Draymond Green on sacrificing for career: 'I don't believe everyone wants to win'

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SAN FRANCISCO โ€” Draymond Green is enjoying Golden Stateโ€™s return to NBA prominence after a two-year sabbatical, believing the break helped his mind and body recover and realign his hunger.

After five straight NBA Finals and three titles, the Warriors had an injury-riddled 2019-20 season and were eliminated in the play-in tournament last season by the same Memphis Grizzlies theyโ€™re facing now.

Green called the last two years โ€œmiserableโ€ but felt they were valuable โ€” he was able to reflect as his Warriors are tied 1-1 with the Grizzlies with Game 3 at Chase Center up Saturday evening.

โ€œAt least I was miserable,โ€ Green said. โ€œI donโ€™t think thatโ€™s for everybody. I donโ€™t think everybody in this league wants to win. Thatโ€™s not a thing I believe. I donโ€™t believe everyone wants to win.โ€

Green isnโ€™t the same 25-year-old who unlocked Golden Stateโ€™s small-ball revolution in 2015. Heโ€™s 32, with some gray hairs in that playoff-tested beard, and has seen segments of players come and go over the last near-decade.

Green spoke of the sacrifices heโ€™s had to make in his career โ€” not necessarily statistical, but in terms of lifestyle and preparation โ€” not to win, but to put himself in position to win. While teammate Stephen Curry has won multiple MVPs and Klay Thompson is noted as one of the leagueโ€™s all-time shooters, theyโ€™ve each made individual sacrifices for the sake of something bigger.

Green has both been a beneficiary and initiator of that culture.

โ€œItโ€™s pretty stressful,โ€ Green said. โ€œBut itโ€™s mentally, physically, and most of all, emotionally draining, taxing, you know, because it requires a level of focus and requires a level of sacrifice, thatโ€™s stressful, you kind of just fully immerse yourself into this, almost into a trance.โ€

Draymond Green talked about the sacrifices he's made for his career as the Western Conference semifinals series against the Memphis Grizzlies shifts to San Francisco. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Draymond Green talked about the sacrifices he's made for his career as the Western Conference semifinals series against the Memphis Grizzlies shifts to San Francisco. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Champions of all eras speak about this, almost as if itโ€™s a secret only they know and the rest of the basketball world isnโ€™t privy to. Itโ€™s spoken about in vague terms but when put together, sounds pretty clear.

โ€œHow can I get better with this? What am I putting in my body? Thatโ€™s going to help me tomorrow,โ€ Green said. โ€œYou know, like, canโ€™t eat this thing, canโ€™t eat that, canโ€™t drink this thing.โ€

Green has gone through transformations with his body to better equip himself for the long playoff grinds as well as the matchups against bigger, stronger players โ€” like last round against presumptive MVP Nikola Jokic.

โ€œAnd thatโ€™s stressful, you know,โ€ Green continued. โ€œAnd so for a guy making $35 million a year and never has to win, why stress yourself out that way? [Itโ€™s] what a loser thinks. And I just donโ€™t think that way.โ€

There are plenty of players with the max designation who are productive but donโ€™t display winning intangibles on or off the court. Greenโ€™s been part of the league long enough to know who they are.

โ€œI donโ€™t knock anyone for how they feel or what they think, whatever their reason is for feeling that way is totally fine with me, that donโ€™t have absolutely nothing to do with me,โ€ Green said. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t affect me in one way or another. It doesnโ€™t at all, it just doesnโ€™t work for me.โ€

Heโ€™s been a champion at the high school level, helped Michigan State to two Final Fours and won Olympic gold in 2016. In short, where he is, winning is sure to follow. Sporting a bit of a shiner under his right eye courtesy of friendly Michigan State fire from Xavier Tillman, he wouldnโ€™t give himself bail for Game 2โ€™s loss to Memphis.

Heโ€™s been where Memphis is, as a hungry upstart. Finding motivation is different but in sum, still something he summons.

โ€œYou know, when I was 25 years old, in the Finals, I wasnโ€™t married with three kids, and trying to be an incredible husband, thatโ€™s a totally different thing,โ€ Green said. โ€œLike, trying to be an incredible father, thatโ€™s a totally different thing. And so that also adds to it, you know, like, thereโ€™s just so many other things that as you get older that you have to do.

โ€œYou know, you add in the stress of not having something to prove, per se, and already being a three-time champion, and knowing if you never win again, you won three championships. And thatโ€™s nearly impossible to do. On the flip side of that, you have the stress of like, I always want that feeling.โ€

Itโ€™s hard to say if the Warriors are in a dogfight with the Grizzlies or if the Grizzlies are still some time and experience away from truly challenging the establishment.

Green seems to live by a simple creed, though.

โ€œAs someone who loves to win, and even more so than that, absolutely hates losing,โ€ he said.

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