When you look the wrong way to cross the street, you've got to be careful with it.

I tried one tiny piece of kangaroo, which I never thought I would try, and it was actually pretty good. I probably wouldn't eat it again, but it was still pretty good.

My parents always told me be confident but be humble at the same time.

I've always been trying to add stuff to my game.

Just working on stuff off the dribble a lot more. It's helping me create my own shot and freeing me up a little bit, being able to make plays and make shots.

I'm definitely active in the community down there in Charleston.

From Day 1 since I was in middle school, it's just to get better every day and not settle for anything, try to get better, try to improve, and try to stay hungry. That's not going to change.

The ultimate goal is to win a championship.

A hamstring is definitely nothing to play with. There are chronic hamstring injuries where guys think it is fine, and they go out there and try to run and pull it again.

We have to do what's best for the team.

I've had to change my game a lot - try to play the right way, try to do the right things, try to be the glue guy for the team for the most part.

I've got the mind-set that I'm going to play as hard as I can, and I'm going to make the person guarding me work as hard as he can.

If I stay patient in the offense, shots will come.

It's just using my size. On the defensive end, it's using my length to disturb the smaller guys. On the offensive end, if there's a post-up advantage, I can take it.

I don't think smaller guys usually bother me on my shot too much.

You have to play your game in this league.

If you miss 10 in a row, you have to believe the next 10 are going to fall for you.

Confidence is a huge thing in this league.

This is what you do your routine for, so when playoff basketball comes, it helps you stay fresh, sharp, energized, strong - all that.

We have to give back. We have to try to grow the game.

We have to try to make the game better than it was when we came in.

It's a great job to have to try to spread the game, to spread joy, to help anybody out.

I don't want to be one of those players who has a good career but couldn't get out of the first round.

Luke Cage is a beast, man. You can't take that guy down no matter what.

I dedicate much of my success to what I learned inside and outside the classroom at Porter-Gaud, and I want to give that same opportunity to other kids in Charleston.

I knew I wasn't going to be a dunker.

I'm trying to make the game easier for everyone else.

It's a tough grind sometimes. Playing 82 games and the travel, it can wear you down. It's definitely something you have to learn and adjust to. If you don't, you can play your way out of the league very quickly.

Getting that degree is something that is very important to me and my family.

I've worked on my game to the point where anything they've asked of me, I try to come through and do it for them, whether that's defending, making plays, being a decoy, or knocking down shots and being a scorer.

It comes to the point where, if a midrange shot is there, I'm going to take it. If I'm open, I have to shoot that shot. That's a great shot for the team and myself.

Some people will have their opinions, but to be in the league, you have to have confidence that you're one of the best.

I'm just trying to shoot in rhythm. That's the biggest thing for my shot from long range. I don't try to speed it up too much.

I'm an unselfish player.

In high school, I played a lot of point forward, and I had to get everyone involved.

I have always been the kind of guy who just takes it one day at a time.

Focus on what needs to be done that day. Don't think too far ahead. Once you start thinking too far ahead, you get distracted by things that don't matter on that day.

Waffle House is my childhood thing. We used to go there on Sundays or weekends every now and then with my family. It's just good, Southern, home-cooked food, and that's what I love.

To be a Milwaukee Buck, it's a great feeling. It's a unique feeling. It's a small-city market, but when you live there, and you play there every night, you realize how much you mean to that city and how much you can do to impact people's lives around there.

It's a business. But as a player, it sucks to know you were just thrown into a trade for it to work.

I have a more old-school game.

I'm not the most athletic guy who is able to make these crazy layups or dunk all over people. I'm more of a shooter, floater, lane guy - not too much flash. But it gets the job done.