The Minnesota Timberwolves have retooled their roster with potent weapons, trading for Jimmy Butler and acquiring Jeff Teague, Taj Gibson, Jamal Crawford, as well as retaining the services of spark plug Shabazz Muhammad.

Andrew Wiggins, one of the pillars of this equation, is anxious to start this season alongside Butler, knowing the two of them together will be a terror on the wing.

“Me and Jimmy are going to be a problem,” Wiggins said, according to John Meyer of Canis Hoopus.

Wiggins is awaiting the final details of a potential five-year, $148 million extension that he is expected to sign at some point before Saturday.

Butler has proven to be in excellent shape, as he has ever since coming back from his injury woes during his stint with the Chicago Bulls.

As two of the best slashing wings in this league, the Butler-Wiggins combo should prove a deadly one this upcoming season, so long as their outside shooting proves respectable enough to make defenses pay for leaving them open on the perimeter.

Wiggins showed some improvement, shooting 35.6 percent from deep last season, while Butler shot slightly better at 36.7 percent — decent marks, but by no way enough to make teams pick their poison guarding them.