[外電] Wolves: Hudson resurfaces to start vs. favorite foe
http://www.startribune.com/511/story/1034509.html
Troy Hudson has been just about everywhere in 10 NBA seasons. He has been on
the end of the bench, forgotten. He has been the first man off that same
bench, and he has started his share of games.
And so he waited, and he worked. Even when he was getting zero minutes, he
would stay after practice and make 150 shots before hitting the showers.
"The NBA season is a long season; I learned that a long time ago," Hudson
said Monday, after staying after practice to make 150 more shots. "You never
know when your chance is going to come, so you have to be prepared."
Here is his chance, again.
After scoring 26 points with eight assists in his first start of the season
Sunday in Boston, Hudson will make his first start at Target Center since the
2004-05 season tonight against the Lakers -- the perfect opponent for such an
appearance, of course.
Remember the 2003 playoff series against the Lakers? In six games Hudson
averaged 23.5 points and 5.5 assists. Those two weeks, as much as anything,
convinced the Wolves that Hudson could be a long-term asset. That was before
a devastating ankle injury at the end of the preseason the following season
sent Hudson on a two-plus season odyssey of surgery, rehab and lost time.
Maybe that was when Hudson learned the patience he put to such good use this
season. Mired on the bench while the Wolves started Mike James and then Randy
Foye at point guard, Hudson never complained or demanded a trade. Instead, he
helped Foye as much as he could, tried to stay in shape and waited.
"Being angry wouldn't do anything but make things worse," Hudson said. "You
get frustrated, at times. But only for a second. Then you come back down and
realize that you have to keep working hard. ... For me to go back to the end
of the bench, it was a humbling experience. But I took it in stride and just
worked through it."
Hudson was put back in the starting lineup because coach Randy Wittman wanted
more flow in his offense. Wittman saw that in Sunday's double-overtime loss
in Boston. He got that, and more, from Hudson.
"I wasn't expecting 26 points," Wittman said. "But I was not surprised by his
court savvy, his pushing the ball up the floor, the flow of our offense."
That was the positive. The Wolves, though, still need to tighten up on
defense, and perimeter defense is not one of Hudson's strengths. Wittman
called Hudson's defense Sunday "OK" and said the whole team needed to
improve, especially with defensive specialist Trenton Hassell likely out
because of an ankle injury.
But what impressed Wittman the most was how ready Hudson was to play after
having not played significant minutes for so long.
"Publicly as well as to our team, I've used him as an example of a guy that
wants to play, probably should be playing and is not, and is handling it the
right way," Wittman said. "Every day he worked. He grabbed Randy [Foye],
really worked with him on the side, tried to teach him. He was a
professional. And I think that's why he was ready."
Foye might now have to deal with fewer minutes. A bad matchup Sunday limited
Foye to fewer than six minutes. For the moment, he has ceded his starting job
to Hudson as Wittman looks for a combination that can end his team's
three-game losing streak.
Maybe Hudson will experience a flashback to that playoff series a few years
ago.
"That was my team growing up," Hudson said. "Maybe it's something that is
subconscious -- when I see the Lakers, I'm ready to play."
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