Editor's note: Third in a three-part series on the players acquired by the Wolves for Kevin Love
Unlike baldness or musical intuition, some traits or talents don't skip a generation. In Timberwolves rookie Andrew Wiggins' family, there apparently are few recessive genes.
From a father who played basketball professionally across North America and Europe for two decades and a mother who won two Olympic track silver medals, there's much in both mind and body that has been handed down.
When Timberwolves president of basketball operations Flip Saunders chose Wiggins as the fitting centerpiece to a Kevin Love trade, he did so because he envisions a 19-year-old drafted first overall by Cleveland last summer becoming the rarest of NBA species: What Saunders calls an "elite" two-way player who can change a game on both ends of the floor because of his 7-foot wingspan and "freakish" athleticism combined with the precious drive to maximize both.
"It's tough to find a lot of those guys in our league," Saunders said.
A quick head count reveals only a handful of candidates — Cleveland's LeBron James, Indiana's Paul George, maybe San Antonio's Kawhi Leonard — if you don't include recovering Lakers superstar Kobe Bryant, who belongs on a list of his own with such names as Michael Jordan and James.
"The best players of all time have always been two-way players," Wiggins said. "I want to be great."
At 6-8, Wiggins possesses the kind of physical attributes required to become such a player: A lean body he clearly will grow into as he ages, a 44-inch vertical leap that'd be jaw-dropping if teammates Zach LaVine and Glenn Robinson III didn't approach his own jumping, as well as those long arms and that considerable reach.