.J. Warren has just inked a second 10-day contract with the Minnesota Timberwolves, the team announced in a press release. The deal will keep him in Minnesota through March 25th. Warren was initially added on his first 10-day deal earlier this month, as essentially an emergency rotation addition to help cushion the blow of losing All-Star Minnesota power forward Karl-Anthony Towns.
On Tuesday, Towns went under the knife to address a torn lateral meniscus in his left knee. Per an earlier Timberwolves press statement, the seven-footer out of Kentucky was expected to have the knee reappraised four weeks from the initial procedure. Though he will not be back in time for this final stretch of Minnesota’s regular season, the wording of the statement seems to indicate that there’s a chance he is back when the club heads into the playoffs.
At 45-21, the Timberwolves are currently the third seed in the Western Conference. The club is currently just 1.5 contests behind the top-seeded Denver Nuggets (47-20), and just one full game behind the 46-20 Oklahoma City Thunder, the West’s second seed. Warren has been a key part of the club’s frontcourt rotation off the bench. Big man Naz Reid has been brought in as the Timberwolves’ KAT replacement in their first five.
He was dusted off by the Timberwolves this month after not being able to find a landing place at any other time this season. The 6’8″ North Carolina State product, still just 30, was selected at the end of the NBA draft lottery in 2014 by the Phoenix Suns, with the No. 14 pick. He developed into a prolific scorer by his fourth season with Phoenix. Across 65 contests in 2017-18, he averaged 19.6 points on 49.8% shooting from the floor, 5.1 rebounds, 1.3 assists, one steal and 0.6 blocks. Warren finished among the top 25 vote-getters league-wide for Most Improved Player honors.
Warren was flipped from Phoenix to the Indiana Pacers in the summer of 2019 for cash. He continued his high-scoring tear with Indiana. Warren evolved into being a lethal three-level scorer during that first Pacers season, averaging a career-most 19.8 points on .536/.403/.819 shooting splits, 4.2 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.2 steals and 0.5 blocks per bout across 67 contests (out of 73 during a pandemic-abbreviated season). The emergent wing was honored on the NBA’s All-Bubble First Team while averaging 31 points in eight bubble contests during the season’s 2020 COVID-19 era Orlando Disneyworld restart.
That’s when the trouble started. Warren has been beset by the injury bug for several years. He incurred a left navicular stress fracture that required surgery early in the 2020-21 season, missing all but four games across the ensuing two seasons. He joined a star-laden Brooklyn Nets squad, led by Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving, on a one-year, veteran’s minimum deal in 2022, and was flipped back to the Suns as part of the Durant trade near that season’s deadline.
Post-injury, Warren may never be the explosive athlete and dynamic scorer he was just a few years ago, but in limited minutes it seems like he can still contribute to a winning program. In his four bouts with Minnesota thus far this year, Warren is averaging 4.8 points on 47.4% shooting from the floor, two rebounds and 0.8 dimes a night. His new deal will carry him through the club’s next five games. If Minnesota wants to keep him around after this agreement expires, it will need to sign him to a rest-of-season contract.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
ST. PAUL – The Minnesota Office of Cannabis Management and
Gov. Tim Walz
recently announced the signing of a cannabis cooperative agreement with
Red Lake Nation.
According to a release, the agreement outlines how the state of Minnesota and Red Lake Nation will protect the public health, safety and well-being of all Minnesotans regarding adult-use cannabis and supports Red Lake Nation’s tribal sovereignty, cultural identity and heritage.
“This partnership opens a new outlet for state-licensed cannabis businesses to access and sell legal cannabis and honors the independence of the members of the Red Lake Band,” OCM Executive Director Eric Taubel said in the release. “We look forward to their cooperation in bringing more cannabis supply to the state and seeing their cannabis operations develop and thrive while respecting the Red Lake Band’s autonomy.”
In Minnesota’s cannabis law, the legislature directed Walz to negotiate intergovernmental agreements with tribal nations sharing territory with Minnesota to strengthen public health and safety, secure an equitable and well-regulated cannabis market, and provide financial benefits to both the state and tribal nations.
Red Lake’s NativeCare dispensary
was the first in the state to sell legal, adult-use cannabis after the law legalizing cannabis took effect in August 2023. With this agreement in place, Red Lake is able to collaborate with state-licensed cannabis businesses and create partnerships.
“Our goal from the beginning has been to produce the highest quality cannabis products that are free of all toxins and impurities. Consistent testing has verified that we have reached our goal,” Red Lake Nation Chair Darrell Seki Sr. said in the release. “Now that our cooperative agreement with the state has been finalized, we are looking forward to sharing our top-shelf products with the Minnesota market.”
Compact negotiations continue between the state and tribal nations sharing territory with the state of Minnesota. To date, the state has signed compacts with White Earth Nation, Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, Prairie Island Indian Community, Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa and Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe.
The state expects to announce additional tribal-state cannabis agreements soon.
Copies of signed, executed tribal-state cannabis compacts and cooperative agreements can be found on
OCM’s website.
The former NFL sideline reporter has met with top Republican committees as she weighs a 2026 bid and a rare GOP pickup attempt in Minnesota.
Michele Tafoya, the former NFL sideline reporter turned political analyst, is considering a run for the United States Senate in her current home state of Minnesota, OutKick has learned. Sources familiar with the situation say she is expected to make a final decision in early 2026.
Tafoya met with the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), Senate Leadership Fund, and other stakeholders in Washington, D.C. last week. The NRSC has been recruiting her to run for the Senate race in Minnesota, where the Democratic primary has pitted progressive favorite Peggy Flanagan against Chuck Schumer-backed Angie Craig.
Tafoya gave up her NBC career so she could speak more openly about her conservative political beliefs. The breaking point for Tafoya at the media giant came in December 2021 when she appeared on “The View” and served as the conservative panelist. The rest of the cast on the show supported Colin Kaepernick’s national anthem protest, and his assertion that the NFL resembled the slave trade, while Tafoya raised some important counterpoints.
“I’ve been covering the NFL for 25 years,” Tafoya said at the time. “Nobody forces these guys to play. I thought comparing it to the slave trade was a little rough. These guys enter willingly, they are the most well cared for people. Yes, they play a hard sport. And every one of them — black, white, Latino, whoever’s playing the sport — will tell you how much they love it, and they’re willing to do it, and they make a damn good living.”
Former NFL reporter Michele Tafoya is weighing a Minnesota U.S. Senate bid after meetings with GOP groups, with a final decision expected early next year.
(Charles LeClaire/USA TODAY Sports via Imagn Images)
Tafoya nnounced in February 2022 that she wanted to pursue other career opportunities. Shortly after, she became the co-chair for Republican Minnesota gubernatorial candidate Kendall Qualls when he ran against Tim Walz in 2022.
Since then, Tafoya has become more active politically, particularly in Minnesota. Tafoya has taken Walz and Rep. Ilhan Omar to task many times over their policies and rhetoric. Most recently, Tafoya has railed against a $1 billion fraud scheme in Minnesota that she linked to Walz and Omar.
Tafoya grew up in California and attended UC Berkeley for her undergraduate degree and USC for her master’s degree. She moved to Minnesota after graduation to pursue a career in sports broadcasting and has lived in the state since.
According to sources familiar with the situation, Tafoya has been receiving calls from supporters in Minnesota encouraging her to run, and she’s had ongoing conversations with South Carolina Sen. and NRSC Chairman, Tim Scott.
Minnesota hasn’t had a Republican senator since Norm Coleman, who left office in January 2009. Should Tafoya choose to run, she’d look to reverse a trend that has continued for over 15 years.
After a frigid weekend, Monday will bring warmer temperatures across Minnesota.
In the Twin Cities, highs will climb into the mid-20s under brighter skies. Temperatures will continue rising on Tuesday, briefly reaching the upper 30s.
A weak system Tuesday night will cool things slightly, but conditions will stay quiet. Wednesday mostly stays mild, but a mix of rain and snow may develop late and continue into Thursday.
Cooler, more seasonable air returns heading into next weekend.
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