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Australian hockey player banned for 12 months after allegedly buying cocaine during Olympics

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Australian hockey player banned for 12 months after allegedly buying cocaine during Olympics

Australian field hockey player Tom Craig has been suspended for 12 months after being arrested for allegedly buying cocaine during the Paris Olympics.

Hockey Australia has imposed the ban on the 29-year-old following an investigation by the governing body’s integrity unit. The second six months of the ban will be suspended if behavioural requirements are met.

The suspension will prevent Craig from competing in any match organised by Hockey Australia, but he will continue to have access to the governing body’s athlete support services.

A Hockey Australia statement read: “Following an investigation into the arrest involving National Men’s Hockey Team athlete Tom Craig at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, Hockey Australia’s Integrity Unit has imposed a 12-month suspension. Six months of this suspension will be served fully, with the remaining six months fully suspended, contingent upon meeting conduct and behavioural requirements.

“During the suspension, Craig will be prohibited from playing in any match, competition, or event at any level sanctioned or organised by Hockey Australia, including the upcoming Hockey One League and FIH Pro League seasons. Additionally, Craig is required to complete mandatory training and education programs as part of his sanction.

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“Craig will remain eligible for selection in the 2025 National Men’s Hockey Squad, which is expected to be announced at the end of the year. Tom has had access to all of the athlete support services under our program and he will continue to do so throughout his suspension. His welfare remains our priority.

“The sanction takes effect from Monday, 9 September 2024.”

The Australian National Olympic Committee said in a statement to Reuters last month that Craig was released without being charged but received a warning from a French judge following his arrest in Paris.

The alleged incident took place after Australia were eliminated by the Netherlands in the quarter-finals of the men’s Olympic field hockey tournament.

Before his release, the Paris prosecutor’s office told the BBC: “Police officers who witnessed a cocaine transaction at the foot of a building in the 9th arrondissement (of Paris), on the night of August 6th to 7th, apprehended the seller, born in December 2006, and the buyer, born in September 1995 in Australia and who is said to be a member of the Australian field hockey team.

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“Given the quantities of drugs seized from the seller, the investigation has been entrusted to the anti-narcotics police.”

Craig publicly apologised and took “full responsibility” for his actions following his release.

“I’d firstly like to apologise for what has occurred (over) the past 24 hours,” Craig said on August 7. “I made a terrible mistake. I take full responsibility for my actions.

“My actions are my own and by no way reflect the values of my family, my teammates, my friends, my sport and the Australian Olympic team. I’ve embarrassed you all, and I’m truly sorry.”

Craig was part of the Australia side that won silver at Tokyo 2020 and gold at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

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(Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images)

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Ex-ESPN star teases Brittany Mahomes over Taylor Swift's Harris endorsement

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Ex-ESPN star teases Brittany Mahomes over Taylor Swift's Harris endorsement

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Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris for president in her run for election against former President Donald Trump sent a shockwave across social media.

It also led to posts directed at Brittany Mahomes – the wife of Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes – in the minutes and hours after Swift made the post on Instagram.

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Jemele Hill poses for a photo on the red carpet at the ESPN the Party event in the Houston arts district in Houston on Feb. 3, 2017. (Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports)

Columnist Jemele Hill, a former ESPN personality, poked fun at Mahomes over it. Hill posted a meme from the children’s cartoon show “Arthur.” The meme showed the character Arthur Read with a clenched fist.

Mahomes had been wrapped up in a social media controversy involving Trump. She appeared to like a post last month regarding the 2024 GOP platform. It snowballed from there as she received immense backlash from it but refused to back down.

TRUMP SAYS TAYLOR SWIFT ENDORSING HARRIS WAS ‘JUST A QUESTION OF TIME’

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Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes embrace

Taylor Swift, left, hugs Brittany Mahomes as Travis Kelce looks on during the men’s singles final between Jannik Sinner, of Italy, and Taylor Fritz, of the United States, at the U.S. Open tennis championships on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2024 in New York. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Her social media activity led many to speculate whether there would be a rift between Mahomes and Swift – who are regularly seen supporting their significant others at Chiefs games. Last Thursday night, the two did not sit in the same suite, which ramped up the rumors.

That was put to rest Sunday when Swift and Mahomes shared a box at the U.S. Open and hugged it out.

As for Trump, he did not appear to be surprised about Swift’s endorsement when he appeared on “Fox & Friends” on Wednesday morning.

The Mahomes' at the Time Gala

Brittany and Patrick Mahomes attend the 2024 TIME100 Gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center on April 25, 2024 in New York City. (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for TIME)

He said he liked “Mrs. Mahomes much better.”

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It's a complex world for Chargers rookies adjusting to life in the NFL and big city

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It's a complex world for Chargers rookies adjusting to life in the NFL and big city

Compared to the countryside of Chatsworth, Ga. — population of 4,871 — Los Angeles might as well be another planet for rookie Ladd McConkey. He is a Southern-twanged Martian adjusting to a new frontier in this sprawling metropolis.

“Chatsworth is a small town, and everybody knows everybody,” McConkey said. “Here, you have a lot more people, and I was not expecting everything to be on top of each other.”

A rural Georgian through and through, all he’s known is the Peach State.

A second-round pick, McConkey grew up in Chatsworth — two hours north of Atlanta. He played at North Murray High before spending four years in Athens at the University of Georgia.

McConkey visited L.A. before as a Georgia Bulldog, when they capped off back-to-back national championships at SoFi Stadium in 2022 against Texas Christian.

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This is much different.

Life as an NFL rookie comes with immense pressure. High draft picks, such as McConkey, look to justify the draft capital spent on them. Then there are practice squad rookies, who carry the anxiety of being one organizational decision away from unemployment.

The transition off the field, however, is just as challenging.

To help, McConkey is living with his fiancée, Sydney Horne, in Redondo Beach, a much more manageable spot than living in the heart of L.A. The couple found a place where McConkey opted for an open-floor plan, steering clear of the cramped living spaces often typical of older homes in California.

Having his fiancée by his side has made McConkey’s move to the NFL much smoother, offering him support to help combat the grind of an NFL season.

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“It’s awesome,” McConkey said. “After practice, whether it’s a good or bad day, I get to go home and just talk and hang out with her. She’s my support system.”

Although McConkey’s family still lives in Georgia, he stays connected through frequent phone calls, which helps ease the challenge of being so far from home. Family visits during preseason games also have helped bridge the gap.

“Its sucks because my whole family lives in Chatsworth,” McConkey said. “Not being able to drive home and see them is definitely different.”

As with McConkey, a mix of country boys, East Coasters and Floridians are trying to adjust to the faster-paced life in Los Angeles after spending training camp at the team hotel in El Segundo.

For rookies, navigating these changes is made easier with the help of people such as Arthur Hightower.

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As the Chargers’ senior director of player engagement, Hightower has guided rookies into NFL life since 2005, from the team’s days in San Diego to their current home in Los Angeles. His role involves overseeing their financial education, life skills, relocation and overall development off the field.

“The one thing they all have in common is that they’re rookies, and everything is new,” Hightower said. “People just assume because they make X amount of dollars, they know everything. But they’re still young professionals. This is their first real job.”

Hightower and his staff’s efforts to help players settle are all-encompassing — from deciding if living with a roommate is more suitable to considering the importance of proximity to the facilities or handling unexpected needs, such as finding a barbershop.

“There are stressors, no matter where you are in life,” Hightower said. “The faster they can get acclimated, the better they will perform.”

Offensive tackle Karsen Barnhart is quickly adjusting to city life after growing up in small towns, though the reality of L.A. has turned out quite different from what he had imagined.

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Chargers guard Karsen Barnhart (61) had his perceptions changed of Los Angeles after moving here.

(Jeff Lewis / Associated Press)

“I had the perception of it being like New York,” Barnhart said of the Big Apple, which he dislikes. “The perception was completely off with how everything’s spread out here. There’s a big town every five minutes, and it’s not as packed.”

He sees similarities between El Segundo, where the team’s facility is located, and Ann Arbor, where he played for the Michigan Wolverines — though El Segundo has the bonus of ocean-side property.

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Now the ocean is closer for Barnhart, thanks to rookie first-rounder Joe Alt, who offered him a place to stay in Manhattan Beach.

“After training camp, I had found a place and wasn’t going to use some of the rooms, so I just said, ‘Hey, you want to room with me,’” Alt said.

The two tackles became close friends at the NFL combine in February, and their friendship has grown stronger throughout training camp, according to Alt. After years of living alone, Alt liked the idea of sharing a space with someone going through a similar experience.

“It’s great to be tested with somebody else and see what they’re thinking and how they’re processing things,” Alt said.

 Chargers offensive tackle Joe Alt (76) takes the field for a game against the Las Vegas Raiders.

Chargers rookie Chargers offensive tackle Joe Alt is adjusting to life in the NFL on and off the field.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

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With both towering more than 6-feet-5 and weighing well over 310 pounds, space is at a premium, which could have led to quibbles.

However, the sleeping arrangement was straightforward. As Barnhart put it, “He gets the bigger room. There was no arguing. He was kind enough to let me stay.”

The starkest contrast to his move comes when he thinks of his hometown, Paw Paw, Mich., a village of just 3,395 residents nestled off I-94.

“Paw Paw is completely different,” Barnhart said. “For a kid growing up in the country … the Cali lifestyle is a completely different transition. But I’m loving it so far.”

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Barnhart’s experience with the Chargers isn’t his first visit to the L.A. area. Earlier this year, he traveled with Michigan to play Alabama in the Rose Bowl on the way to a national championship.

It hasn’t taken long for the rookies to embrace California culture. Barnhart already has adopted one quintessential Angeleno complaint — the traffic.

Others are settling for the South Bay’s scenic ocean-side views, soaking up the endless sunshine and indulging in some local delicacies.

 Chargers linebacker Jeremiah Jean-Baptiste drops into coverage.

Chargers linebacker Jeremiah Jean-Baptiste has reunited with college friend Tre’mon Morris-Brash.

(Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press)

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“I’m not going to lie, I done run into a lot of good taco places,” Jeremiah Jean-Baptiste said. “I eat tacos at least three times a week.”

Jean-Baptiste shared his love for al pastor and carne asada, a passion he apparently enjoys by himself. With a look of betrayal, his roommate Tre’mon Morris-Brash asked from a neighboring locker, “You getting tacos, bruh?”

“Nah, he ain’t put me on,” Morris-Brash said. “That’s fine.”

Jean-Baptiste, who plays inside linebacker, and Morris-Brash, who plays outside linebacker, find their living arrangement reminiscent of another college year. They were teammates for four years at Central Florida and lived just a few doors apart in the same residence hall.

Now, in L.A., they’re both on the Chargers’ practice squad, continuing a shared experience.

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Chargers linebacker Tre'Mon Morris-Brash (57) returns an interception during a preseason game against the Cowboys.

Chargers linebacker Tre’Mon Morris-Brash (57) returns an interception during a preseason game against the Cowboys.

(Matt Patterson / Associated Press)

“It’s cool going to college with him and then having him be here,” Morris-Brash said. “It’s great to see a familiar face every day, and even cooler that we became roommates. It’s definitely sweet.”

The two share a luxury apartment just minutes from team facilities and kept it civil when deciding who got the bigger bedroom, settling it with a game of rock, paper, scissors. Jean-Baptiste came out on top.

Despite their fondness for the complex, the cost came as a bit of a shock.

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“Oof, one thing I can say is that the rent in California is very different than where I’m from,” said Jean-Baptiste, who grew up in Florida City, Fla., (population 13,000). “Very pricey.”

The two moved in a few days before the Chargers’ season opener against the Raiders. While they were game planning for Las Vegas on the field, off the field they focused on setting up their wi-fi, which they handled themselves.

“We really just been trying to get our house set up first,” Morris-Brash said.z

This move isn’t a first for Morris-Brash or Jean-Baptiste. Morris-Brash left his hometown of Richmond, Va., to play at UCF in Orlando. Jean-Baptiste moved to Oxford, Miss., for his final year at Ole Miss as a graduate transfer.

The distance from family can be challenging, but Jean-Baptiste credits their support — and the phone — for easing his transition. He often talks with his father, who keeps him updated on the weather in Dade County.

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“I talked to my dad yesterday,” Jean-Baptiste said. “He just says one day it’s raining, one day it’s hot as hell. One day it’s raining, one day it’s hot.”

“My family’s behind me,” Jean-Baptiste said, “and being over here allows me to stay focused on my dream.”

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Why DeMar DeRozan wants more athletes to open up on mental health, show their ‘Clark Kent side’

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Why DeMar DeRozan wants more athletes to open up on mental health, show their ‘Clark Kent side’

The vulnerability is DeMar DeRozan’s superpower.

It’s there throughout his new autobiography, “Above the Noise: My Story of Chasing Calm,” in which the six-time NBA All-Star and newest member of the Sacramento Kings bares his soul in the kind of way we rarely see from elite athletes.

“(Vulnerability) goes a long way, especially for us as athletes being looked at like we’re superheroes at times,” DeRozan said in a recent phone interview. “You never really get to see the Clark Kent side. Everybody always sees us saving the day (on the court), doing something heroic and not knowing that, at the end of the day when you take off that suit, there’s a lot of things that you carry.”

It’s one thing to pull the cape off just a little bit, though, only to put it back on when the uncomfortableness of sharing one’s truth publicly sets in. But the 35-year-old — whose 3:06 a.m. tweet about his battle with depression on Feb. 7, 2018, inspired a real conversation about mental health and athletes, and who quietly boasts one of the best resumes of any player in today’s game — stays true to those real roots in his 210-page book that was written with co-author Dave Zarum.

From his time growing up in Compton, Calif., where loss and pain became themes that still haunt him and he “never dreamed” of sharing his emotions, to the highs and lows of his NBA career and everything in between, DeRozan reminds us all that money doesn’t, in fact, buy happiness in his three-dimensional look at life as a wildly successful pro athlete. His decision to share deeply personal stories — from his childhood spent surrounded by gang culture to the loss of his father, Frank, in February 2021, to his own journey as the father of five kids and much more — amounts to a public therapy session. And to hear DeRozan tell it, that choice to open all the way up to the world was easy once he learned about the impact that vulnerability could make.

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It all goes back to that tweet.

As DeRozan lay awake during those early morning hours, having returned home to his native Los Angeles for that year’s All-Star Weekend in those final few months with the Toronto Raptors, the stress of it all had become too much to bear. He was overwhelmed by the obligations that came with a hometown return, exhausted by the cross-country trips he’d been making to visit his ailing father in Los Angeles, unhappy that he hadn’t seen his two daughters in more than a month and desperate for a break that wasn’t coming anytime soon. On that first night back home, when he was scheduled to attend a Kendrick Lamar concert and the annual All-Star party hosted by TNT’s Kenny Smith, DeRozan decided instead to sit for hours alone in his basement with his thoughts.

“This depression get the best of me…” he eventually tweeted before going to sleep.

When he awoke later that morning, DeRozan was confused and stunned by the global reaction to his sentiment. Why would sharing his battle with something so common — depression disorders affect approximately 280 million people worldwide — cause such a stir? The truth, as he knows now, is that the response was much more about the messenger than the message.

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Prominent athletes had, by and large, historically steered clear of discussing this once-taboo topic. But DeRozan’s choice to share his struggles sparked change, with Kevin Love opening up about his mental health less than a month later and non-NBA stars such as Michael Phelps, Naomi Osaka, Simone Biles and so many others following suit in the years to come.

By the summer of 2019, the NBA had expanded its mental-health program by requiring teams to employ mental-health professionals who would be anonymously available to players. The growth has continued from there, with players across the league taking advantage of the kinds of services that weren’t provided when DeRozan entered the league out of USC in 2009.

As DeRozan discussed at length with The Athletic, he takes great pride in this off-court part of his legacy. And the best part, for DeRozan and the Kings team that gave him a three-year, $74 million deal in the trade with the Chicago Bulls and San Antonio Spurs that brought him to town in early July, is that he’s still going strong on the court too.

(This interview has been lightly edited for clarity and brevity.)

DeMar, as you know, most athletes are not comfortable sharing like this. Whether it’s your childhood or the loss you’ve been through, your family life now, all these different things. So what was your journey to get to a place where you were comfortable letting the world in, and why did you ultimately decide that you were willing to?

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I wasn’t always completely comfortable. It was one of those courageous things where you kind of take a step back and look at something being bigger than you, in a sense, especially when I realized the impact you can have on helping others. It is a journey. I’m still far from perfect, but you see how much you inspire the next person who you probably never even came across, never even met, by showing any sort of vulnerability.

In that vein, I’ll follow your lead and share the fact that I suffered from depression pretty severely in high school, so I definitely appreciate the value in you sharing your story. But when you talk about making an impact on people you didn’t know, I wondered if there were stories that you didn’t share that played a part in your choice.

Yeah, I remember when I was playing with San Antonio (after the Raptors traded him to the Spurs in the summer of 2018), I was walking off the court, warming up before the game in Denver, and a guy pulled me off to the side. He was sitting courtside. I didn’t know if he worked for the organization or what, but he just stopped me. I could tell through his conversation and through his greeting with me that whatever he was going to say was very heartfelt. And I just remember him telling me (how) his son was very suicidal. I was one of his favorite players. And when I came out telling my story, it changed his whole perspective, and he opened up and spoke about a lot of things he was dealing with. Something like that hit extremely hard. I didn’t know the dude, and I’ve never seen him again. It’s crazy because every time I go to Denver, I always see if I’m gonna see the same guy again. But I just remember him pulling me to the side telling me that my story helped save this son from being extremely suicidal. So that was definitely touching.


DeMar DeRozan, who played for the Bulls last season, is a six-time All-Star with over 23,500 career points. (Wendell Cruz / USA Today)

The book made me think about the NBA and where the league is now on the mental-health front. But how are you feeling about that ecosystem now and the infrastructure for players? 

You’ve seen it grow ever since guys like myself, Kevin Love and countless others came out and started to share. The infrastructure that they started to build of making it accessible for us to have therapy, having therapists on-site to travel with us on a daily basis. It becomes 100 percent confidential for the players. It’s not someone who’s connected to the front office, where the therapist will go back and say (what was shared). They really (built) something that made guys feel comfortable to have access on a daily basis to have help. I had teammates recently, playing in Chicago, where before practice, after practice or even on the road, they’ll go to dinner with the therapist, and it really helped them through a lot of things. I never asked the specifics of things that they talked about, but it was used frequently. You see the connection that players have with the therapist, whether it was at breakfast before practice, laughing and joking about certain things, (interactions) that give a comfort for guys to be able to go and handle whatever business they need to handle within.

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It wasn’t even a thing when I first came into the league. You had all your other necessities when it came to sports as far as weight training, nutritionists, film guys, workout guys. But that’s kind of where it stopped. You didn’t really have the personal infrastructure that was needed for certain players, especially young players.

I thought it was pretty neat that Spurs coach Gregg Popovich wrote the foreword. You talk in the book about how he was really there for you when your father died, and then I heard over the summer that — because of the relationship you have there — the Spurs made it clear to you in free agency that they were willing to help you get where you wanted to go if a scenario like that emerged.

(Per league sources, the Spurs showed interest in bringing DeRozan back to San Antonio to aid in the Victor Wembanyama era. But the Spurs also made it clear they would be willing to help him get to the team of his choice by helping facilitate a three-team trade. DeRozan, who played for the Spurs from 2018 to 2021 before signing with the Bulls, was sent to Sacramento in a deal that moved Harrison Barnes to the Spurs and Chris Duarte, along with two second-round picks, to the Bulls.)

Yeah, (that gesture) just shows the character of not just Pop, but the whole Spurs organization. Everything about that place — it’s hard to even find words to put it into detail. They treated me like I was Tim Duncan. And that’s just the amount of respect, love and admiration I’m gonna forever have toward Pop and that whole organization. There’s a lot of things they didn’t have to do for me, and there’s a lot of things I didn’t even ask for. You’ve got to give them all the credit, because they’re definitely special people.

I mean, I’ll never forget the first conversation I had with him (after the Raptors trade). It was “I didn’t trade you. I traded for you.” That kind of stuck, and from there on out, he just challenged me to be an even better player than what I was in ways that I never could have expected. And it was such a necessity for me for my career, for longevity, understanding and the knowledge that he really gave to me. It meant a lot, on and off the court. That’s what makes it so special, and that’s why I had to have him do the foreword for the book.

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You’re pretty open in the book about wanting to play in your hometown. But this summer, it sounds like that interest wasn’t reciprocated by the Lakers or the Clippers. There’s a pretty strong argument to be made that both teams could use you, so how did that hit you?

Yeah, you just learn how to deal with it from a business standpoint. Obviously I have my selfish reasons of wanting to be able to play at home, (but) sometimes it just doesn’t work out that way. And sometimes it probably isn’t the best decision for me either. So after that didn’t happen, I didn’t dwell on it. I wasn’t mad. They made their choice, and I just left it at that.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Hollinger: Don’t expect rings, but Kings’ floor-raising DeMar DeRozan trade adds up

On the Lakers’ side, it sounded like LeBron James and Anthony Davis were pretty big on the idea. But just like three years ago (before the Lakers did the Russell Westbrook deal), it didn’t go anywhere. Did it seem like it was going to happen this time?

Yeah. Yeah, it did. But after the last time, the last situation, you really don’t get your hopes all the way up. I think the first time before I went to Chicago (in 2021), that was the closest it had been. And even for me, I thought it was going to be that. But when that didn’t happen, I didn’t have high hopes because you already see how it could play out.

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This Kings move has been received pretty well across the league, but I still feel like folks aren’t truly gripping how good you still are at this age. To that point, I looked at a stat the other day that blew me away: If you score at a similar rate for the Kings in the next three seasons that you did the past three seasons with the Bulls, you’d be pushing for top 10 all-time in NBA scoring (DeRozan is 31st, just 86 points behind Stephen Curry).

That sort of history doesn’t really reconcile with the way you’re talked about, though. So with that in mind, how do you feel about the discussion that surrounds you in terms of your career?

To be honest, I think I just look at it like I want to give it everything I’ve got while I’m doing it. And when it’s all said and done, I’ll let everything speak for itself, you know what I mean? I don’t try to overdo it. I just try to stay consistent. Whenever I choose to hang it up, I want to be able to say I gave it everything I had on the court, off the court and be able to just really sit back and soak it all in.

How do you see the Kings’ situation and what it can become? We all know they’re not typically on players’ short lists in free agency, and you already go down as the highest-profile free agent pickup in their history

No, it definitely took me a minute (to consider them). To tell you that they were on my radar beforehand — no, they definitely weren’t. But sometimes you’ve gotta let the fog clear to make a decision, and that’s kind of what I did. You try to look at the landscape to make everything make sense, and where you feel you’re going somewhere where you’re getting what you deserve and you have an opportunity to compete at the highest level. Both ends of that were met. And looking at it, it just felt like it was the perfect opportunity.

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I am extremely excited, just for the opportunity of feeling like I could be the missing piece that they needed. Me just being a fan of the game, I pay attention to everything that comes about in our league. And you see the excitement that they had two years ago (when they made the playoffs for the first time since 2006). You see the fan base. You see the winning culture that they were fighting towards. And anything (related to) winning — when you see it from the outside, it lets you know as a competitor and as a winner, that it’s something you want to be a part of. Even when they had the theme of lighting the beam, it just shows you how connected they were to the fans. The organization was connected with the players in a sense of doing everything we possibly can to compete at the highest level to win. And it’s just something I see myself being a part of and feel like I can take it over the top.

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