ORLANDO – Three complete games and another four minutes into this new season, Timberwolves guard Ricky Rubio attempted his first three-point shot early in Wednesday's 98-91 victory over Brooklyn.
Until then, he hadn't tried a single one, and it wasn't because he hadn't qualified during practice and earned coach Flip Saunders' approval to shoot them at will.
"Yeah, I qualified," Rubio said, laughing. "I think they will let me shoot."
Before Wednesday's game was over, he had attempted three of them, which wasn't a coincidence.
"I did realize before the game that I didn't even attempt a three, so I was thinking to myself I have to be more aggressive," Rubio said. "And I have been working on my shot, so why not try shooting more threes?"
The Wolves hired a shooting coach partly to help improve Rubio's mechanics. Rubio's absence of a single three-point attempt in those first three games is not a comment on the work they've done, but rather it's a conscious effort to emphasize a mid-range shooting game, particularly from around the free-throw lane.
Rubio took just 10 shots from there and made one of those all last season, coach Flip Saunders said. In this season's first three games, he has shot 12 already, Saunders said.
"It's something I've been working on, and I just keep doing it," Rubio said. "It's something we talked about after the season. I'm trying to be more effective in that area because that's where the point guard can be dangerous, and it helps the team open up everything. It's a good area to take good shots. I'm just trying to get better looks, better quality shots and they're going to fall in."