Our focus should be on finding a bipartisan solution to healthcare that makes it more affordable and accessible to all Americans.

It sickens me to hear of people being unable to get coverage if they have a pre-existing condition, or of seniors that are struggling to afford prescriptions.

In addition to dealing with call spoofing and robocalls with acts like the Robocall Enforcement Enhancement Act, the American people require a larger scale approach.

We must work together as Americans in a bipartisan fashion.

Elected officials need to stop with the name calling and hateful statements.

We were elected to work together and help keep this country the greatest nation in the world.

Bringing solar as a renewable energy resource for those who are not able to install solar panels on their roofs allows more communities to benefit from a solar array.

It is important that we are looking at renewable resources and growing businesses based on them.

For illegal robocallers, the goal isn't always getting you to answer. Sometimes, it's getting you to call back.

With the Ending One-Ring Scams Act of 2019, I continue my fight against those that prey on the weak.

Election security is the first step to having free, fair, and open elections.

Since the founding of our nation, our democracy has been the beacon of hope and the standard by which other countries look to.

We need to do everything in our power to assure the American people that the election system is secured and that outside forces will not interfere.

Our Country is a beacon of hope for the world.

Secure, safe borders with physical barriers, proper technology, manpower, and a sufficient number of judges is attainable and important to the security of our nation. We must also treat these children at the border with compassion and decency.

Systems are overrated; players are underrated.

Everyone wants to focus on what Ben Simmons can't do, which is shoot and try to rush him into being a range shooter. I think Simmons in Philadelphia has done a good job in focusing what he does great versus what he doesn't do as well.

To be successful in anything, you have to have a passion for it, and that leads to being enthusiastic and demanding. I didn't have it for history. So I wouldn't have been a good teacher in that area. But I had it for basketball. And that's what coaching is at every level: it's about teaching.

I think fans oftentimes get an inferior product on back-to-back games, and I think that has to be the number one thing that gets addressed for the fans and for the players - the elimination or the drastic reduction of back-to-back games.

Dwight Howard is a Hall of Fame player.

While a guy may not be totally happy, he can be effective and do well for the team.

The best player's responsibility is to unite and inspire your teammates to play up to their full maximum ability, and that never occurs if you try to separate yourself as part of the problem.

I don't know about any others, but coaching basketball is the only thing I can do.

I have known Marbury since he was in seventh grade, and I have always felt he is a hell of an NBA player.

Stop the nonsense about 'student-athlete.'

I love listening to Coach Belichick's press conferences: even though they may not be what the media wants, they're great coaching, teaching tools.

As far as LeBron James, to me, he's on his way to carving out the very best career that's ever happened in the NBA.

The triangle itself is just an offense based on freedom of the ball to go to different places, everybody feeling involved. It's a good thing.

I don't like comparing people or teams.

There are franchise players to build around that have championship-level talent, skill, basketball IQ, and character - it's hard to find those guys. Those guys are rare.

Mark Fox is always criticized recruiting: he can't keep the Georgia kids home. What that means - he's not cheating and paying. That's what it means.

I don't ever remember wanting to do anything but coach. My dad obviously influenced me. But it wasn't because he sat there and drilled coaching stuff into our heads. We were on the bench keeping the scorebook and traveling with the team on weekends. It was such a great upbringing.

I was asked to do something and represent my country. That's a great honor. This isn't about what it could do for me but what I could do for U.S.A. Basketball.

My father and mother have given me so much love, so much support, that it would trivialize their parenthood if I would reduce it just to basketball. But my dad does call me before and after every game. And when we lost a game we shouldn't have, he told me it wasn't my fault. And I appreciated that, because he was trying to pick me up.

Providence had a graduate assistant job opening. They asked me if I wanted to apply, and I applied. That break right there put me in position to learn from great coaches. It really jump-started every other good break I ever had in coaching.

Players and coaches alike, you sign up for 82 games. You get paid for 82.

I grew up dreaming about being an Olympic basketball player: Doug Collins getting smashed into the stanchion, making two free throws. Phil Ford and Mike O'Koren in 1976.

Why is UCLA and Georgia Tech in China to play a basketball game? Missing all that school, and then force-feeding their fans the idea of 'student-athletes.'

I think greatness is always good for the NBA. Great players, great teams - it's always good for the NBA.

Christmas Day is a big day for NBA basketball.

I miss coaching - certain elements of coaching.

In one era, it's hard enough to compare people. But comparing people of different eras... that's next to impossible.

Every team has leadership. The leadership is the best players. But there's positive leadership, and there's negative leadership.

If sports science really has a beat on what's healthy for the players, then they need to tell the league how many games that is healthy for players to play and then only play that many games.

I broadcast games. I think there is a huge difference between print journalism and broadcasting. I don't have to say, 'sources close to LeBron James,' five times a game. I can just put my name to it. I say what I believe. It doesn't mean it's right. It's what I believe.

If you are going to call out your teammates, you have to call out yourself, too. You can't just separate yourself from the rest, because if you are going to get 90 percent of the credit when you win, you have to be willing to take 90 percent of the blame when you lose.

You start comparing people, and ultimately, somebody feels diminished.

I've had two owners - Jim Dolan and Les Alexander in Houston. Both were terrific. They wanted to win badly and gave you the resources to win.

The public Yao was the private Yao: To his core, there was an unmistakable peace to him.

As great of a player as Yao was, he was kind and patient with everybody. He wasn't trying to feed an image or cultivate a brand or manipulate a public persona.