Who is Karl-Anthony Towns’ girlfriend? Meet Jordyn Woods and see photos over the years.

A look back at photos of the model and the Knicks star.

Karl-Anthony Towns and Jordyn Woods have known each other a long time, but it wasn’t until 2020 that they actually got together as a couple.

Per People, they were friends … and then they were more than friends during the COVID-19 pandemic. They were Instagram official in September of 2020, and ever since then, we’ve seen her courtside at games and they’ve posted about each other on social media ever since.

As the New York Knicks star continues to produce in the NBA, let’s take a look back at some of their most adorable moments on Instagram that we’ve seen so far in their relationship:

https://www.instagram.com/p/CFn4eNMlmVB/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=fe6e6fb5-c496-4d86-8d6d-35032880708e

https://www.instagram.com/p/C3twGMEt-Uv/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/p/C3wJhGlN27q/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/p/CoqOaIbu8F5/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/p/CtzCyeYumiX/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cxjd5Gksxhp/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/p/C3W51o3O98f/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/p/C7MaqZCrxtV/?hl=en

Donte DiVincenzo had a heated argument with Knicks coach Rick Brunson after reunion game

Donte DiVincenzo is still so bitter with the Knicks.

Sunday night was the first time that Donte DiVincenzo faced his old team, the New York Knicks, after being thrown into the shocking Karl-Anthony Towns trade. And let me tell you, DiVincenzo, now with the Minnesota Timberwolves, did not seem remotely interested in holding back any ill feelings over his life being uprooted just days before Knicks training camp.

It started with DiVincenzo appearing to trash-talk Tom Thibodeau while shooting free throws. The guard was seen jawing at Thibodeau, with some incorrectly assuming it was about his trade from New York.

As DiVincenzo clarified after the game, he was actually rhetorically asking Thibodeau about whether he could finish at the rim, a criticism he apparently heard during his Knicks stint:

But the real incident — where DiVincenzo said he was NOT joking — came with assistant coach Rick Brunson, the father of Knicks star Jalen Brunson.

DiVincenzo and Brunson were caught in a heated argument on the postgame court where they actually had to be separated by other Timberwolves and Knicks players. It was not clear what was said between them:

Whatever happened here, it sure seems like we have the early makings of a tasty interconference rivalry. The Knicks will visit DiVincenzo’s Timberwolves again in late December.

We better get our popcorn ready, folks.

The Knicks exploiting this hilarious loophole in the NBA’s CBA has the league seething

The NBA reportedly isn’t happy about this, but the league has to respect the audacity.

The New York Knicks’ front office is running circles around everyone else this summer. There’s no debating that.

We know that the Knicks created arguably the most unique trade in NBA history to get the deal done. New York had to get a bit of help from FIBA and a EuroLeague team to make sure the deal happened.

But that’s not the only unique solution the Knicks came up with to land Towns. I’d argue that it’s not even the most unique.

The Knicks exploited a pretty hilarious loophole in the NBA’s new punitive collective bargaining agreement to complete the deal.

The Knicks were apparently in a position where the team couldn’t aggregate veteran minimum contracts to balance salaries out in a trade, according to The Athletic’s Fred Katz. But the Knicks needed to do so to avoid trading key rotational players in the deal.

So what did Leon Rose and his cap guru, Brock Aller, do to get around this problem? They paid Duane Washington Jr., DaQuan Jeffries and Charlie Brown Jr. just $1 more than the veteran minimum to make the deal work.

A. Single. Dollar. Just one. This is insane.

This is officially the most video game-y trade in NBA history. The Knicks literally took every penny into consideration with this one. This is hilarious. It’s a trade straight out of MyGM mode on NBA 2K. Unreal.

And you just know the league’s front office is seething about this. Katz is reporting the NBA isn’t happy about it.

But, honestly, how can you be mad about this? If it were, I’d just have to respect the audacity.

I imagine this is what it’s like for parents when their kids bend the rules to the point where they don’t quite break. It’s like, sure, you told little Johnny to be home by 6 o’clock, But it’s 5:59! Technically, this is fine.

The Knicks are Johnny, and the NBA is the seething parent who is upset but also impressed because they’ve raised a master negotiator.

Way to go, Leon Rose. You broke the CBA. Thank you for doing this.

Why the Knicks needed help from FIBA and the EuroLeague to complete the Karl-Anthony Towns trade

The Knicks needed some help from FIBA and the EuroLeague to get this deal done.

The Karl-Anthony Towns trade is easily going to go down as one of the strangest deals made in NBA history.

READ MORE: Trade grades from the deal between the Knicks, Timberwolves and Hornets.

Trades are not a rarity in the NBA, but certain types of trades are. We rarely ever see three-team deals. The even more rare four-team deal is possible, but exceedingly improbable. There are usually just too many moving parts to make that happen. For it to get done, all sides have to really want it to get done.

But what I’m pretty sure we’ve never seen in the NBA is a trade between…leagues? And, technically, a trade between continents, too.

That’s what the Karl-Anthony Towns deal is.

Wait, what? Remind me of the details again

The trade is officially done, according to reporting from The Athletic’s Shams Charania. It took some juice to get this over the finish line.

The Knicks get: 

  • Karl-Anthony Towns
  • The draft rights to James Nnaji

The Timberwolves get: 

  • Julius Randle
  • Donte DiVincenzo
  • Keita Bates-Diop
  • A protected 2025 1st round pick

The Hornets get: 

  • DaQuan Jeffries
  • Charlie Brown Jr.
  • Duane Washington Jr.
  • Three future 2nd round picks
  • $7.2 million in cash

There are a lot of moving parts there, naturally, considering how many teams there are.

So, where does the international stuff come in?

(Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images)

I’m glad you asked. It all stems from one player involved in the deal: Duane Washington Jr.

Typically, Washington’s inclusion in a deal like this would be fairly inconsequential. He’s included in the deal as mere salary-cap filler. The Knicks included him as a sign-and-trade piece to the Hornets to ensure that they wouldn’t need to include a key rotational piece in Miles (aka Deuce) McBride.

There was one big complication, though. Washington doesn’t play in the NBA anymore. He plays for KK Partizan in Serbia.

Wait, what? The Knicks traded a dude who CURRENTLY plays in Serbia?

YES. Exactly. That’s where this thing gets weird.

As far as the NBA is concerned, the Knicks still held Washington’s rights because he played for the team on a two-way deal last season and the league doesn’t acknowledge non-NBA contracts when considering a player’s free agency status. So he was still eligible to be part of a sign-and-trade deal.

The problem is he’s under contract and has already played in a couple of games for Partizan this year.

So, basically, for the trade to work, Washington had to get out of his deal with Partizan and become a Knick for a day to eventually become a Hornet for a day and then get waived.

So…how did they make this work?

The process was pretty convoluted. Washington had to get a letter of clearance to get out of his deal with Partizan and be free to sign his new deal with the Knicks.

Here’s Sportrac’s Keith Smith on the nitty gritty.

“So, in order to be signed-and-traded by the Knicks to the Hornets, Washington had to get a LOC from FIBA that says he’s free and clear from his contract with Partizan. Then, to re-sign with Partizan after clearing waivers from Charlotte, Washington has to get another LOC from FIBA.

All of that takes time. No matter how much the Hornets and Washington might want to set him free, there’s still a 48-hour waiver period in the NBA. And that’s if the FIBA LOC process is expedited very quickly.”

With the process underway, Washington may be away from Partizan for about a week. Smith says it’s possible he could return on October 6, but it’s more likely that he’ll be back for a EuroLeague game against Real Madrid on October 10.

Either way, Partizan is walking away from this with an undisclosed amount of cash from the NBA side in a contract buyout, and Washington will walk away with a solid $2.3 million for signing his name a couple times here and there on the inside. That’s a pretty sweet pot for them both.

Wow. This is unreal

Yet again, it’s more masterful work from Leon Rose and the Knicks front office to make sure this happens.

The team made big moves to bring in star players and, they hope, compete for championships this season. These moves were shrewd and calculated. It’s pretty unprecedented stuff.

Knicks fans, you’ve got one of the best front offices in the league. Cherish these moments. If anyone knows what the other side is like, it’s you.

The Timberwolves’ Karl-Anthony Towns trade broke up the best way to beat Nikola Jokic’s Nuggets

Nikola Jokic’s Nuggets should be overjoyed about the Karl-Anthony Towns trade.

As long as Nikola Jokic is in his prime and healthy, the Denver Nuggets will likely always be considered one of the NBA’s premier championship contenders.

But winning a title in the NBA is often about ideal matchups. Every team — and this is without exception — has its fatal flaw, an unavoidable kryptonite. A superstar like Jokic is transcendent, but he and his Nuggets teammates are not unbeatable.

After the Minnesota Timberwolves dealt away perennial All-Star big man Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks on Friday night, my first thought went to the status of Jokic and the Nuggets. This is not because Minnesota, Anthony Edwards, and Towns ended the Nuggets’ 2024 season in a dramatic Game 7 in May, but precisely because Towns’ absence means the Timberwolves no longer have the ultimate trump card to overcome Denver’s three-time MVP in a heated postseason setting.

The dreaded, infamous two-big lineup.

With everyone healthy and at their best, Jokic’s Nuggets two most notable playoff losses have come at the hands of the Los Angeles Lakers during the 2020 Western Conference Finals and to last year’s Timberwolves in the second round.

How both teams primarily beat Denver is no coincidence.

In 2020, the Lakers used a rotation of three bigs featuring Anthony Davis, Dwight Howard, and JaVale McGee to overwhelm Jokic. Jokic is arguably the most skilled center in the league — especially thanks to his all-time floater game. He is a one-man matchup problem who can score at will against sizable NBA defense in isolation or the post as he pleases. However, the Lakers ensured that they always had someone with size and athleticism fronting Jokic while the other forward roamed as a low-man backup in case the initial line of defense was lost.

With an exhausted Jokic still maturing as an All-NBA-caliber player, the Lakers cruised to a five-game series win. Though, Davis had his remarkable individual moments on offense, too:

The two-big lineup is not an unbeatable coverage for Jokic, per se, who has shown he can find a way to the rim and get a quality shot off anyway. But that requires the Serbian star to use a lot more of his energy. This sort of mix wears him down over time. When Jokic is tired and gassed, he’s eventually no longer working tirelessly for quality shots, he’s settling for random 3-pointers, and he’s often even failing to swallow a litany of defensive rebounds his reputation is centered around.

The Nuggets, in effect, are a shell of themselves with Jokic in this state.

The Timberwolves had a near-carbon copy of this equation to defend Jokic. They could use Towns or power forward Naz Reid to front him while four-time Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert roamed, waiting to send over his help defense or to block the shot. To his credit, Jokic still found ways to make an impact against this defensive coverage — his masterful 40-point, 13-assist, seven-rebound effort in Game 5 of the series comes to mind — but again, that takes a lot out of him. And Towns certainly seemed like he challenged Jokic the most of all three defenders.

There’s also a reason the Timberwolves don’t usually prefer putting Gobert on Jokic in single coverage because this is what happens:

By his high standards, after having to metaphorically break his back against Towns, Gobert, and Reid all series, Jokic almost appeared ephemeral in stunning back-to-back losses in Game 6 and 7. It’s because the Timberwolves had the perfect defensive coverage to combat his skill. With all due respect to Julius Randle, he is not nearly the same kind of defender as Towns, let alone as talented.

And if the Timberwolves want to use more of Reid against Jokic while Gobert roams, well, I’ll let the screenshot below from their most recent playoff battle tell the story about how that would likely go:

With Towns out of the picture now, Minnesota got a lot worse against Denver, specifically, as a result.

None of this is to say that the Nuggets’ path through the Western Conference to another NBA championship this season has parted like the Red Sea. The West remains a daunting gauntlet, with juggernaut contenders like the Oklahoma City Thunder, Dallas Mavericks, and yes, even the Timberwolves without Towns, still standing in Denver’s way, among others.

But if you’re Denver, you likely always feel great about your chances in any playoff series the easier Jokic has it. The looser his individual matchups are, the more likely it is the Nuggets will find a way to beat you in a back-and-forth best-of-seven. I would not be shocked to learn that Denver’s front office celebrated this Towns trade just as much as anyone actually involved in the deal. As Denver aims for two titles in three years, this might have been the organization’s biggest move of the offseason, and it didn’t even have to lift a finger.

As it currently stands, no other West championship contender has proven they have the ultimate antidote to trying to beat Jokic. With Towns, the Timberwolves did. But that reality is dead and gone now.

It should be music to the Nuggets’ ears.

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Karl-Anthony Towns already has a perfect New York-themed nickname waiting for him on the Knicks

This nickname is literally too good.

Four-time NBA All-Star big man Karl-Anthony Towns is heading from the Minnesota Timberwolves to the New York Knicks in a blockbuster trade.

While the trade is not yet official, the big man has reportedly already arrived in New York. But once the deal is no longer pending and his tenure with the Knicks officially begins, there is a perfect nickname for Towns once he suits up for his new team.

Some fans think that Towns should start going by “Bodega KAT” when he plays for the Knicks. Stating the obvious: This is a tribute to how his initials “KAT” sound like the word “cat” and how New York City bodega delis often have felines living in those stores.

While we have seen several tweets suggesting Bodega KAT as his name, including one from comedian Sam Morril, this name is not a brand new idea.

In fact, the origin of the nickname could date as far back as May 2024.

No matter who came up with it, though, I’ve got a feeling that Bodega KAT should stick around for some time.

Especially considering his East Coast roots growing up nearby in New Jersey, this is a perfect nickname for so many reasons. Plus, it is much better than Big Purr.

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Knicks creatively avoided Karl-Anthony Towns talk while the blockbuster trade is still pending

Karl-Anthony Towns is reportedly headed to the New York Knicks, but the organization is not actually allowed to talk about it quite yet.

Karl-Anthony Towns is reportedly headed to the New York Knicks, but the organization is not actually allowed to talk about it quite yet.

While the trade was reported by The Athletic’s Shams Charania, it is not yet official. The blockbuster deal will send Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo to the Timberwolves to the Timberwolves in exchange for the four-time All-Star (who also seemed surprised about the trade).

This massive move will give New York an incredible starting five, but there is one small problem: The organization cannot actually discuss the terms and implications until the league processes the transaction. That usually isn’t a big deal but that comes at a very inconvenient time: Media day.

With so many reporters around the team, they all want to know about Towns. But they are only getting coy, canned answers. Here are a few of them so far:

Jalen Brunson: ‘Don’t know who that is’

Josh Hart: ‘We got KAT?! Oh, wow.’

Tom Thibodeau: ‘Good try’

 

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Two former Kentucky stars were traded for each other on Friday

Former Kentucky basketball stars Karl-Anthony Towns and Julius Randle were traded for each other Friday.

The NBA is loaded with players who spent their college career with Kentucky basketball. So it was only a matter of time before two of them were traded for each other, which is what happened Friday night with Julus Randle and Karl-Anthony Towns.

The New York Knicks sent Randle and guard Donte DiVincenzo along with a first round pick to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Towns. The deal was reported by Shams Charania, who added that DaQuan Jeffries and picks would be going to the Charlotte Hornets as well.

Related: Big Blue Madness tickets sell out in 24 minutes

In one season at Kentucky, Towns was part of a deep run in the NCAA Tournament in 2015, though they came up just short. He averaged over 10 points and 6 rebounds per game.

Randle also spent one season as a Wildcat, in 2013-14. He averaged 15 points and 10.4 rebounds that season, and led them to the championship game.

Now, the two former Wildcats have been traded for each other. Good luck to both of them in their new homes.

The Karl-Anthony Towns trade shows a lack of joined-up thinking

September is supposed to be the month where nothing happens in the NBA. Almost every free agent has been signed, almost every trade has been made, and rosters are set, waiting for training camp to begin. Normally. But not this year. Last night, out …

September is supposed to be the month where nothing happens in the NBA. Almost every free agent has been signed, almost every trade has been made, and rosters are set, waiting for training camp to begin. Normally.

But not this year. Last night, out of absolutely nowhere, it was reported that the Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks agreed upon a deal to send Karl-Anthony Towns to the Big Apple in exchange for Julius Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a future protected first-round pick.

There are whispers before their trades. Normally. But not this time. The news came to the surprise of everyone in and around the NBA, not least of which was Towns himself, whose camp was reported to be “stunned”. Towns, it must be noted, never requested a trade from Minnesota – not now, and not ever. No one outside of the very few in on the deal knew this was coming, or that anything like it was brewing, from Minnesota’s end at least. And when looking at the deal from their end, it is easy to see why this was the assumption.

In HoopsHype’s recent look at the trade assets of every NBA franchise, it was seen how the Wolves had little in their stable to facilitate deals. They had foresworn almost all of their future draft picks – mostly in the July 2022 trade with the Utah Jazz that saw them land Rudy Gobert – in the pursuit of assembling their own version of the Big Three, the three-headed foundation now considered so ubiquitous in NBA roster construction.

Additionally, as seen in our recent look at every team’s luxury tax situation, the Wolves were sporting the largest payroll in their history. With more than $208 million committed in 2024-25 alone, the team was set to have the second-highest payroll in the league, and with their large contracts extending beyond this season, the payroll was going to stay big and quickly become subject to the luxury tax at repeater rates. In tandem, between the lack of draft capital, the payroll expenditure, and the age of the star they had traded it all for, they were thought to be “all in”.

More importantly, it looked like it was working, albeit to relative standards. Fuelled by a rejuvenated Gobert – who won his fourth NBA Defensive Player of the Year award in 2023-24, his second year with the team – the Wolves won 56 regular season games, their best return in 20 years, and advanced beyond the first round of the playoffs for only the second time in franchise history. Gobert still had his fastball, Towns was entering his prime, and the third wheel – Anthony Edwards – only turned 23 over the summer. The journey was imperfect, but it was starting to work.

However, with the future mortgaged, they have gone away from the present. And it is hard to see why.

For a moment, forget everything you know about all the players involved in the deal. Instead, look at the term in purely asset terms. First, look at the financial ramifications.

It is true that the Wolves will be shifting out the substantial $220,441,984 still owed to Karl-Anthony Towns through 2028 through this deal. However, Randle and DiVincenzo combine for $95,845,200 coming back in. The only way to realize the potential salary savings is to let them walk; otherwise, they will need big new contracts, making the financial situation much closer to a push than it appears on first glance.

Secondly, in terms of the assets, the only piece of draft capital coming back is a Top 13 protected 2025 first-round pick from the Detroit Pistons. The protection diminishes until 2027, but given that the Pistons are at the foot at the NBA and not going anywhere any time soon, that pick may never convey. If it does not, Detroit’s 2027 second-round pick will be sent instead. And that makes barely an imprint on the net negative situation that Minnesota has in its draft capital.

And thirdly, look at the ages of the players involved. 28 years old going out, 29 and 27 coming back in. This is not a timeline-changer. This trade was about the present day. This trade was about this season, This trade was about the “now”.

Reductive though it may seem, the value in looking first at the trade in this detached way is simply because Towns is, indisputably, the best player in it. Arguments can be made that Randle might prove to be a better fit alongside Gobert, and that DiVincenzo – who hit the third-most three-pointers in the NBA last season behind only Stephen Curry and Luka Doncic, and who had ascended to Star Role Player status – is not a piece to be overlooked.

Arguments can also be made that the loss of Towns will in part be offset by an expanded role for Naz Reid, who has developed into an excellent modern offensive big. This is true enough; Reid is good.

But as things stand, after going all in to create a Big Three, the Wolves have stepped back to a Big Two And A Bit, without meaningfully replenishing the assets cupboard and keeping the oldest one of the three. If the trade from Minnesota’s perspective is indeed one of the “now”, then it bears a mention that that “now” will rely upon the health of a currently-injured (and often-injured) Randle, a talented player who has never had optimum deployment of said talents, except for that one anomalous year when he shot like Kevin Durant somehow. This is quite a huge question mark to trade a perennial All-Star seven-footer for.

What is indisputably true is that the Knicks are a better team than they were last week. They have been aggressive for a while, and that aggression has brought them a front four of Towns, Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges and OG Anunoby. That lineup really needed a center, particularly in the wake of the departure of Isaiah Hartenstein and the continuing injury problems of Mitchell Robinson. And they did not get just any center; they got an elite one, entering his prime years, for the cost of a flawed star they were going to play out of position anyway, a pick that may never convey, and a solid role player who nonetheless was likely to be jockeying for court time with Josh Hart. We might not have known that the Knicks were going to do this deal, but now that they have, we certainly know why they did.

Can we say the same about the Timberwolves?

Pair of Kentucky basketball legends traded for each other in NBA blockbuster

A pair of NBA All-Stars and former Kentucky Wildcats were traded for each other in a blockbuster deal Friday evening.

A stunning blockbuster trade late in the NBA offseason involves a pair of Kentucky Wildcats, with the New York Knicks sending Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo to the Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for four-time All-Star Karl-Anthony Towns.

Minnesota also receives a protected first round pick, while the Charlotte Hornets are a third party in the trade, receiving draft compensation to help make the financial aspects of the trade even out.

Towns and Randle are two of the seven NBA All-Stars from last season who played college basketball at Kentucky, alongside Tyrese Maxey, Anthony Davis, Devin Booker, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, and Bam Adebayo.

Towns was a consensus All-American at Kentucky in the 2014-15 season, averaging 10.3 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks per game while leading the Wildcats to the Final Four. He became the first player selected in the 2015 NBA draft and averaged 22.9 points and 10.8 rebounds across his career in Minnesota, and now joins a Knicks team desperately in need of a true center.

Meanwhile, Randle was at Kentucky just one season before Towns, also earning All-American honors while averaging 15 points and 10.4 rebounds for coach John Calipari’s club. The forward was picked seventh in the 20214 NBA draft, and has made three All-Star appearances while with the Knicks.

The trade unfortunately ends the “Villanova Knicks” dream. The Knicks rostered DiVincenzo, Jalen Brunson, and Josh Hart last season – all Villanova alumni – and over the offseason acquired another Nova star in Mikal Bridges. With DiVincenzo heading to Minnesota in the trade, all four former Wildcats won’t get to suit up together in the Big Apple after all.