Carlos Danger wrote:Injuries happen. And not just to Rubio. Total games played the last two seasons:
109 - Bennett
108 - Budinger
107 - Martin
104 - Rubio
101 - Garnett
89 - Pekovic
75 - Bazz
If you're going to go after one guy as being "injury prone" then why not go after all of them? Rubio isn't even the worst offender. It's Bazz, Pek and KG.
Wait. Aren't there quite a few DNP - Coaches Decision in there, too? What's next, saying Jeff Adrien isn't as durable as Rubio because he's played fewer games (yes, that's the Q bat signal)...
As Khans notes... Rubio is the team's foundation. Yet, because of two key injury-plagued seasons and one season where he inexplicably was largely sat down in the 4th quarter... Wolves fans don't know for certain what kind of player he can become.
Statistically, he's the same guy as he was as a rookie. That's not terrible by any means. When healthy, he can be an average PG in this league... doing some things great... other things really poorly. Even it out and you have Rubio.
Is that a foundational piece? Maybe. More importantly though... that's a question we could ask IF he hadn't missed A LOT of time over 2 of his 4 seasons. As it is.... we can't even get to those kind of big-picture declarations or affirmations until the guy stays on the court so we can see if there's more to his game than he's shown thus far.
It's very rare to see a guy be as consistent (statistically leveling off) as Rubio has for as long as he has (four years) while at the same time inciting so much optimism and promise that he could be more.