Wolves lock up Dosunmu on five-year, $112M deal while shipping Randle to Brooklyn in three-team reshuffle
Minnesota keeps its 26-year-old guard on a five-year, $112M contract while sending Julius Randle and the 28th pick to Brooklyn as part of a three-team trade agreed hours apart on draft-eve.
The Minnesota Timberwolves spent the hours before Tuesday's NBA draft re-making their roster on two fronts. Guard Ayo Dosunmu, 26, intends to sign a five-year, $112 million contract to return to Minnesota, with a player option in the fifth season, according to multiple reports published early on 23 June 2026. Hours earlier, the franchise had agreed to send forward Julius Randle and the No. 28 pick to the Brooklyn Nets as part of a three-team trade, sources told ESPN's Shams Charania.
The twin moves amount to a clear signal of intent from a Wolves front office that has spent two seasons trying to build a contender around Anthony Edwards. They are paying to keep a young, ascending guard who arrived in Minnesota as a second-round pick out of Illinois, and they are using Randle's expiring money to free the cap space and roster slot needed to do it.
The Dosunmu deal, in numbers
The reported structure — five years, $112 million, with a player option in year five — is the kind of bridge contract that lets a franchise buy out a player's prime years without surrendering all future flexibility. The fifth-year option is the load-bearing clause. If Dosunmu continues to develop into the kind of secondary creator who can take the offensive load off Edwards in playoff minutes, Minnesota holds a bargain. If he plateaus, he becomes a movable chip at 30 rather than 31.
For Dosunmu, the deal represents the largest contract of a career that started quietly. He was a second-round selection out of Illinois, spent his first four seasons in Chicago establishing himself as a combo guard capable of running a second unit, and landed in Minnesota as a complementary piece. The new contract reflects a market that has decided he is now a foundational one.
The Randle-Nets side of the ledger
The trade that sent Julius Randle and the 28th overall pick to Brooklyn was reported by ESPN at 03:22 UTC on 23 June 2026 as part of a three-team arrangement, with the third club not named in the initial reporting. The mechanics matter: Randle's contract gave Minnesota a sizeable outgoing salary line to balance, and moving it to Brooklyn — a franchise in asset-acquisition mode under its current front office — produces the cap relief required to absorb Dosunmu's new money and any further roster moves Minnesota has planned for the opening of free agency.
The 28th pick itself is also a currency. With the draft still hours away at the time of the ESPN report, the Wolves had effectively converted a lottery-adjacent selection into the room needed to retain a player they would rather build around going forward than a forward on an expiring deal.
What the framing leaves out
The official line on these moves will be straightforward roster maths: keep the young guard, move the older forward, free the cap space. That framing is mostly right. But it leaves two structural questions unaddressed.
The first is whether the Wolves' 2025-26 playoff run — and the second-round ceiling it appears to have established around Edwards — has put enough pressure on the front office to pay a premium now rather than wait. Extensions signed before a player's first All-NBA selection tend to be cheaper; extensions signed after are not. The reported $112 million figure sits at the upper end of what a second-round pick of Dosunmu's profile might have commanded twelve months ago, and at the lower end of what he might fetch if he makes an All-Star team in 2026-27.
The second is what the three-team structure says about Brooklyn's position. A team taking on Randle's money and acquiring a late first-round pick is a team that believes draft equity is mispriced in 2026. Whether that belief is correct will depend on the rookie scale and on the Nets' ability to convert the 28th pick into a rotation player — a track record on which the franchise's recent history is, to put it gently, mixed.
The structural read
The two moves together describe a small-market franchise that has decided it is closer to contention than the league's consensus pricing implies. Retaining Dosunmu and clearing Randle at the same moment — hours before the draft, in the middle of a soft free-agent market — is the kind of sequencing that only works if the front office is confident in its valuation of its own roster. The risk is straightforward: if Edwards misses time, or if the Wolves' supporting cast around him thins, Minnesota will have committed five years and $112 million to a player whose ceiling is still a matter of projection rather than proof.
The broader NBA read is more cyclical. Around the league, the draft-eve window is when teams with cap space convert it into picks, and teams with picks convert them into flexibility. The Wolves just did both at once, which is unusual only in that they managed it without surrendering a meaningful future asset. Whether the price they ultimately paid was the fifth-year player option is a question the next three seasons will answer.
How Monexus framed this vs the wire: the trade and the extension were reported as two separate ESPN scoops hours apart. Monexus reads them as a single transaction — the cap relief from the Randle deal is the precondition for the Dosunmu contract — and has sequenced the piece accordingly.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayo_Dosunmu
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_Randle
