Timberwolves center Ronny Turiaf has played for seven teams in his nine-year NBA career, but wherever he goes he still carries with him a little bit of the Los Angeles Lakers, Tuesday's opponent at Target Center.
He does so because the Lakers drafted him in 2005's second round and soon after was diagnosed with an enlarged aortic root. Lakers owner Jerry Buss paid for an open-heart surgery that saved Turiaf's pro career and perhaps his life.
Three years later, the team welcomed him with a scoreboard video tribute in his first game back after he signed a free-agent offer with Golden State.
"A piece of my heart stayed there and always will be there," said Turiaf, who hasn't played for the Lakers since 2008.
Tuesday, he faces once again his former team, this time as the starting center for the Wolves as long as starter Nikola Pekovic remains sidelined by ankle bursitis.
Pekovic was out of a protective boot Monday, one week after he played only six minutes and left a game in Chicago because of pain in his heel that bothered him for the previous 10 days.
It's uncertain when Pekovic will return, and until he does Turiaf will start in his place, trying with his spirit and interior defense to compensate for what teammate Kevin Love calls the 20 points and 10 rebounds the Wolves miss nightly without Pekovic.
"Pek goes down, I'm the next in line so I have to step in his shoes," Turiaf said. "I just have to be myself. It's not like I'm trying to go out there and score 25 points and get 15 rebounds, like Pek does. I might get those 15 rebounds, but I might block shots and be a little more active on defense. Pek and I do different stuff.