There are many diehard Timberwolves fans, but it’s unlikely anyone travels farther to cheer them on every year than Japanese superfan Mitsuaki Ohno.
Ohno, a 46-year-old IT engineer who lives in Kawasaki, Japan, with his wife, flies 6,000 miles every year to attend several Wolves games. He’s kept this tradition going since Kevin Garnett’s rookie year in 1995, and always makes a second trip when the Wolves reach the playoffs.
But his love of the Wolves goes all the way back to the team’s inception in 1989. Ohno lived in Rochester during middle school when his dad had a temporary job at IBM.
Although it’s been a rough series for the Wolves against the Dallas Mavericks, Ohno said he had an unforgettable time traveling to Denver to watch the dramatic Game 7 win over the Nuggets. He also visited Minneapolis following the Denver win for Game 1 of the Western Conference finals.
“I never thought these kinds of memories and experiences would be possible,” he said in a phone interview before flying back to Japan last week.
As first reported by Minnesota Public Radio, Ohno quickly became hooked on the team as a kid after watching them play at the Metrodome for the inaugural season before his family moved back to Japan in 1990.
Despite the distance, he’s been a season-ticket holder for more than 20 years, and attends at least a few games a year.
But it’s not just the Timberwolves that makes Ohno want to return to Minnesota. He said it’s also the culture.