Timberwolves rookie Zach LaVine wandered into the Target Center media-dining room before Monday's game against Atlanta looking to swipe a cookie and instead ended up shaking hands with the man once nicknamed the "Human Highlight Film."
Minutes later, teammate Kevin Martin asked All-Star Saturday-bound LaVine what it felt like to be the second-best dunker in the arena that night.
"Second-best?" LaVine asked, somewhat incredulously.
Martin deemed the man LaVine had just met — the great Dominique Wilkins, now an Atlanta Hawks television analyst — the best around that night.
"I don't got him," LaVine said, agreeing with Martin's assessment. "He's got the scoring, too. I've seen all of his dunks, but I watched more of his scoring, him and [Michael] Jordan battling back in the '80s. They were always No. 1 or 2 for the scoring title. I always used to watch that on the Hardwood Classics."
Wilkins participated in five All-Star slam dunk contests and won two of them, beating Jordan in the 1985 final round and Kenny Smith in 1990.
That last title came five years before LaVine was born, so the man who won twice but claims he really won four times has some advice for a 19-year-old rookie who will participate for the first time Saturday in All-Star weekend's slam dunk contest at Brooklyn's Barclays Center.
"Don't leave anything at home, don't save the best for last," Wilkins said. "Come out strong in the beginning. You've got to make a statement. If you do, even if your second or third dunk is not as good, the judges and people think it is."