Philadelphia 76ers rookie Markelle Fultz’s shooting struggles have been well documented.

The No. 1 overall pick from Washington played through an early shoulder injury and proceeded to forget how to shoot a basketball. Even as he works to recover from the injury, Fultz’s shot is, well, still very much broken.

The desperation to help Markelle Fultz remember how to shoot a basketball has reached a new level.

According to phillyvoice.com, the team is having Fultz use virtual-reality goggles to help him visualize making basketball plays. Via Sixers reporter Kyle Neubeck:

The Sixers, according to multiple people who spoke with PhillyVoice for this story, believe they are one of a small group of NBA teams with a setup that allows them to train players in virtual reality. It is something the organization has been toying with over the last half year or so, which they believe is primarily useful to help put players inside a game situation, like being part of an inbounds play. It is a way to keep them involved in the program when they can’t participate physically, as they’ve done with injured rookie Furkan Korkmaz. With Fultz, there is a different motivation to get him behind the VR goggles. The Sixers, according to multiple sources, wanted him to be able to visualize the mechanics he’ll use in a game, to remember how easy it once was for him to rise up with the ball and shoot from anywhere on the court, and to be able to do so without the glare of the cameras or other people around him. With pressure coming down on him from all angles, turning part of a teenager’s job into a video game is one way to relieve the stress of the situation.

Oh man … “Remember how easy it once was.”

Fultz’s case of the yips will be studied by basketball scholars for years to come.