I don't see myself being able to stay away from football.

Any way that I can help the Harvard football program and Harvard is great.

Coming to Harvard was an eye-opening experience because there's so much diversity on campus.

At Harvard, I grew up a lot in terms of being able to deal with different types of people because where I grew up in Arizona, it's predominately white and predominantly Mormon families, so there's not a whole lot of diversity.

Some nights, you're tired. But I just like to go out there and help my team win and not let my team down. It's the least I can do.

Everyone sees me as a defensive-minded guy, but both sides of the court are important. If you want to win, you have to be good on both sides.

Defense is the thing we can control and bring every night. But I want to be great on both ends.

In Europe and FIBA, the game is a little slower and the court is a little smaller.

Like I always say, it's a five-on-five game.

I haven't scratched the surface of what I can become offensively.

That's what it's all about at the end of the day. What can you do? What difference can you make in the world?

I definitely want to be one of the best players in the history of the game. That's a good goal to have.

I want to improve every part of my game.

When you have a coach that is a competitor, that wants to win more than anything else, it really carries over to the team.

Usually, I heal very fast.

There are a lot of people that never thought I was going to be the guy that I am now. Now when I see them, it's fun to see how people are. I don't think they're being fake. I think now they just see me from a different eye.

In the playoffs, it's not going to be pretty. There's going to be some games where you don't score. But are you going to take a charge for a teammate?

This is basketball. It's All-Star and all that stuff. That's not what it's really about. It's about making a difference and impacting the kids and helping people in need. That's what it's about.

It's a tremendous amount of fans in France that love basketball, that follow it every day even though the games are at like two or three in the morning.

I don't care about that All-Star bonus, to be honest. It's just about my legacy.

Obviously I think offensively, spacing for me as a guy that puts a lot of pressure on the rim is going to make it harder on a defense. They're going to have to make tougher decisions, and space is going to be way more open for all the guards, too.

I'd take the Defensive Player of the Year any day over an All-Star selection. There's only one of these in the whole league every year.

I always love to help the community, to interact with the kids, with the fans. It doesn't matter who I am on the court, to me it's important.

I think when you're a very good defensive team you give yourself a chance every night, on the road, at home, it's a big factor and something to build on.