Everyone thought Jordan Horn's college playing days were behind him last year.
After all, it had been several years since the former Tartan standout was a 2017 Mr. Basketball finalist. He was walking the halls of his alma mater as a school behavior specialist and 10th-grade boys basketball coach.
Horn ran his own clothing brand business, bought a town house in Woodbury with his girlfriend. His college hoops career seemed well in his rearview mirror after stints at Siena, North Dakota State and Texas Permian Basin.
So why is the 25-year-old, St. Paul native now at Concordia (St. Paul), his fourth program in seven years? How did he get convinced to become arguably the oldest college basketball player in Minnesota this season?
"I definitely got that itch back to play," Horn said. "I just missed the feeling."
Horn's skills didn't evaporate, even after a year removed. The 6-2, 195-pound scoring machine led the NSIC and ranked top 10 in NCAA Division II with 23.9 points per game before a hamstring injury sidelined him after eight games last month.
While rehabbing to play for the first time since early December, Horn's been a natural leader and mentor for his much younger teammates who not surprisingly nicknamed him "Old Man."
"He does have a unique journey," Concordia coach Matt Fletcher said. "People keep giving him chances because they realize what he can do in the locker room. I had known who Jordan was forever, but I thought he was done — as did pretty much everybody else."