I've been blessed with a good body that has held up over the years and I love the game.

I can't speak for anyone else, but I know how good I have it. You can't find a much better job than this. There are only 300 players in this league, so I feel very fortunate and proud to be one of those players.

I don't think it matters how old you are as long as you keep yourself physically fit.

I'm not comfortable with being honored, showered with appreciation. But it's always appreciated.

I was a very quiet kid, had nothing much to say.

I cannot thank Don DeDonatis enough for his leadership of USSSA, his stewardship of our business initiatives, and his friendship to me over the years.

I've had the zeroes since junior high school. We didn't have enough numbered shirts to go around, so my shirt was called double zero. I liked it, so I kept it.

I'd be the first to say that I'm a distant individual. I have a tendency to come across as being aloof and dismissive.

I am a loner, I suppose.

As far as any personal records, if I get 'em, fine, and if I don't, fine.

I will always be a Celtic at heart. That's where my career took off.

Boston has some of the best fans in any sport. They are very knowledgeable. They understand me. I was loved, embraced, and supported; what more can you ask for as an athlete?

I have never been one to seek or want attention or admiration or a pat on the back for what I've done.

I've never been a person that was concerned about accolades or the media embracing me.

I need a coaching job in the NBA. I'm restless and I need money.

Across the board, most NBA teams do not call back. You need a court order just to get a phone call back from these organizations. I'm not a part of their fraternity.

I want to make it clear, I'm not whining, and the Celtics owe me nothing. But having said that, you would think at least I would have a conversation about a coaching job, since that's what I want to do.

The one opinion that experience does for you is it keeps you cool, calm, and collected under pressure.

I think experience helps but it's not required to be successful.

You need talent and good coaching to be successful in the NBA.

I was seriously thinking about having a very short basketball career before the trade because of all the losing that I experienced with the Warriors, and being blamed for the Warriors demise.

I can't speak for the Warriors but for me and my career, being traded to the Celtics changed the trajectory of my career.

I exceeded my expectations of longevity in the NBA.

I told myself coming into the league that if I could play for six or seven years, that would have been a great career.

I haven't talked to the press much. That's why I've gotten kind of a bad reputation. They look at me and think I don't give a damn. But I'm not comfortable with the attention.

I use Kung Fu. That really helps my flexibility and coordination.

I basically gave up drinking. Personally, I thought I was drinking too much and, over the long run, it caught up with me.

I don't talk about my private life.

I always feel like you should walk into a room or walk down the street, like you belong. That's the philosophy that I always try to subscribe to.

To be honest my mentor was my mom and dad. I was very blessed and fortunate to have parents like I had.

I was always looking at the ground because I was self-conscious about my height. I had big feet, big hands, and all that.

Shoot, I ain't working for free. You can never have enough money.

You've got to listen to yourself, do what you think is best. Because if you listen to the critics, you might be going in all different directions.

On the West Coast, things are more relaxed, maybe because people have more fun outdoors. In the East, where the weather is not so good, people have to stay indoors. They're very knowledgable fans. This makes you play even harder.

I have a great deal of respect for Coach Fitch. When we won the championship in '81, he was the main reason why we won. We were down and he never let us doubt ourselves.

I've surprised a lot of people, including myself, with my longevity.

My parents always taught me to be humble no matter what the experience, to not think I was better than anyone else.

My father always shied away from attention. Whenever he'd get a compliment, he'd downplay it.

At Golden State, it was basically a guard-oriented offense and it wasn't either around me or in my direction.

Playing with a winner is important.

I've had my share of losing.

Not head coach - Assistant would be very attractive, but I don't think I have the discipline to deal with all the egos and personalities a head coach has to deal with.

I know if someone talked trash to me, I'd want to kick his butt.

Joe Kleine is not a legitimate center in the sense that he is not a shot blocker and not an intimidator. He's not a force on the offensive end.

Every year it happens. When I'm not putting up big numbers, I start hearing it - that I'm too old, that time finally has caught up with me.

I'm not worried about offense. I've always had that, but I can get better defensively and that in turn will make my offense better.

Golden State was basically a guard-oriented offense so I didn't use it that much.

I've got a young mind.

I don't want to be taking up space, but as long as I can make a contribution, I want to play.

If you don't play with intensity in this league, you're going to get embarrassed. Without hard work, you don't have a chance.