Listen to Timberwolves guard Martell Webster speak, examine his lengthy NBA résumé or watch him stretch and rehabilitate his slowly healing body and it's so easy to forget one thing about a guy who's already midway through his seventh NBA season:
He's only 25 years old.
While Timberwolves brass searches league rosters looking to add by a March 15 trade deadline the starting shooting guard they clearly lack, is it still possible the player they seek is right in their midst?
Webster's season-high 21 points in Saturday's 122-110 victory helped the Wolves win for the first time since December 2005 in Portland, where Webster played his first five NBA seasons and where he still lives.
That performance also was another small sign that perhaps he is playing himself by the day back into good health after undergoing back surgery twice within 11 months, most recently last September.
He suggests Saturday's 7-for-10 shooting night -- with eight rebounds, two blocked shots and a steal in 34-plus minutes, too -- isn't significant because of where it came.
"Not at all," he said after the Wolves ended a four-game western trip 2-2. "It's my seventh year in the league, so coming back to my old team now is not a big deal. The biggest thing was coming to Portland to see my family, my wife and my kids. It has been tough for them."
More meaningful is when it came, 19 games into another injury-delayed season that once again has tested his patience.