There is -- quite possibly for the first time since Latrell Sprewell wondered aloud just how he would feed his family on $21 million -- a buzz crackling and humming around these Timberwolves.
You can feel it after so many seasons of indifference at Target Center, where more than 12,000 people gathered for a preseason game and 2,500 arrived for a free, lunch-hour scrimmage.
You can sense it on your Facebook page, where one friend proudly posts a cellphone photo of herself posed with Spanish sensation Ricky Rubio at Seven in downtown Minneapolis on a Saturday night.
Yes, it's true the beauty of sports means every season brings optimism, but ...
"People say things will be better every year because you don't expect to be bad, ever," Wolves forward Anthony Tolliver said. "But at the end of the day, I know some things for a fact: Everybody has a different attitude coming in this year than we did the last."
There are many reasons Tolliver claims to know what he knows, the arrival of Rubio and Derrick Williams among them. But foremost is one that Tolliver expresses simply by pointing across the practice floor, his finger directed at new coach Rick Adelman.
"That guy right over there," he said.
"That guy" ranks eighth on the NBA's all-time list of coaching winners, and his 945 career victories with Portland, Golden State, Sacramento and Houston are 240 more than the Wolves have won in their entire history.