Vancouver Sun

‘They gave me a chance’: Rubio leaves Minnesota after six bitterswee­t years

- JON KRAWCZYNSK­I

The rumours finally became reality for Ricky Rubio. Now the Spanish point guard has gone from wondering where he fits in with the Minnesota Timberwolv­es to being a central figure with the Utah Jazz.

“It makes me feel special. It makes me feel like they want me here,” Rubio said on Tuesday. “I’m a loyal guy, so I’m going to try to do my best to help them reach our goal, which is a championsh­ip one day.”

The Jazz acquired Rubio in a trade last week just before the start of free agency, bringing to an end a six-season run in Minnesota.

“I’m always going to be attached to that city because I made friends and family there,” Rubio said. “With the team, we went through some rough times. I remember my rookie year and all of the excitement. I was really, really happy to make my dream come true. They gave me a chance.”

Rubio was a wide-eyed teenager when he was drafted by the Timberwolv­es in 2009, and still had no idea what he was getting into when he left Spain for Minnesota in 2011.

A long-suffering fan base immediatel­y connected with a floppyhair­ed kid flinging passes through defenders’ legs. They chanted, “Ole! Ole! Ole! Ole!” when he was buzzing up the court and delighted in the endearingl­y broken English he used to relay his excitement about finally playing in the NBA.

“The people over there are the nicest people on Earth, I think,” he said. “I’m truly going to miss that.”

It took his game far less time to acclimate to the United States than his language. Rubio energized the Timberwolv­es in his rookie season, teaming with Kevin Love and coach Rick Adelman to push the team into the Western Conference playoff picture. But he tore the ACL in his left knee late in a game against the Lakers in March of that season to short-circuit the optimism.

He also missed 60 games with a severely sprained ankle in 2014-15. The Wolves never made the playoffs or finished with a winning record in his six years.

“It’s always been something in the team that it seems like it never let us make that run and feel comfortabl­e a whole season,” he said. “Great six years. I enjoyed every single one. It was a lot of tough times, but I learned a lot.”

He struggled with his shooting for most of his career, hitting 37.5 per cent from the field and 31.5 per cent from 3-point range. His ability to get to the free-throw line helped mitigate those deficienci­es some and there were stretches where he seemed to be turning the corner, including the final 34 games of last season when he hit 37.6 per cent of his 3-point shots.

The shooting issue caused his name to surface in trade rumours for years, intensifyi­ng after the death of former president and coach Flip Saunders. Rubio had bonded with owner Glen Taylor and the Saunders family. Ryan, Flip’s son and an assistant on the team, worked closely with Rubio to improve his shooting and the two grew close while Flip was struggling with Hodgkin lymphoma and Rubio’s mother, who died last year, was being treated for lung cancer.

The connection was not the same with interim coach Sam Mitchell two seasons ago or Thibodeau last season.

Thibodeau has long preferred his point guards to be scoring threats, and he considered making a trade in February that would have sent Rubio to New York for Derrick Rose. Thibodeau ultimately decided not to pull the trigger, but the lack of communicat­ion during that process led to a breakdown that had Rubio believing a change of scenery might be for the best.

“When your name is in the rumours, it’s tough to feel one of the main guys and feel a really good part of the project because there’s a lot of doubts around you,” Rubio said. “But we’re profession­als and we have to know that they’re not doing it because they don’t like you. It’s just because they want the best for the team. Maybe it wasn’t meant to be over there. We will see.”

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Ricky Rubio

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