If it was Sunday morning in the Saunders household and the phone was ringing at 6 a.m., it was usually only one person doing the calling: Sid Hartman.
"He was just looking for the scoop at the house," Timberwolves coach Ryan Saunders said with a laugh Monday. "He didn't care who was on the other line. He was going to find a way to get that scoop."
Saunders has fond memories of the relationships he and his late father Flip had with Hartman, the decadeslong Star Tribune columnist who died Sunday at 100.
Saunders said his first memory of meeting Hartman came when he was nine, just after the Timberwolves had hired Flip. The Saunders family and Hartman went for a ride on Hartman's boat on the Saint Croix River.
"You'd go over to his house, and I'm picturing it right now, that house, it felt like something out of a movie and you see all those pictures of him shaking hands with so many incredible people," Saunders said. "You felt like you were in the presence of a movie star, in a way. You knew he was a celebrity. He was more than that."
He was more than that to the Saunders family, as well. Hartman was a part of the family, Saunders said, and he said he wasn't throwing that term around lightly.
"Sid is family because it's not always perfect with family, but you know that at the end of the day there's so much love there because there's so much trust, so much integrity and there's so much honesty that even if there is a disagreement, there's unconditional love," Saunders said. "That's what Sid was to our family and what our family feels about Sid and his family."
Saunders said after he got the head coaching job with the Wolves, he and Hartman had a special moment.