"When you think about it, most people don't think of shooters as really superb athletes," Kahn said. "And yet, Wes is exactly that: An unbelievable athlete with an amazing stroke. And in some ways, that's what Martell is, He's an amazing athlete with a proficiency of making three pointers. From a spacing standpoint on offense, the two kids will help us immediately.
"I see them as being wings, where you can see one guy on one side of the floor and one guy on the other side stretching the defense out because they have to honor them. I also see them, of coures, on the fast break, flying down the court -- lane runners, as Kurt calls them -- finishing at the rim. I think they can play a lot together.
Johnson turns 23 next month. Webster is 23, so is Hayward, whom the Wolves drafted 30th overall after they traded teh 23rd pick to Washignton for the 30th and 35th picks. They used those picks to take Hayward and Serbian forward Nemanja Bjelica, a former point guard who's now 6-10 and who Kahn hopes is a "poor man's Toni Kukoc."
Johnson fit team needs and Kahn considered his age and maturity attractive over the promise of 19-year-old Kentucky center DeMarcus Cousins, who both intrigued and frightened NBA executives.
"Some people say, `Well, why not Cousins,' " Kahn said. "I think to me, it was very simple and it was basketball related. We spent most of this past season talking about the length of athleticism and speed on our frontline and I didn't feel that he would improve those areas.
"That's all I'm going to say. I think he deserves his day in the sun in Sacramento. I expect him to be a very fine player in our league and we spent many over the last week and a half talking about him and making certain we explored if it'd be a fit or not. But at the end of the day, we felt Wes was the right thing for us to do."