David Kahn: Ricky Rubio's coming

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http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_/id/13872/david-kahn-ricky-rubios-coming

Minnesota Timberwolves president of basketball operations David Kahn has a message about Ricky Rubio. In a phone conversation today, he explained:

Don't believe anything you read, or any kind of emotional outburst, or any kind of emoting of any sort that he will not play here. Nothing could be further from the truth. I'm looking very forward to him starting his career here with the Minnesota Timberwolves in what I assume will be a year-and-a-half.

Why a year and a half?
He doesn't have a buyout at the end of this year. I'm assuming it will be difficult for him to leave. Barcelona paid a lot of money for his buyout, about $5.3 million, they're obviously going to want to amortize they're investment over a couple years. There is a buyout after that, however.

How do we know what he's thinking? Can you characterize where your confidence comes from? Were you over there?
I was over there. I saw him play in Serbia a few weeks ago. We have people at most of his games. There's no reason for us to think otherwise. We developed a very solid relationship with his representatives, and more importantly, perhaps, his family, this past summer. It wasn't an issue of him having any concern about Minnesota whatsoever. I think at the end of the day he just felt that him having a couple more years in Europe would be the smart and prudent thing for him to do. He had a lot of input from his Spanish National team members, who all think he can play here, but also thought that a few more years of development would help him. I don't have any reason not to think that's true, either.

Has your view of him evolved at all, since drafting him?
I think this year he's had to play in a much more rigid system with Barcelona. It hasn't afforded him the kind of freedom he had in Badalona. But I think there's been an adjustment period, but he's made a really fine adjustment. He's on what is arguably the best team in Europe. So he's surrounded by better players, and playing at a very high level. He's not playing as many minutes, because the team is so deep. But he's starting and still playing a good 20 minutes a night.

And when I saw him I thought his upper body looked a big bigger. His arms have more definition. I asked him. He told he has been lifting.

He has been working very diligently on his shot ... so we shall see.

It's amusing, too, to see that a lot of people are looking at his statistics and complaining, yet they fail to make any connection to Brandon Jennings. I believe to this day that Ricky will prove to be a very special NBA player, and I fully expect him to be here in the next year-and-a-half.
 
Kahn hasn't been particularly believable in the past in his Rubio statements, so I'm not sure why this one gets any credibility aside from the fact that he's not claiming he's coming over immediately.

Still, with the spectre of an impending lockout in the summer of 2011 (when Kahn says Rubio is coming) the whole thing should be taken with an even bigger grain of salt, perhaps a whole shaker. Rubio has two pretty strong financial reasons to stay in Europe for the '11-'12 season: 1) There may not be an NBA season, and 2) under the rules of the current CBA (who knows if these might change) he will be freed from the traditional rookie salary scale if he stays an extra year, allowing him to negotiate a better contract immediately. Otherwise he'll have four years on the cheap (relatively) before he can get a big deal. Why not make money in Europe while the NBA may be on hiatus, avoid the buyout, and jump to the NBA when your bargaining power is increased?

But, hey, if Kahn can keep T'Wolves fans believing it, more power to him.
 
Rubio's max potential is Jon Barry with a little bit of Nash mixed in. He will never have the chops, and his moves while pretty are too methodical for the NBA. Hope he has been lifting alot of weights because when he comes to America, that young man look is going to look like a red bullseye for 90% of the NBA. Rubio is one galvanizing MF.
 
Kahn hasn't been particularly believable in the past in his Rubio statements, so I'm not sure why this one gets any credibility aside from the fact that he's not claiming he's coming over immediately.

Still, with the spectre of an impending lockout in the summer of 2011 (when Kahn says Rubio is coming) the whole thing should be taken with an even bigger grain of salt, perhaps a whole shaker. Rubio has two pretty strong financial reasons to stay in Europe for the '11-'12 season: 1) There may not be an NBA season, and 2) under the rules of the current CBA (who knows if these might change) he will be freed from the traditional rookie salary scale if he stays an extra year, allowing him to negotiate a better contract immediately. Otherwise he'll have four years on the cheap (relatively) before he can get a big deal. Why not make money in Europe while the NBA may be on hiatus, avoid the buyout, and jump to the NBA when your bargaining power is increased?

But, hey, if Kahn can keep T'Wolves fans believing it, more power to him.

Hum, good point. I didn't relationate that 2011 is the end for the current CBA...It's quite possible that could retain Rubio one more year in Barcelona, but it's true what Kahn said about the buyout. After all the drama with DKV ended and he was bought by Barcelona, I remember reading in most sites that he had a clausule in his contract that allowed him go to the NBA after playing for them two years.

I think he shouldn't have go to the draft last summer, he should have waited to end his contract with DKV so there were no buyouts to retain him in Spain. It was a quite dumb move, He only could afford jumping the atlantic if he was between 1 and 4 pick...I guess he tried it while the hype on him was still hot, but it was too risky anyways.


But now that's done, and also think he would go there earlier or later. It's very probable that Barcelona is going to win it all this year, so he'll have won everything winnable here in Europe by then, so there won't be so much to do.
 
I think Johnny Flynn was always trade bait for Minnesota. They want Rubio and they know it's going to take a couple of years to get him there, so they play Flynn big minutes in the mean time and hopefully there's a taker when Rubio is ready to go. If not, then Rubio maybe comes off the bench his first year and then you switch Flynn into the backup role. I don't think you would ever want to play both of them at the same time, but it's not a bad platoon situation considering Flynn is more of a scoring PG and Rubio is more of a set-up guy. Flynn may be better suited for a Bobby Jackson sixth man role in the long run anyway.
 
Rubio's max potential is Jon Barry with a little bit of Nash mixed in.

That's a pretty bizzare scouting report. Let's compare him to a mix of a scrub/hustle guy and one of the greatest point guards ever to play. So, does that average out to an all-star?
 
their other european prospect seems to get overlooked with rubio in the picture. but nikola pekovic might come over next season and he has alot of similarities as their current PF (jefferson) although he needs to improve his rebounding so i wouldn't be surprised if jefferson gets traded sometime next season if things pan out
 
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