PRESCOTT VALLEY, ARIZ. – The Timberwolves invested millions in their very own G League team precisely for days such as Thursday.
That's when little-played guard Marcus Georges-Hunt rose in San Francisco while his teammates slept, caught a commercial flight ahead of their charter to Phoenix and rode two hours through the desert mountains to play a game that night for the new Iowa Wolves against the Northern Arizona Suns.
In the NBA, the undrafted second-year prospect played 11 minutes in the first 11 games this season. On Thursday, he played 39½ minutes before about 1,000 fans at the Prescott Valley Events Center.
Georges-Hunt arrived two hours before the opening tip, greeted his new teammates — three he knows from Timberwolves training camp — and scored 34 points in a wild 141-140 loss. Then he rode back down the mountains in the dark and rejoined his team for Friday morning practice in Phoenix.
The evening allowed him to gauge what condition his conditioning is in, even if the 281 combined points weren't exactly Timberwolves defensive-minded coach/President of Basketball Operations Tom Thibodeau's brand of basketball.
"He probably would have lost his mind," Georges-Hunt said. "He definitely would have lost his mind, for sure."
But the opportunity to play so many competitive minutes on a G League team that already includes Georges-Hunt's training-camp teammates Melo Trimble, Amile Jefferson and Anthony Brown is what Thibodeau envisioned when he convinced owner Glen Taylor to buy and rebrand the Iowa Energy team in Des Moines.
"It just made a lot of sense," Thibodeau said. "Marcus has worked hard on his conditioning, but there's nothing like playing in a game. As much as you try to practice to a gamelike intensity, you can never get it."