PHOENIX – As headline news goes, Timberwolves point guard Ricky Rubio's winning three-pointer just before Friday night's final buzzer at Oklahoma City doesn't quite rank up there with "Man Bites Dog" because it's not like he has never done it before.
"When I was a kid," he said. "Not lately."
He remembers such shots as a child and then something similar again as a teenager. His catch-and-heave shot from half-court that forced overtime and delivered Spain a FIBA Under-16 championship in double overtime over Russia remains the stuff of legends a decade later.
It does so both because of Rubio's 51-point, 24-rebound, 12-assist, seven-steal stat line that day and the stunning nature of his banked shot right at the buzzer. It came while the Russians still celebrated what they thought was a winning three-pointer of their own.
Rubio hopped and ran and was mobbed by teammates in August 2006, when he was 15. On Friday, Rubio reacted blankly, partly because two-tenths of a second still remained.
He walked away without reaction moments later while teammates emoted for him, celebrating both the Wolves' first victory in Oklahoma City since Thanksgiving weekend 2008 and success for a player whose shooting struggles in the NBA have been well-documented.
Rubio gave two separate accounts for his reaction — or lack thereof — on Friday, telling FSN immediately after the game, "It's great to win, but we should have done it more this season." In the locker room later, he explained himself by saying, "Of course I'm happy, but I'm tired, too."