Kenny Holmen had finished a saxophone version of the "Star Spangled Banner." The large crowd inside Target Center had been promised a chance to greet Kevin Garnett of the Boston Celtics, and now was the time for it to happen.
Back in the corridor, the door to the visitors locker room opened, and out came Celtics security director Phil Lynch, followed by Garnett. He shook a couple of hands, started right, then retreated to his left to greet Kevin McNamara, a security guard who has had a long presence in this building. Garnett then started toward the entrance at the opposite end of where he had taken the court for 12 seasons with the Timberwolves. He was dressed in a pea coat, jeans, sneakers and a white shirt with a silver tie.
There were three reporters and a TV crew waiting a few yards down the corridor. The group included Steve Aschburner, the former Star Tribune sportswriter who covered the Wolves during Garnett's entire run.
"How you doing, Steve?" said Garnett, offering a knock of his left fist.
There were no other greetings, and then Garnett followed a path under the stands. There were a couple of dozen fans behind a barrier and they started shouting, "All right, KG," and other hoots that alerted the crowd that the Wolves' one and only superstar was on the way.
"It's not the same without you," boomed a voice from behind the barrier.
Garnett gave a slight wave of his right hand, and then he was through the opening in the stands, and in view of the masses, and everyone was on their feet ... roaring, shouting KG this and KG that all the way to the rafters.
He walked only 10-15 feet onto the court, under the basket in front of the visitors bench. The roar kept coming, and so did the waves of KG's right hand, and soon there was a smile -- not huge, like he could offer in victory -- but more of the satisfied variety.