A journalism major who foresees a broadcasting career when his playing days end, Lehigh senior guard C.J. McCollum gives as good as he gets during interviews with NBA team executives leading to Thursday's NBA draft.
"One GM asked me, 'Are you interviewing me or am I interviewing you?' " McCollum said. "I told him it's my job to be informed on his team as well. You've got to be a student of the game."
That is why he asked Washington Wizards representatives if they believe he could play alongside John Wall and Bradley Beal and why he asked Cleveland Cavaliers executives how he would fit with Kyrie Irving.
It's also why he knows something about Timberwolves draft history, and how his presence Thursday night vexes the Minnesota faithful four years after another sweet-shooting combo guard from a small school entered the draft.
"Steph Curry?" McCollum asks. "They passed on him."
Yes, C.J., they did and why don't you give every Wolves fan a paper cut and pour lemon juice on it while you're at it?
Curry's playoff performance with Golden State and Weber State's Damian Lillard's Rookie of the Year season in Portland reaffirm that small-school products can thrive in the NBA.
"It's not where you play," Wolves President of Basketball Operations Flip Saunders said.