In mid-December 2015, I wrote a long piece about then-Wolves guard Ricky Rubio being, at least by one statistical measure, the worst shooter in modern NBA history.
At that point in his career, Rubio had the worst field-goal percentage (.365) of any player in the NBA who had played more than 5,000 minutes since the adoption of the three-point shot in 1979-80.
But Rubio's game was as full of dualities and complexities as anyone in recent Timberwolves memory. To underscore that: Just a couple weeks after that piece was published, Rubio embarked on one of the strangest, most impressive streaks of shooting in NBA history.
Per data from Basketball Reference, Rubio made a technical free throw Dec. 31, 2015, against Detroit. A couple of days later, he went 3-for-3 in one game. Thus began an improbable journey that lasted until Nov. 11, 2017 when Rubio — by then early in his Utah Jazz career — missed a technical free throw.
In that span, Rubio made 60 consecutive technical free throws. When the streak ended, it was reported by The Athletic's Jon Krawczynski to be the second-longest technical free-throw streak in NBA history behind Doug Christie's 73 makes.
So how is someone simultaneously one of the best and worst shooters ever? Well, the answer is probably a combination of a testament to Rubio, the power of confidence and the very nature of free throws themselves.
• First, Rubio has become a decidedly better shooter from the field since that pivotal point in December 2015 — from 36.5% from the field at the time to 41% in the past four seasons combined.
And his free-throw success jumped from about 80% in his first four seasons to 87% in his past four seasons. He was good enough as a free-throw shooter in 2016-17, his final season with the Wolves and during the height of his technical free-throw streak, to rank No. 11 in the entire NBA for the season at 89.1%.