MEXICO CITY – Thirty-eight years after they first met, Flip Saunders and Kevin McHale come together again Wednesday night in Mexico City, where purportedly they will coach against each other when the Timberwolves play Houston.
Former college teammates, Wolves front-office comrades and essentially lifelong friends whose relationship has waxed and waned as certain as the forthcoming tide, they will work opposite sidelines for the second time in their basketball careers.
Just don't tell either man that because each thinks it might be the first.
"Is this the first time I've coached against him?" McHale asked Tuesday afternoon inside the Mexico City Arena. "No? Well, there you go. I guess it shows you what it means. I didn't even remember that."
McHale was just 13 games into the job as the Rockets' new coach when his team went to play Saunders' Washington team in a January 2012 Martin Luther King Day matinee that, it turns out, came just a week before the Wizards fired Saunders after a 2-15 season start.
The Rockets won the game that Monday afternoon 114-106. Kevin Martin scored 25 points for the visitors, Chase Budinger added eight points off the bench. Neither current Timberwolves player remembers a thing about that game, but they shouldn't feel badly about it.
"I don't even recall that," Saunders said. "Was it one time?"
McHale and Saunders have arrived back together to play one of the NBA's "Global Games" Wednesday after each took such different journeys to get there: McHale is the 1980 No. 3 overall draft pick who won three championships with the Boston Celtics and made himself into a Hall of Fame player whom Charles Barkley still calls the toughest opponent he ever faced. Saunders is the formerly driven point guard with limited game who made himself into a coach and worked his way from college assistant jobs to pro basketball's minor leagues. He finally reached the NBA after his college teammate accepted Taylor's offer to run the Wolves and called Saunders to help with that big job.