A year ago Thaddeus Young was the old man on a Philadelphia 76ers team that, in full rebuild mode, posted the second-worst record in the NBA.
This season, acquired in a trade by the Wolves in the offseason, he is again on a team looking to retool after trading away Kevin Love.
But there is at least one very big difference. The Wolves might be going young, but the team still has a number of veterans.
"Things here are different," Young said after Thursday's practice. "Now you have some more veteran guys on the team along with the young guys that need to be groomed a little bit. It's just a different situation.''
Young still is committed to being a mentor. But he doesn't have to do it alone.
And he already has shown what he can do on the court. In just 18 minutes at power forward in Tuesday's exhibition at Indiana — coach Flip Saunders is taking care not to overwork the veterans — Young scored 12 points on 5-for-10 shooting with four rebounds, two assists and a steal.
"He has the ability to score," said Saunders, who likened Young's game to that of Antawn Jamison, who played in Washington when Saunders coached the Wizards.
"They're very similar in their ability to score from different angles and in different ways — floaters, under somebody's arms, different things. And he plays hard. He was third in the league behind Ricky [Rubio] last season in steals so he has the ability to get after it at both ends."