Shabazz Muhammad returned to the Twin Cities a more confident player, more convinced he is an NBA player and yet aware that, for now, patience might be his greatest asset.
Muhammad, the No. 14 overall pick in last summer's draft by the Timberwolves, just completed a four-game swing through the NBA Development League with the Iowa Energy. In those four games he averaged 27.8 minutes, 24.5 points and 9.8 rebounds while shooting 57.1 percent from the floor. For a player who initially appeared cool at the idea of a short D-League stint, Muhammad came around quickly.
"First of all, it was really fun getting out there and actually getting to play," he said after Monday's practice with the Wolves. "I mean, getting to run in transition and stuff like that, actually getting to play? It was a good experience for me. … It gave me a lot of confidence going into practice today. I can really help this team out if I get the opportunity."
But he might have to continue waiting for that.
For the first time in nearly two years, Wolves coach Rick Adelman has a completely healthy roster. Center Ronny Turiaf, recovered from injury, is getting big minutes off the bench, as is forward Chase Budinger. With the Wolves desperately in need of a winning run, it might be difficult for Adelman to find playing time for many players on the back end of the bench, including Muhammad.
"He has improved since training camp and, down there, he showed it," Adelman said of the 6-6 swingman from UCLA. "He attacked the basket, he passed the ball."
But?
"We have 15 guys," Adelman said. "Only so many guys can play. In this league, though, things can happen very quickly, and you've got to be ready all the time. I think he's proven that with his attitude and everything else. But with any young player, defense is the thing that's hardest thing that comes to them."