(PROCESS)[I ALWAYS STARTED OFF MY ROUTINE CLOSE TO THE BASKET.]
I would start off short and work on my touch. Always. Always. Always. Get my muscle memory firing. Then, I’d move back, work for a bit, move back again, and repeat the same process. After that, I’d start working on situational looks that I was going to get that night. I’d walk my body through the scouting report, and remind it of things it had done thousands and thousands of times before.
I never had a set routine, an ironclad formula that I practiced night after night. I listened to my body and let it inform my warm up, because there are always variables. If I felt the need to shoot extra jumpers, I’d shoot more. If I felt the need to meditate, I’d meditate. If I felt the need to stretch for a longer duration, I’d stretch. And if I felt the need to rest, I’d sleep. I always listened to my body. That’s the best advice I can give: listen to your body, and warm up with purpose.
It’s just me and the basket, the court and my imagination, dreams.?There’s something about being in a big arena when no one else is?there. It gives me a sense of nirvana and also prepares me for the?game. When I jogged out of the tunnel and the fans were screaming?and it’s loud, the noise didn’t impact me. Mentally, I was able to?remember the stillness of the earlier moment and carry that with?me.