Every moment is big in the playoffs.

It's hard to play basketball without a point guard - it's an important position.

Off-seasons hurt when you lose the last game.

You have to buy into what the team is doing and get lost in that process. When you make it about yourself, that's when you can start to press a little bit.

I never casually shoot shots, ever. I shoot the same way every time. I shoot the same shots that I'd shoot during the game.

I've never been a basketball prodigy. I've always had to work, earn my way. And that's the way I want it to be.

Shooting threes is always going to be what I do best.

In Atlanta, we ran a motion offense, so, obviously, I was on the move a lot.

I love thinking about mechanics and having your mind agree with the mechanics. Sometimes you can shoot it correctly, but your mind doesn't think that it's right. So it's like, how do you get your mind to trust that that's the right way to shoot it.

I do remember my first 3-point attempt. I missed it.

It's easy to draw up isolation basketball - it's not easy to draw up great motion offense with passing and cutting.

The playoffs are a chess match, with adjustments every game.

I loved being 36.

My parents didn't pay for college because we all got scholarships.

I only try to talk to people about things I really do use in my shot. If I see something similar and something that will help them, then you try to come to them and say, 'I think I might have something for you. Think about it if you like it.' If they do, and they want to keep talking about it, then I will.

If I see something in somebody, if it's something similar in my shot, I feel like it's the same type of thing in life. People who tell you what to do all the time or have all the answers for you, it's like, 'OK, whatever.' But if you've gone through something in life, you can speak to something a little more.

Well, the LeBron James of the world don't come around very often. That's a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing.

Diving is cool to watch. Springboard or platform - it doesn't matter.

I'll see some random guy and really like how he's locking his wrist when he's shooting or how a guy is catching the ball. It can be a little reminder that that's something I have to think about today.

It's easy on teams when you have got superstars. I mean, they're really good. And you give them the ball, and you say, 'Make a play.'

That is what shooting is. There is no secret sauce, man. You've got to find mechanics that you can make the same every time, and you've got to do it over and over again, and you can't just shoot for rhythm. You've got to understand what you are doing. You have to focus on those details every day.

To have a superstar - he's Allen Iverson - he really took me under his wing and really forced me to shoot the ball and forced me to make plays, and to have him do that for me - and the way he was always in my ear telling me to shoot the ball and supporting me - it's a big deal.

I don't shoot shots just to shoot shots. I'm always working in a rhythm, working on mechanics. I've got a checklist of the things I need to do with my form, my legs, my arms, all of my mechanics.

I've always tried to set my standards high on a daily basis.