On January 12, 1984, Minnesota governor Rudy Perpich assembled a 30-member panel led by legendary Minneapolis Lakers center George Mikan to bring NBA basketball back to the state. (The Minneapolis Lakers had moved to Los Angeles, California, in 1960.) After attempts to purchase the Milwaukee Bucks, San Antonio Spurs, and Utah Jazz failed, the NBA awarded Minnesota a new franchise in 1987.
In 1989, the Timberwolves arrived in Minnesota. In 1989 the Timberwolves began their first season. Minnesota's first-ever draft pick was Jerome 'Pooh' Richardson, who went on to be named to the NBA All-Rookie First Team in 1989-90. The Timberwolves finished the season with 22 wins and 60 losses, which was the best record that year among the NBA's four recent expansion clubs. The team posted a seven-game improvement in its second year, but a league-record four straight seasons of 60 or more losses followed from 1991-92 through 1994-95.
Although the team was short on success during the early 1990s, individual achievement was not as rare. Christian Laettner, college player of the year at Duke University and the first collegian ever to start in four National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Final Fours, made the All-Rookie First Team in 1992-93. Also that season, guard Micheal Williams made 84 consecutive foul shots to break Calvin Murphy's 12-year-old NBA record. Williams's .907 free-throw percentage that year set a Timberwolves record. A year later, Isaiah Rider was named to the All-Rookie First Team and won the NBA Slam-Dunk Championship at the All-Star Weekend in Minneapolis.
After going 21-61 in 1994-95, the team named former Boston Celtics star Kevin McHale to replace a retiring Jack McCloskey as vice president of basketball operations. In 1996-97 the Timberwolves made the playoffs for the first time, and in the late 1990s forward Kevin Garnett emerged as one of the NBA's best all-around players.