<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>LONDON - Now that they will always have Istanbul, the Minnesota globetrotters have flown westward to this smallish town over here, held one practice and marveled at how so very, very many people occupy the metropolis back there in Turkey.</p> "Those people," new Timberwolves forward Ryan Gomes all but gasped. "There were so many."The people," Wolves coach Randy Wittman all but shouted. "The vastness of the population."</p> Eyeballing a Wednesday exhibition with the Boston Celtics, the post-Kevin Garnett Wolves have two types of impressions from their previous weeklong stopover: They have some first basketball impressions from their exhibition victory over the Turkish professional team Efes Pilsen, and they have some deep life impressions from a country more exotic to Americans than most foreign-exhibition destinations.</p> While players participated in charity and business appearances in Turkey -- and John Edwards and Mark Madsen visited such famous sites as the former mosque-turned-museum Hagia Sophia and one of the city's noted blue mosques -- everybody on the trip was amazed by the multitudes.</p> "Just 17 million in one area, or it's almost like one area, and you're driving, and the stoplights change, and it's like ants," Wittman said, adding, "No crosswalks ... that, to me, was just, 'Wow.' I don't see that very much."</p> Said Gomes: "I was talking to our interpreter, and he said there's 16 million people there," as it's clear you can lose about a million in such crowds. "People are out and driving everywhere, fishing in the river."</p> He had seen Americans standing in median strips selling roses before, just not "people selling bottled water -- on the highway."</p> Wittman's highway memory involves a sole driver who clearly lost something off his truck and got out to run back and retrieve it. As he ran, Wittman said, "Somebody was coming down his lane, and he wasn't moving over. It was like a game of 'chicken' with no vehicle. He was gonna get killed to get whatever it was."</div></p> Source: Star Tribune</p>