PHILADELPHIA - Newly acquired Anthony Randolph has brought his headphones and an extremely quiet demeanor into a Timberwolves locker room that before any game can feature Michael Beasley singing the Oscar Mayer bologna song and lots of other loud banter.
After Wednesday's victory at Detroit in which Randolph achieved his first double-double game in 14 months, he brought something else.
A big smile. "It was just fun being out there," he said. "I've missed this so much."
"This" was the chance to play nearly 25 minutes -- his most since November. It was an opportunity he used to deliver a 19-point, 10-rebound game, a double-double domain that almost exclusively this season has belonged to Kevin Love.
A former Las Vegas Summer League sensation who was traded away by both Golden State and New York before his 22nd birthday, Randolph played most of the fourth quarter in his fourth game with the Wolves. He was acquired from New York in that three-way trade that sent Carmelo Anthony from Denver to the Knicks.
He scored inside and out. He ripped down rebounds. He was part of a unit featuring mostly reserves and Love that Wolves coach Kurt Rambis turned to for defense in the game's closing minutes.
And perhaps notably, Randolph's presence and his willingness to handle the ball and push the ball on fast breaks appeared to transform struggling point guard Jonny Flynn into an assured, assertive distributor who had 10 of his career-high 14 assists by halftime.
"This guy to my left, man, I can't talk about him enough," Flynn said at his locker after the game. "He'll grab a rebound and he'll wave you off and push the break. To have a guy who's 6-11 out there wanting to run every single time, you have to run. You can't have a guy who's 6-11 beat you down the court."