Indiana big man Cody Zeller worked out alone for Timberwolves management for 75 minutes Wednesday, foregoing an earlier group session that featured four other centers and forwards at Target Center at the discretion of his agent.
That doesn't mean he didn't work.
By session's end, he was dripping sweat everywhere off his chin and brow, including on reporters gathered close.
"There were certain games last year when I lost between seven and 10 pounds in just one night," he said. "It's tough for me to put on weight just because I'm always working out and sweating so much."
Zeller is one player the Wolves will consider with the ninth pick in the June 27 draft, if he's still available.
Zeller might have been one of the draft's top three picks if he had left Indiana for the NBA after an impressive freshman season. Now he could go anywhere from fifth to the mid-teens because of a sophomore season in which scouts questioned his strength at 7 feet and 240 pounds and his ability to play against bigger, longer competition.
Gophers forward Trevor Mbakwe was partly responsible for sowing those seeds of doubt. He manhandled Zeller at Williams Arena last winter when the Gophers upset the No. 1-ranked Hoosiers.
Flip Saunders, the Wolves president of basketball operations, said he mentioned to Zeller that he "got his butt kicked" that night.