MEXICO CITY – The Timberwolves flew on Monday to Mexico City, returning there to grow the NBA's brand by participating this week in an open practice/clinic and corporate-partners' reception 11 months after they last visited.
They might even play a basketball game this time.
"That'd be great," Wolves veteran guard Kevin Martin said.
Last December, the Wolves traveled 1,800 miles away from Target Center to play a "home" game against the San Antonio Spurs that was postponed and never played at the modern, glass-encased Mexico City Arena after acrid smoke caused by a generator fire clouded the court a little more than an hour before the opening tip.
This time, they're back to play the Houston Rockets in a 9 p.m. Wednesday game on ESPN that also counts as one of their 41 home dates.
Smoke seeped into the arena that night last winter while players warmed up. It eventually filled the air, setting off alarms in the locker rooms and corridors that drove players and workers out into parking lots and into the night just as 22,500 fans arrived for a sold-out event.
"I was shooting, then I went to the locker room and suddenly they came to the locker room and said we had to leave the arena," Wolves point guard Ricky Rubio said. "I thought it was a joke, but it was serious."
It was serious enough that doctors from both teams insisted players not be allowed to play even after the fire was contained and the smoke started to dissipate. Concerned about what chemicals and residue might linger in the air, Wolves and Spurs executives shuttled back and forth, from a loading dock outside where coaches and players mingled in the dark for more than an hour, then into the arena and back out again.