LOS ANGELES – Believe it or not, it's not always easy being Ricky Rubio.
At least it hasn't been these last three games, even with all that hair, all that charm and all that game.
He has struggled to make a shot since missing a potential game-tying free throw late in Friday's home loss to Toronto, and he did so again in Wednesday's 111-95 loss to the Clippers in Los Angeles.
Just last week, Rubio made his first five three-point attempts and could barely miss a shot during a victory at Milwaukee. And now, he has gone 3-for-31 from the field – including all six three-pointers he has attempted – in his last three games. In Wednesday's loss, he fought foul trouble and a slow shooting start against a playoff-bound Clippers team that on Sunday won its first Pacific Division title by completing a series sweep of the hometown rival Lakers for the first time since Donald Sterling bought the team in 1981.
Rubio missed three first-half shots and finished 2-for-8 for six points on a night when the Wolves fell behind 8-0 early and then surrendered a 9-2 run to end the first half.
"He's fighting through it," Wolves coach Rick Adelman said about Rubio's last three shooting nights. "He has come a long way from the start of the year with the (knee) injury and everything else. He has a nice run and now he's missing shots. There's nothing you can do but make sure you're taking good shots and keep attacking.
"They got aggressive and they got into him tonight and he got into foul trouble. I just don't think he got any rhythm."
The Wolves cut a 12-point halftime deficit down to three points by midway through the third quarter, then allowed the Clippers a 19-6 run that ended the third quarter and included four open three-point shots while the Wolves forced too many themselves and shot just 6-for-23 from three-point range all night.