Kids these days.
They're older than they used to be.
For the best young athletes in the Twin Cities, 20 is the new 30.
A flock of young athletes has graduated from puberty to the outskirts of stardom in Minnesota, making the Twins, Timberwolves and Vikings as simultaneously promising as they have been for decades.
Teddy Bridgewater, Anthony Barr, Miguel Sano, Byron Buxton, Karl-Anthony Towns, Andrew Wiggins and Tyus Jones are all between 19 and 23, with only Barr being older than 22. All have adapted to the national stage with the ease of an average teenager adapting to new social media.
Wednesday night, the Timberwolves unveiled the first picks in the last two NBA drafts, as Towns and Wiggins played in an open scrimmage alongside Tyus Jones and Zach LaVine at Target Center. The event drew more than 15,000 fans, and Towns displayed as much personality as game.
Before the scrimmage, he grabbed a mic and welcomed the fans. During the game, he dribbled the length of the floor for a layup, hit a three-pointer, dominated the boards, hit a lefthanded half-hook and even politely kissed coach Flip Saunders' wife the first time he came off the floor.
Wiggins last year played his best against the best competition, performing better in the NBA than he did in his one year at Kansas. Jones thrived as an eighth-grader on the Apple Valley varsity and as a title-winning freshman at Duke, and looked just as comfortable on the Target Center floor wearing a Wolves uniform as he was playing showcase games there in high school.