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What have you learned from Coach Brown in particular?
Fox: Oh, for me, I would say, really, a leadership mindset. I feel like he brought that in. Obviously, he’s a guy who’s won many championships. So just being able to have that, going into games, going into practices, when we’re on a losing streak on a winning streak, what this looks like, and I feel like he’s helped me with that a lot.
Sabonis: Coach comes in every day for practice, and the whole coaching staff is on it. Like he says, they’re holding us accountable. They’re pushing us. There’s not one day that’s gonna slide by. So that’s really important throughout the course of the season, because it’s just gonna prepare us for the moments that matter.
De’Aaron, you were somebody who always won—besides your first few years with the Kings. Talk to me about that adjustment. Was it hard to deal with that?
Fox: It was definitely different. Obviously, it was frustrating. You don’t want to be selfish—like, well, I got my numbers but we lost. So it was definitely hard. But I feel like a lot of guys, especially when you’re a top pick, those things happen. You go through struggles. Obviously, I don’t want to go through five years of struggle, but I feel like it makes winning even more sweet. And it’s something that you want to just be able to continue and be consistent throughout the years.
Domantas, you got traded from Indiana last year—what was the adjustment like, coming to Sacramento?
Sabonis: It definitely was different. Spending five and a half, six years, in Indiana to come to the team with a lot of high expectations as a player and as a competitor. That’s something you’re always looking forward to. I feel like everyone was excited this year to come in and do really well, because it just makes the year a lot more fun, and it makes it easier with teammates that care for each other. I feel like everyone’s been loving the season so far, you know, and the best is yet to come.
I’m a music journalist by trade. What kind of music are y’all listening to?
Fox: I got a little Ed Sheeran.
Deadass, bro?
Fox: Damn, man! I got to listen to rap?
No, not at all! Not at all. I shouldn’t have reacted like that. My bad.
Fox: Damn! [Laughs] This guy Luke Christopher is good. He’s from Southern California. Does a lot of rap and R&B.
What about you, Domantas?
Sabonis: Other than what the guys are listening to in the locker room, I got some Ed Sheeran too. He was the first concert I went to too.
What was that like?
Sabonis: It was amazing. He gets into it with the fans like it was just an interview.
Take me through that marathon of a game against the Clippers.
Fox: Man. We were on the back to back night. So just the way that the game was going, man, it was up and down. I feel like the defense wasn’t terrible—there wasn’t just a bunch of dunks and wide open layups, those were tough shots. It was a very high level of shotmaking. I mean, if you go look at the 16 shots Kawhi [Leonard] made, he was probably open on one, or maybe two—where there was like a miscommunication. He was open. Everything else was a tough shot. But he had a step back three over, I think, Malik and Trey. We doubled and he had to step back. So it was very high level shotmaking. But I was tired, man.
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Jayson Buford
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