Two years after arriving in America, Turkish center Enes Kanter speaks English fluently. But it wasn't always that way.
"When I first got here, I couldn't speak any," he says now. "My dad just taught me to say, 'Hello,' and 'My name is Enes Kanter,' and that's it."
In many ways, he's still making his introduction.
Unlike the other guy the Timberwolves most likely will choose if they keep the second overall pick, Kanter, in these weeks leading to Thursday's NBA draft, has done almost everything asked of him by NBA teams to whom the rugged 6-11 center still is something of a mystery.
Arizona's Derrick Williams worked out only for the Wolves and Cleveland -- owners of the draft's first two picks -- and went to Chicago for last month's combine for only interviews and physical testing because, after a sensational sophomore season, he said, "What do you want me to prove? I did that during the season."
Kanter, meanwhile, did every drill requested in Chicago and has auditioned for at least five teams, including the Wolves at Target Center on Thursday. He also is headed to Cleveland on Monday for a second visit with the Cavaliers -- who own the first and fourth picks -- for a simple reason: "Because no one has seen me play yet," he said.
Kanter signed to play at Kentucky last season, but never did so after the NCAA ruled him ineligible for accepting $33,000 from his Turkish club team.
He spent all year in Lexington attending classes and working as a student assistant coach and working out first with the team and then with coach John Calipari and others to prepare for the draft after he permanently was ruled a professional in January.