Day by day, the Timberwolves' predraft workouts provided a steady stream of shooting guards, whether they paraded to the team's Target Center doors or new president of basketball operations Flip Saunders traveled to work out Indiana's Victor Oladipo near Washington, D.C.
He's searching for someone who fits the job title and has prototypical NBA size for the position — in other words, someone who stands literally head and shoulders above current starter Luke Ridnour.
"If that's what they want," Georgia sophomore guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope said, "I'm their guy."
Oladipo and Kansas' Ben McLemore are considered the prizes of a shooting guard class that Saunders deems the draft's deepest position. But he would have to strike a deal to move up from the No. 9 spot to pluck one, a prospect that Saunders makes sound less likely as the days tick by.
That just might make Caldwell-Pope the favorite to be the newest Wolves player by Thursday night.
Measured last month at 6-5½ in sneakers, he is nearly an inch taller than either one, although Oladipo's wingspan is an inch longer and NBA executives always remind that the game is played with arms and not the top of your head.
"I can shoot it, I can create my own shots, I can defend, I can rebound," Caldwell-Pope said. "I can do a lot of things."
The Wolves finished dead last in three-point shooting last season, a lousy 30.5 percent with both Kevin Love and Chase Budinger injured much of the year. That has led Saunders to list shooters as his team's biggest needs.