On most days, if a former Mr. Minnesota Basketball worked out for the Timberwolves, bringing a four-year college résumé that included two All-Big Ten selections, he would have been The Show.
But Tuesday, after the Wolves had held a predraft workout, Jordan Taylor had to share the attention. Because Royce White, another former Mr. Basketball, was also in town.
But that's OK. Any amount of attention is fine with Taylor.
"All you can ask for, a guy in my position, is to have a chance to show what I can do," he said.
Of the players working out Tuesday, only White, the former Hopkins star who played last season at Iowa State, is considered to have first-round potential. The others, including Taylor, hope to be taken in the second round but also are preparing to go the free-agent route.
And that means having your best day every day you're at these moving feasts known as predraft workouts.
Taylor, a high school standout at Benilde-St. Margaret's, has a lot going for him. He was the point guard on a Wisconsin team that made NCAA tournament appearances in each of his four seasons there. He was all-conference twice, a second-team All-America as a junior, a leader on a successful Big Ten program. But still, there are questions he is spending his June trying to answer.
"There is no question he's a high-character kid," said David Kahn, Wolves president of basketball operations. "He has a lot of appealing attributes. He's able to drive the ball; he showed in college that he could finish around the rim. But, because he's only about 6-1, which is what I think he measured, I think his shot will need to become more dependable."