Timberwolves veteran forward Thaddeus Young visited Washington and its sights many times during the first seven NBA seasons he played just up the freeway in Philadelphia, but he never saw it quite like he did on Wednesday.
Young and his teammates toured the Pentagon and Arlington National Cemetery, spending 30 minutes with Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Martin Dempsey at their first stop and visiting with the wife of a U.S. soldier slain in Afghanistan at the second.
Afterward, he called it a sobering, unifying moment for his young team.
"It was definitely one of those eye-opening, life-changing experiences for us," he said.
The NBA and USA Basketball have collaborated with the United States' Department of Defense on a "Commitment to Service" project that involves all five branches of the military and is intended to improve communities across the country. As part of that program, the NBA arranged for the Wolves' tour Wednesday.
During it, they spent time in his office with the highest-ranking military officer in the U.S. Armed Forces and the man who is the main military adviser to President Obama. He spoke to Wolves players, coaches and staff about commitment, teamwork and community and discussed some of the history and the importance of paying respect to the U.S. flag and national anthem.
He told them of a team photo from last summer's FIBA World Championship that he received from the U.S. national men's basketball team's Mike Krzyzewski. The Duke and former Army coach inscribed "Our team couldn't have done what we did without your team" on a poster that showed every player holding his hand over his heart — a gesture perhaps inspired from the team's visit to West Point a month earlier.
Dempsey told them the post means more to him than almost any other memento he has from his job.