He is only 19 years old, but already the new face of the Timberwolves franchise possesses his own personal assistant, a $12 million-plus shoe contract before he ever signed to play in the NBA and, judging by the enthusiastic welcome he received last week at the Minnesota State Fair, quite a following.
A child of the YouTube age, Andrew Wiggins arrives in Minnesota just as Kevin Love leaves. His fame, generated since age 13 by highlight-reel dunks archived from AAU jamborees, prep games and one collegiate season at Kansas, precedes him.
Wiggins hasn't played a single game or even practiced yet, but his first week in Minnesota suggests the No. 1 pick in June's long-awaited NBA draft is about to become the public pulse for an organization that has reframed its future by trading away a superstar.
Wiggins flashed an easy smile and mostly seemed to be a young man of few words, whether he was socializing with corporate partners and big-spending season-ticket members at an exclusive downtown Minneapolis rooftop reception, leading the way for the four newest Wolves at a very public news conference on the fairgrounds or donning sunglasses in unity with a patient at Minneapolis Children's Hospital.
"I don't think I'm quiet," he said. "People say that about me. I just speak when I want to, when I choose to speak. I think I grew out of my shell a while ago."
That will happen organically when you've been something of an Internet sensation — discovered by a worldwide basketball audience coming out of Canada, of all places — since you were in middle school.
Go to YouTube and you'll find a 39-second snippet of him — entitled "Best 13 Year Old in the Nation" — that has been viewed 4.7 million times.
While there, you'll also find footage of him playing with a North Carolina prep school at Augsburg College before about 1,500 fans in a December 2009 holiday prep tournament against Hopkins and Henry Sibley high schools.