TULSA, OKLA. – When Ricky Rubio sat out Friday against Milwaukee to get rested and presumably ready for Sunday's meeting with Russell Westbrook, Timberwolves coach Flip Saunders placed the ball where he has more often than you'd think during a preseason in which more than half the games remain.
He put it in the hands of rookie Zach LaVine.
It's a slightly unexpected place, entrusted with a raw 19-year-old who barely played point guard during his one collegiate season at UCLA — and comparatively didn't play all that much there at all — but now is learning to play both guard positions at the game's highest level.
It's an investment process that will deliver nights such as Friday's 105-98 loss to the Bucks in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where LaVine started in Rubio's spot, played more than 27 minutes, made just two of nine shots from the field and committed six turnovers.
He also made a play in the game's final 77 seconds, finding space in the defense to drive the ball to the basket for a short bank shot that drew the Wolves within a point — but no further, it turned out — after they had trailed by as many as 14 points.
It's the kind of performance — much like his first NBA game, the preseason opener at Indiana — that sends him back afterward to review, multiple times: After that Indiana game, he watched the game on the flight home, then watched the game with Saunders the next day, and then watched portions of it with his coach yet again later.
"Watch some film, see what you did right, what you did wrong and go back out there and compete," LaVine said of his formula. "The film don't lie. It shows you the black-and-white truth, and that's what you want to see. You see what you did good and what you did bad."
On-the-job training
Friday's game revealed a very young player trying to fit precision passes into places where they didn't fit, hence many of his six turnovers. In the open court, he showed the kind of speed and inclination to push the ball at an NBA pace and maybe then some, reasons why Saunders used the 13th pick in last summer's draft to select LaVine in Saunders' other role as president of basketball operations.