Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American athlete Paul George.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Paul Clifton Anthony George is an American professional basketball player for the Los Angeles Clippers of the National Basketball Association (NBA). Nicknamed "PG-13", he is a seven-time NBA All-Star and six-time member of the All-NBA Team, as well as a four-time member of the NBA All-Defensive Team.
That's really the biggest thing, being happy in an organization that supports you and helps you grow and a city that supports you and a training staff.
I'm going to play at the highest I can, the best I can every night. Wherever that lands me, that's where it lands me.
I grew up a Lakers and a Clippers fan.
I love Indiana.
I think everybody, whether they have team goals or individual goals, I think everybody would like to be the MVP of the league. But that's not what my focus is. My job is just to give everything that I have, play as hard as I can, and just try to win as much as possible. If that makes me the MVP, then so be it.
I know what I bring to the table. I know my game offensively and defensively. I think I'm one of the best, if not the best, playing two-ways.
People saying I want to come here, who doesn't want to play for their hometown? That's a dream come true, if you're a kid growing up on the outskirts of L.A., to be the man in your city.
I'm not going to try and sit here and be Superman.
I'm not out in the streets. I'm not out in the club, at parties. I'm not really at movie premieres. After games, after practice, I'm home, I'm with my kids, I'm with my girl, and I'm chilling.
I'm a family man now. I don't need no distractions; I don't need no big cities, no big lights, at this point in my career.
In a way, it's like I want to come here, I want to play for the home team and put a Lakers jersey on. That's always going to be something that I want to fulfill.
I feel like every year I get better, every year I learn something new, and I don't plan on stopping.
Nobody wants to play for a team that's not competitive.
I was kind of unproven. I didn't play in a high-profile school, and with that comes the notion that, 'He's not ready.' I felt I had questions to answer. Was I going to be ready to play against elite-level athletes?
It's always been a battle to play the Warriors.
If it's a shot for me, if I can make a play, create for someone else, I'll do that. A lot of times you run a play, everybody's watching, everybody's locked in, everybody's pulling over, and it just makes the game tougher for me.
I felt I was immortal. I was invincible. I've made so many plays where guys go down, and I walked up clean from it. I did feel that nothing bad could ever happen to me on the court.
Once I changed my diet, I noticed I had a ton of energy - I was more lively and ready for the workouts; my body was better. I noticed it was definitely the stuff I was putting in my body that made me feel better.
I like to lead by people seeing me playing at certain level.
I've always been a guy to just let the game come to me. Just play the game.
I'm from L.A. I can say I love L.A. because I'm from L.A.
I think me making the Select Team was huge. It was the chance for me to be around those guys and see their work ethic and how they prepare. I think that's what I took the most away from it.
LeBron is the best player in our league, but some people have a hard time playing with him.
My shoe has been going through evolution, and we having great feedback from the 1 to the 2 and the 2.5's, so I think just consistency. The biggest thing I wanted to accomplish was a shoe that basketball players loved and felt like they have an advantage out of.
I want every year to have a chance to compete for a championship.
Always being an underdog, always being the player or the person nobody really knew, that always kept a chip on my shoulder.
You put two fiery all-stars on the same team, something special has to happen.
My thing is, I like if I go on that court and there's a guy I don't have to worry about.
Oklahoma, y'all truly made a big impact on me.
You're not going to look at Paul and see him slacking, not carrying his weight. All the other stuff, 'Paul doesn't lead' and all that? That's fine. Go grab guys that lead, then. Let me help them lead.
I have a goal to be the best player every time I touch that floor. Just be the best me.
I can play in any offense and play off any player.
I'm big on my community and want to stay that way.
I feel like you can dominate a game in so many ways. That's just always been my mindset, just play ball. Be a basketball player, and everything will fall into place.
I knew I had a lot to offer, and it was just about finding my niche and figuring it out.
First and foremost, I want to give thanks to Indiana, as a state, for embracing me and my family for seven years of being there. I learned so much being there. They taught me so much.
I know a little bit how it is coming back from an injury, trying to find your rhythm.
I felt I was in a good place with Oklahoma.
When I first fell in love with the game, and I'm outside playing in front of the house, I'm not picturing myself in an Indiana jersey or picturing myself in a Thunder jersey. I pictured myself in a Lakers jersey.
I love fashion but I don't necessarily have time to be looking stuff up.
I am a sneakerhead, and I grew up a sneakerhead.
At 23, I know I'm nowhere close to where I want to be and where I need to be and where I'm going to be.
Honestly, I think I have some of the biggest partners being in a small market, and I think it doesn't really matter: you can accomplish anything if you have the right people around you and be driven.
When I get the ball, I have to be ready to be in scoring mode.
As beautiful as Oklahoma is, it doesn't have big lights and none of that. But that's fine... I'm a low-maintenance, low-key, chill guy.
As soon as I discovered PlayStation, I was throwing hints here and there to my dad - cutting out the clipping of a video game, cutting out the clippings of the PlayStation, leaving it on his dresser. I remember on Christmas morning, I unwrapped my gift, and sure enough, it was the PS2. I've been a PlayStation guy ever since.
I haven't been in a position to be a free agent or know what that is like and then to have the chance to go where you want to go. That's always been - I feel, with players, they want that option.
I don't ever feel cautious about making plays. I tell myself that injuries are more likely to occur if I try to play safe.
When I told the Pacers I wanted to play for the Lakers, that was true feelings. I wanted to come back home.
Usually I've had two jobs: be the best defender and the best scorer.
In Indiana, I knew the offense in and out. I knew spacing; I knew personnel. I knew the offense, how coach wanted to play me. So when I just wanted to take over and control the game, I could.
I've never been a guy that's been salty about the shots I'm getting. I just try to play the right way.
For me, it's all about winning. I want to be in a good system, a good team.
I always just take pride in being a basketball player.
I don't really classify myself as a scorer. I'm a ballplayer; I'm a playmaker. I like to set people up and make the game easy for everybody.
At the end of the day, people enjoy being comfortable. But that's not what life is about.
I know who I am as a player, I just want to help a team win.
I've always been a guy to put pressure on myself.
If my performance down the stretch lands me on the All-NBA, which I think I'm deserving of, then so be it. I'll be happy.