You can measure Andrew Wiggins' growth from draft prospect whose intensity NBA scouts doubted to a Timberwolves rookie season now aimed squarely toward stardom strictly by the numbers: The season's first half reduced to 10-game chunks details progress in such things as fouls drawn, scoring average and shooting percentages, player efficiency rating.
But it's probably more powerfully told anecdotally, in the company he's starting to keep.
The latest occasion came Saturday at Target Center, where for the second and final time against Cleveland this season he dueled the game's greatest player and delivered a career-high 33-point performance that beckoned LeBron James to reminisce.
"I remember when I was a rookie," James said, "and I played against T-Mac on Christmas Day. I played against Kobe, I played against A.I. and all those guys that were shattering the league at the time. I remember how I got up to play those guys, so I know what he was feeling."
Back then, Tracy McGrady, Kobe Bryant and Allen Iverson were the gold standards by whom a superstar-in-waiting rookie judged himself.
Now, James himself is the measurement and Wiggins is the rookie who has elevated his game twice against a two-time NBA champion and four-time MVP, not to mention a Cavaliers team that drafted him last summer and traded him merely a month later.
The first time around on Dec. 23, Wiggins delivered 27 points in Cleveland, a game that in retrospect taught him just what could be if he truly applies himself every night.
The second time around last week, he outplayed James and everybody else for three quarters and provided a performance that was trumped only when James won the game by scoring 16 points in the fourth quarter alone.