San Antonio's Danny Green, Miami's Chris Andersen and Indiana's Lance Stephenson, to name a few, have proved nightly during this spring's postseason that there is a prominent place in the NBA someday, someway for former second-round picks and those who once went undrafted.
New Timberwolves president of basketball operations Flip Saunders just believes that time hasn't yet arrived for his team or any such players in next month's draft.
Before he jets off to Miami this weekend to bond with Ricky Rubio or travels to Europe after that to woo forthcoming restricted free agent Nikola Pekovic, Saunders did his long-term due diligence Tuesday at Target Center surrounded by representatives from 25 other teams, including NBA coaches Mike Woodson and Randy Wittman, doing the same.
They watched a dozen unsung draft prospects — many of whom won't hear their name called next month — drill in separate sessions that opened two days of group workouts the Wolves annually hold.
"I don't know right now if a second-rounder is going to be in our rotation," Saunders said. "If you're getting guys at that level, you hope they will somehow be able to play for you in two or three years."
But that could all change in those two or three years, when Tuesday's players fresh out of college have ripened and when the NBA's ever-tightening restrictive salary cap takes hold.
By then, there might be a place or two — or more — for such a cost-effective role player.
"Eventually, the cap is pretty hard when you look at it and you have to have people who are going to fit in, especially if you become a good team and have two or three guys who are max [salary]-type players," Saunders said. "You're going to have to find some low-end type guys that fit for you."