Possessing a peace of mind that usually only comes with the passing of time and age, NBA veteran Mo Williams believes he knows why he's here.
Or at least he knows why he is with the Timberwolves.
Joining his seventh team in 12 NBA seasons, he signed with the Wolves in July because of his late-game reliability and all he has seen and done since his defensive play earned the second-round draft pick a pro job.
Now 31 and six weeks older than new teammate Kevin Martin, the starter at shooting guard, he's the oldest player on a team that could have seven rookies or second-year players on its opening-night roster two weeks from now.
He's also expected to be something of a mentor and that proverbial coach on the floor.
"I know. I relish that, I accept that," Williams said. "I come out here and run by these young guys all day. As long as I keep doing that, I won't mind anybody calling me the old guy."
He, of course, was once the young guy in a journey that has taken him from Utah and Milwaukee to Cleveland, Los Angeles and Portland as well as from reserve to starter to All-Star and back again.
Wolves President of Basketball Operations Flip Saunders signed him after Williams didn't reach a contractual agreement to return to Portland and after negotiations to return home to Dallas failed.