Ricky Rubio was mugged on a drive and there was no call. Toronto came away with the basketball, and Rubio rallied to steal it back. He was sitting on the floor, being clawed at, and you expected a frantic request for a timeout.
That's not what the Target Center crowd saw Friday night. Rather than panic, Rubio noticed the flash of a teammate, Andrei Kirilenko, breaking down the middle of the court. He pushed a pass in Kirilenko's direction, Andrei went for a layup and was fouled, resulting in a three-point play.
A couple of minutes later, with 57 seconds left in the first quarter, Rubio was called for his second foul and went to the bench. Just like that, the Timberwolves' offense went from flowing to stumbling.
Eventually, the Raptors took advantage of the matchup favoring DeMar DeRozan and the offensive talent of Rudy Gay to hold a 94-92 lead in the closing seconds. The Wolves made a defensive stand, the ball came to Rubio and he sped down the right side, headed for the basket.
Rubio was fouled in the act of shooting, made the first free throw, and had the tying attempt rattle out. Another Wolves' foul gave Toronto a final point and a 95-93 victory.
The Wolves came back Saturday night and gave coach Rick Adelman his 1,000th regular-season victory by beating Detroit 107-101. Rubio had a horrible night shooting, and yet the Wolves were a plus-17 when he was on the court, demonstrating that he is the player this team can rally around and escape from the abyss.
That abyss includes eight consecutive losing seasons — from the fall of 2005 to this spring. In Minnesota's major league era that started in 1961, that will equal the fledgling Timberwolves of 1989 into 1997, and the Twins from 1993 through 2000 for the longest stretch of losing seasons.
Rubio blew out his left knee March 9, 2012 and the Timberwolves collapsed. He returned on Dec. 15 as a shadow of himself and to a shadow of a team ravaged by injuries and frequent illness.