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Wolves acquire Adreian Payne from Hawks for 1st-round pick
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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Adreian Payne came to Minnesota on Monday as a seldom-used member of the powerful Atlanta Hawks, languishing on the bench for one of the league's best teams.

When the Hawks left town, Payne stayed behind and now finds himself with an entirely different future on a rebuilding Timberwolves team that should offer a lot more playing time.

The Timberwolves acquired Payne from the Hawks for a protected first-round draft pick on Tuesday, bringing Payne to a team that loved him when he was coming out in the draft.

"We are extremely excited to welcome Adreian to Minnesota," Timberwolves president of basketball operations and coach Flip Saunders said. "Adreian fits the mold of a young, athletic and talented player who we believe will fit in well with our young and talented core. We've liked him for a while and look forward to seeing him grow with us in a Wolves uniform."

The Timberwolves have a trade exception from the Kevin Love trade to Cleveland last summer, so they do not have to send a player back in return. The first-round draft pick the Hawks are getting is lottery protected in 2017.

Moving Payne, a player who wasn't cracking the rotation, also opened up a roster spot for the Hawks, who are believed to be interested in free agent shooting guard Ray Allen as a possibility to bolster the scoring off the bench and also could use a big man to help them on the glass. The Hawks are among the league's worst rebounding teams despite their NBA-best record.

Saunders is close with Michigan State coach Tom Izzo, Payne's college coach. The Timberwolves worked him out before the draft last June, but ultimately passed on him with the 13th pick in favor of UCLA guard Zach LaVine.

The Hawks took Payne with the 15th pick, but a surprising surge this season has offered them little time to let Payne develop in games. Payne has played a total of 19 minutes in three games this season while being buried behind Al Horford, Paul Millsap, Pero Antic and Mike Scott in the Hawks frontcourt.

In Minnesota, he comes to a team that is 11-41 and in last place in the Western Conference. Injuries to Ricky Rubio, Kevin Martin and Nikola Pekovic derailed any hopes they had of being in the playoff mix, so they have turned their focus squarely to the future.

Saunders dealt veteran point guard Mo Williams and guard Troy Daniels to the Charlotte Hornets earlier on Tuesday for Gary Neal and a second-round pick. Veteran power forward Thaddeus Young could be on the trade block as well as the Wolves look to give Payne and Anthony Bennett, the No. 1 overall pick in 2013 who has struggled to find traction in his first two seasons with the Cavs and Wolves, more playing time at the position.

The Wolves also have Rubio back healthy at point guard and promising rookie Andrew Wiggins to build around as they move on from the Love era.