I just try to do what I do by getting my teammates open and getting better at finishing and making plays when I can.
For me, it's about making the winning plays, making the right plays, making the basketball plays and being aggressive whether it's on defense or offense.
I have great teammates around me who make plays.
I feel like I can make plays, finish around the rim.
My teammates trust me; they know I make the right plays. I'm not a selfish guy.
I realized the secret to success is finishing! And not just finishing, but finishing strong!
I think it speaks a lot to Coach Kidd and my teammates to trust me as a rookie to make plays down the stretch. When they put that confidence in you, it's hard not to try to make plays.
I enjoy making plays for my teammates.
I do a lot of things to help my team winning - set screens, roll into the rim, finishing. I think I can be even more than that.
A big thing for me is trying to work on slowing down and not rushing plays, so I can be able to make plays for my teammates.
I try to take whatever the defense gives me, have a sense of urgency, know who's guarding me and pick my spots, get my teammates involved and also attack the rim.
I put out on Twitter that the only thing I terrorize is the rim. People know me, my teammates know me, everybody knows me.
When your move with your left hand can be just as potent as your right hand, I think that's pretty special. I think that's why Kyrie's the best, because he finishes so well around the rim with his left or right.
I do all the dirty work: play defense, grab rebounds, block shots and finish strong around the rim.
I think everybody needs to think about making plays for the team, making winning plays, before thinking about how many points we're going to score and stuff like that.
For me, I always think somebody's open. That's the biggest gift and the biggest curse. If I see somebody have a step, I'm passing it. But sometimes, you've got to really think and make the right plays.