I played baseball too, and flag football, but basketball was the easiest for me. Then when I was 12, my dad asked me what I wanted to do, and I said 'Be an NBA player.' Since then, he started training me.

With all the pick-and-rolls in the NBA, getting in the lane and shooting floaters or pull-ups will help a lot.

No, I don't get nervous when I play basketball.

When it comes down to the last five minutes, it's not about Xs and Os. It's pretty much who wants it more.

Well, everybody's human, and you're not going to do the right thing perfectly every time. But you mess up and you learn from it and you go on from there.

LeBron and Rondo are arguably two of the best leaders ever.

I'm not loud. Not gonna be crazy with the refs.

I know there are a lot of kids who aren't lucky enough to have a father figure in their lives. That's a really tough obstacle to overcome.

Who's gonna want to wear a loser's shoe? I know I wouldn't.

When I play the game, I play to win.

I feel great in pick-and-roll.

You can always work on everything.

Magic Johnson is one of the greatest players to ever play... he's the best point guard to ever play, so I can learn a lot of things from him.

If you keep doing something over and over, you should get good at it.

If you have one guy taking all of the shots, you're obviously not playing very fast, because you have to slow it down and wait for him to get to his spot in the offense. But when you just want the best shot possible, a lot of different people are going to get the ball.

I think I can score. But personally, I like to pass first, because people love people who pass. And I'm a point guard, so my job is to kind of get people open.

I think you're either born a leader or you're not.

Once you believe in yourself, you can pretty much do whatever you want in my opinion, so that is the main thing.

If you want to be a good shooter, you've got to shoot.

A lot of things are going to happen that you can't necessarily control all the time, but you can control what you do after it happens. So that's what I try to do, keep my head up, keep moving forward, stay positive and just work hard.

I am not a robot; I am a member of a family - my commitment to them comes over and above my commitment to cycling.

It's fantastic to have the opportunity to race at home, so I wouldn't miss it.

The Rio experience for me is going to be completely different to London.

Eating well is really important to me. That means having balanced meals, never missing a meal, never skipping a meal, having a balanced diet, and never doing anything extreme.