I don't really read the papers.

I try to watch film with teammates and help them as well, so that's just part of the game, part of playing.

I try to do what's best for the team.

I always feel like I can teach.

I'm an extension of the coach on the floor.

You can get caught up in making and missing shots, but the game is so much more.

If given an opportunity, knowing I'll play 36 minutes a night, I can perform at a high level. Spotty or inconsistent minutes, which have been the case in the past, then the numbers fluctuate.

Every team I've played on has players-only meetings, players staff meetings, so this is part of the process.

I'm a poet.

When we're able to get stops, get the ball off the glass and run, you never know who's going to get the ball. Everyone takes off, runs to their spots, and the ball just finds the open man.

I think I stand up more often than I should on defense. I've got to be solid and continue to get better.

I take pride in being a great teammate.

With the ball in your hands as the point guard, you want to be able to control the game and take care of it.

Hopefully I'll be a GM one day, or even a coach, teaching the game to the young guys.

Everyone wants to believe Chris Paul is a good guy. They don't know he's a horrible teammate. They don't know how he treats people.

I take accountability for my actions.

I might be out of the league if I didn't have a guy like K.G. to show me the ropes and a coach like Doc Rivers.

No better way to bond than food.

I play the game hard; I play the game with an edge.

Getting a tear in my ACL in 2012 puts a lot of things in perspective about being able to play the game.

Every night, I go out there, and I try to compete and win.

I play the game the right way.

The point guard is always the leader on the floor, regardless: the extension out there on the floor for the coach.

The only thing that can conquer hate is love.