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There is a particular kind of player NBA fans turn on. Not the lazy ones. Not the selfish ones. The ones who tease you. The ones who, for three possessions, look like they could bulldoze their way through a playoff game, only to spend the next eight minutes drifting around the perimeter, spinning into traffic or staring at a defensive rotation a half-second too late.
Julius Randle has become that player in Minnesota. And now, after another ugly postseason showing for the Minnesota Timberwolves, the frustration has curdled into something harsher. Wolves fans are not just criticizing Randle anymore. They are exhausted by him. The missed rotations. The stalled possessions. The body language. The way every bad playoff game seems to collapse inward around him like a sinkhole.
The numbers are difficult to defend. In Minnesota’s first-round playoff series, Randle averaged 15.5 points while shooting 43% from the field and 30% from three. In the second round against San Antonio, things became uglier. His game six performance, three points in under 24 minutes during a season-ending blowout, felt less like a bad night and more like a final public unraveling.
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And yet the anger surrounding him has become so loud that it risks flattening the truth. Because Randle is not a useless player. He is an overextended one. That distinction matters.
At his best, Randle is still one of the league’s most physically overwhelming forwards: 250 pounds of left-handed force, capable of grabbing a rebound, pushing the break himself, and collapsing a defense before it can organize. During the regular season, he averaged 21.1 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 5 assists per game. There are nights where the game still bends around him. Nights where he barrels into smaller defenders and looks like an All-NBA player for six-minute stretches.
That is the trap of Julius Randle. The flashes are real enough to convince organizations they can build around them. The NBA has spent a decade trying to solve the riddle of who Randle actually is. With the Los Angeles Lakers, he was raw potential. With the New Orleans Pelicans, under assistant coach Chris Finch, he evolved into a more dynamic offensive player, posting what was then the best season of his career. With the New York Knicks, he became both savior and scapegoat, dragging a starving franchise back into relevance before eventually becoming the symbol of its ceiling.
From 2025: Seems apologies are due to the Timberwolves leadership and Julius Randle
Minnesota inherited all of it. The power. The volatility. The history. And Finch, more than anyone in the organization, believed he could make it work. Their relationship matters more than most fans realize. Finch coached Randle during his breakout year in New Orleans and has repeatedly defended him publicly in Minnesota, even as criticism mounted. Randle himself admitted earlier this season that Finch’s support “means everything” to him. There is trust there. Familiarity. Finch understands the emotional machinery of Randle’s game better than most coaches ever have.
That relationship is likely one reason Randle’s role remained so large even while his playoff inconsistencies became impossible to ignore. Because Finch sees the version of Randle that still occasionally appears: the bruising downhill scorer, the secondary playmaker who can relieve pressure from Anthony Edwards, the veteran capable of carrying offensive possessions when Minnesota’s spacing dies.
But playoff basketball is cruel to players like Randle. The postseason strips away ambiguity. Weaknesses stop hiding. Every possession becomes a stress test. And Randle’s flaws: his tendency to stop the ball, his inconsistent defensive engagement, and his reliance on difficult isolation scoring become louder under playoff lighting.
That does not mean the hatred is entirely fair. There is a strange dishonesty in the way fans discuss Randle now, as if he arrived in Minnesota pretending to be a franchise cornerstone. He did not hand himself the contract. He did not trade himself for Karl-Anthony Towns. He did not decide he should become the second-most important offensive player on a contender. NBA teams saw those flashes of dominance and projected something larger onto him.
Randle’s career has often been a story of expectation outgrowing reality. He is not a superstar. He probably never was. But he has spent years being paid, marketed and utilized like one because the league is addicted to size, scoring, and the illusion of self-created offense.
And to his credit, he plays hard more often than people admit. Teammates and coaches consistently speak highly of him. Off the court, he has built a reputation as a grounded family man, someone deeply involved with his wife and children and intentional about maintaining structure away from basketball. In a recent interview with GQ, Randle spoke openly about fatherhood, mental clarity and trying to build healthier habits as he ages. There is maturity there that rarely gets acknowledged once playoff narratives harden.
From 2025: Julius Randle proving his worth in the Minnesota Timberwolves playoff run
But professionalism does not erase basketball reality. At this point, Randle feels less like a solution and more like a weight the Timberwolves are dragging uphill. Minnesota’s future belongs to Edwards, with his pace, explosiveness, and improvisational style. The Wolves are at their best when the floor is open, when the ball moves quickly, when chaos works in their favor. Too often, Randle slows that ecosystem down. Possessions become sticky. Defensive energy dips. Momentum leaks out of the building.
And perhaps the harshest truth is this: the Timberwolves do not need Randle to be terrible for him to be the wrong fit. They just need him to be limited. Which he increasingly is.
So yes, Wolves fans are justified in wanting change. The frustration is earned. The playoff tape exists forever. But turning Randle into some villain misses the point entirely. He is not the reason Minnesota failed on his own, just the clearest symbol of a roster that still does not fully fit together.
Julius Randle remains what he has always been: a player talented enough to convince you, flawed enough to break your heart and human enough that the pile-on eventually starts to feel excessive. The problem is not that fans expected too little from him. It is that the NBA convinced everybody to expect too much.
Juan Miquel Adams, a student journalist at St. Paul Academy and Summit School, is a senior who will be attending Boston College in the fall.

