With Timberwolves point guard Ricky Rubio recently getting some criticism about his play, Wolves President of Basketball Operations Flip Saunders has come to his defense.
Rubio has had a frustrating season. He usually is a brilliant passer, but his shooting and decisionmaking — especially down the stretch of close games — has often been poor.
Saunders says he still believes fully in Rubio, and that the Wolves need to be patient with his offensive development.
"Here's the thing," said Saunders, a former point guard himself. "Ricky is 23 and he's still somewhat young and he's only played 100 games in our league. Is he not shooting the ball well? There's no question. Has he at times made what some might call questionable decisions? Yeah. But there's some things you can't teach, and you can't teach his offensive instinct and his passing ability."
Going into Sunday's game with the Spurs, Rubio was sixth in the league in assists at 8.2 per game and his 12.4 assists per 48 minutes trails only the Clippers' Chris Paul at 15.5. He was second in the league in steals at 2.67 per game and was sixth in rebounding among NBA guards at 4.7 per game.
But Rubio's 34.6 field-goal percentage is the worst among qualified NBA players this season and is on pace to be one of the worst shooting percentages in NBA history. His scoring average also has dipped by nearly two points per game, from 10.7 last year to 8.8 this season.
Rubio's other major issue has been his performance in the final minutes of close games. According to NBA.com, in the final five minutes of the 19 games where the Wolves were either ahead or behind by five points, Rubio has been averaging only 0.6 points per game on 12.5 percent shooting, something that has to change.
Saunders said Rubio is aware of what he has to do to become a complete star in this league.