Long after Thursday's practice concluded, Timberwolves point guard Ricky Rubio sat on the Target Center scorer's table, engaged in a lengthy conversation with the man hired by the team recently to be both a coach and confidante.
The team sent Rubio to Los Angeles last July to work for a week with specialist Mike Penberthy and then hired the shooting coach who has spent summers with Indiana's Paul George and Oklahoma City's Reggie Jackson, among others. With the Wolves, Penberthy will work with everyone from Rubio to big men Nikola Pekovic and Gorgui Dieng.
Sometimes that means repetitive work on the court, modifying Rubio's positioning and mechanics in an attempt to correct the biggest deficiency left in his game, or pushing veteran forward Chase Budinger out to halfcourt to work on his midrange shot.
Sometimes it means long conversations off the court concerning the art of shooting and the mind's fragile nature when it comes to said subject.
The one thing it hasn't meant so far: No player has been bamboozled into post-practice shooting games for a little money with Penberthy, a former two-time NAIA All-America point guard who shot his way onto the Los Angeles Lakers for their 2001 championship season.
"No games of H-O-R-S-E yet," Budinger said. "I don't think too many guys would take him in that."
Wolves coach and President of Basketball Operations Flip Saunders calls Penberthy's hiring a "speciality-type thing" and "proactive." Six-time NBA champion San Antonio long has had a shooting specialist on its coaching staff … and look where it has gotten the Spurs.
"Mike is not going to change somebody's shot, he is going to tweak it and work on certain mechanics," Saunders said. "As coaches, when we go through practice we are looking at everything. It's the whole canvas. With Mike, he's going to be able to look at one person and really lock into what they're doing."