INDIANAPOLIS – It didn't take those usually knowledgeable Indiana basketball fans long — mere minutes — before they directed "Overrated!" chants toward Timberwolves rookie Andrew Wiggins during Tuesday's preseason opener at Bankers Life Fieldhouse.
By the time his team walked out convincing 103-90 losers to Indiana, new Wolves coach Flip Saunders used any other word but that to describe the centerpiece of August's blockbuster Kevin Love trade and his first real NBA debut.
On a night when the Wolves sat two likely starters as well as two other rotation players, Wiggins stepped up with a 32-minute, 18-point, three-block performance that provided a glimpse of the franchise's newfound future, particularly when he shared the floor late in a lost game with fellow youngsters Zach LaVine, Shabazz Muhammad, Glenn Robinson III and Gorgui Dieng.
Wiggins shot 4-for-11 from the field in a game in which he and his teammates shot just 37 percent and trailed by as many as 21 points early in the fourth quarter. He also reached the free-throw line for 10 shots and showed glimpses of the defensive force Saunders expects him to become.
"You could see today when you watch him, he's always going to get two or three 'aahs' a game," Saunders said. "You know, 'Ooh-aahs' by what he does. You can see he's not just an athlete. He's skilled. He can get his shot when he wants. He made a couple threes (2-for-2), he got to the free-throw line (8-for-10). The more he plays with veteran guys, the more he'll improve."
The Wolves played without injured Kevin Martin and Anthony Bennett and resting veterans Nikola Pekovic and Mo Williams, which gave Wiggins and his young teammates an open stage to both fail and deliver tantalizing glimpses of what they can become.
Wiggins did so alternately Tuesday, getting his step-back jump shot blocked early in his introduction to the pace of an NBA game and then later impressing defensively with his long arms and those three blocked shots.
"He covers a lot of ground," Saunders said. "Today, he was actually better than I thought he'd be."