Timberwolves coach Tom Thibodeau coached Taj Gibson for five seasons in Chicago, so he knew he signed a selfless player who does all the little things.
He didn't know that he was getting a "stretch" power forward, though.
One of the Wolves' biggest needs could be filled by a nine-year veteran who spent his summer working on the corner three-point shot.
The Timberwolves defeated Golden State 111-95 Thursday in their first of two games in China. Gibson scored 13 points. Jimmy Butler had 16 points and four assists, and Karl-Anthony Towns also scored 16 for the Wolves.
Gibson went 2-for-2 from there in the Wolves' preseason-opening 108-99 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday in Anaheim, Calif. By doing so, he suggested he might be able to give his new team more versatility than what he supplies defensively as a starter beside young star Karl-Anthony Towns.
"He worked on it all summer," Thibodeau said. "He always had a pretty good corner jump shot from 17 feet. He has stretched it out. As long as he works on it and he's comfortable shooting it, I'm good with it."
The NBA game has become one dependent upon the pick-and-roll and wing players who play power forward on television both because they stretch opposing defenses with their perimeter shooting and because they are mobile enough to defend opponents who do the same.