Draymond & PG Discuss Their True Feelings On The NBA Business

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Draymond Green and Paul George respond to Nikola Jokic's recent comments about how the NBA is a job and “no one likes their job.” They share aspects of the job they don’t love while also expressing their love of the game itself. #nikolajokic #draymondgreen #paulgeorge
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Пікірлер: 773

  • @paulevans6066
    @paulevans606610 ай бұрын

    Respect to Dray, PG, and Jokic for keeping it real. “Playing the game is the easiest part”

  • @Noname-fr8rz

    @Noname-fr8rz

    10 ай бұрын

    There a difference between pg dray compared to Jokic Jokic does not like basketball you can tell by how he reacts to winning the title dray was hyped pg would be hype Jokic didn’t even smile acted like he won a Starbucks gift card instead of the nba Championship

  • @djoleserbian

    @djoleserbian

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@Noname-fr8rzur wrong, he likes bball he just don't like attention. And he said he felt relief when they win game because of expectations. And he said he was thinking about interview's and speeches that he needs to doo. Guy just don't like attention. Maybe it's hard for you to understand but not everyone likes to be in center of attention. For some that is hard to handle.

  • @ivangoran4461

    @ivangoran4461

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@Noname-fr8rz Bro, the reason for that is job not being done by winning just one championship. If you like basketball you should be happy to see that even winning a championship did not make him change his focus on the job one bit, and that is multiple championships. The reason for his reactions is, while winning a championship he already processed it as a normal thing to do, and kept his focus on his job. By reading his reactions, like the one you mentioned, I knew what he was going to become as early as 2016. I just couldn`t imagine he was going to be so consistent. I never saw anything like it.

  • @BlakeAlexander12

    @BlakeAlexander12

    10 ай бұрын

    Lol sure it is That’s why Paul George is a cringe self-embarrassing urban legend out there especially in the playoffs and Draymond had to go cry & beg KD to come

  • @BlakeAlexander12

    @BlakeAlexander12

    10 ай бұрын

    Cheating on girls including Doc Rivers daughter who is now Seth Curry’s wife is the easiest part for ‘playoff (cringe & choker) P’ .. and as just mentioned, so is being cringe (and a choker) for George

  • @gbone1812
    @gbone181211 ай бұрын

    Announcer: how does it feel to be a champion? Jokic: It’s good. It’s good. Job is done we can go home now

  • @berrymckockiner5883

    @berrymckockiner5883

    11 ай бұрын

    this interview made me really understand why jokic, was the way he was, during the finals

  • @otispage4

    @otispage4

    7 ай бұрын

    Hahaha😂 Media: are you ready for a parade.. Jokic:…. nnnnnooooo!

  • @thydevdom
    @thydevdom11 ай бұрын

    I played a little soccer overseas on a mid league team and it definitely felt like a job after the first few weeks. The constant work, nutrition and knowing somebody can take your spot was stressful. I can only imagine what it’s like for the big timers. Having to perform in front of millions around the world and being scrutinized alone would make me want to quit. The few hundred - a thousand fans we would get at my games felt like pressure some times.

  • @seize3

    @seize3

    11 ай бұрын

    That's the thing most people don't think about. You have to be so strong mentally. Can you imagine thousands of people booing you, hundreds talking shit, and then you have social media when anyone can "@" you?

  • @mementomori1900

    @mementomori1900

    11 ай бұрын

    I played defensive midfielder in lower leagues in Holland, Belgium and Serbia and i dont know your experience but as long as criwd can see you are putting effort, you run after every ball, go in those tackles theyll be content with you and even like you even if you are realistically trash. I did not score often, but once I tackled a careless CB and found myself one on one with their keeper, i panicked, tried to dribble past him, changed my mind, went for a shot, missed the ball but somehow while falling down managed to pass it by the keeper, ugly as hell and fans cheered like i scored a beautiful goal in CL finals, luttle moments like that makes it worth it 😂

  • @queloqjohnny4839

    @queloqjohnny4839

    11 ай бұрын

    Bro the podcast is talking about elite players not everyone takes it as serious. You are required to go to practice and attend games regular workers are monitored way more. I ain't gon let them get away saying NBA is harder than blue collar jobs

  • @queloqjohnny4839

    @queloqjohnny4839

    11 ай бұрын

    Not to mention the added stress of providing for a family when they don't have to worry about that. Draymonds point of stress is valid but it skips over everyone's regular life

  • @lesh4815

    @lesh4815

    11 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠​⁠@@queloqjohnny4839But Dray did state that he would not trade it for anything in the world. Two things can be true at once...being a high level athlete comes with the bs, stress, pressure, procedures that can make the job suck AND they can understand that they are living a pretty privileged life.🤷🏾

  • @seize3
    @seize311 ай бұрын

    Great points by them. This reminds me of the time a reporter had no idea who Klay was and asked him about the scaffolding in NY. He was delighted that she didn't ask him about ball lol I'd assumed it gets old real quick when everyone wants to talk ball with you

  • @CoutureThug

    @CoutureThug

    11 ай бұрын

    That interview was funny, Klay is a character

  • @gnomechomsky2524

    @gnomechomsky2524

    11 ай бұрын

    I knew someone who worked with a lot of famous people in the entrainment industry, he said for most of them all they want to do is be treated like they’re normal people, not worship the ground they walk on or draw attention to their fame

  • @seize3

    @seize3

    11 ай бұрын

    @@CoutureThug for sure is, he's hilarious 😂

  • @seize3

    @seize3

    11 ай бұрын

    @gnomechomsky2524 that makes sense but if I listened to a singer's/rappers song that got me through depression/sad times etc, I would fanboy a bit when I would see them. Just my opinion but I get it from both sides

  • @ochomunna270

    @ochomunna270

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@gnomechomsky2524that's true, Leonardo DiCaprio hates the attention he gets wherever he goes and tries much as possible to be incognito. It's same for any successful person, they prefer normal than 24/7 adulation.

  • @Joshologic
    @Joshologic11 ай бұрын

    i'm glad this segment happened. teach these kids that there's no way to escape the LOVE for what you do in any field. it's either a passion or you're really good at it. anything else will lead to depression

  • @kb5509

    @kb5509

    11 ай бұрын

    That is a terrible lesson. The vast majority of people don't have the luxury of doing something they love, or even something they're great at. Most people just do a job because they have to.

  • @HODGES.24

    @HODGES.24

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@kb5509I agree my bro im 23 and I'm a pro bball player in Zimbabwe and it's a hobby basically ain't no money in it but I love the game and I miss practice for work I miss games for work it's actually tough but we move

  • @KyndallNicolee

    @KyndallNicolee

    11 ай бұрын

    facts i needed to hear this today

  • @anthonyluangphasi8800

    @anthonyluangphasi8800

    11 ай бұрын

    Buddy you understand that 99% of the world doesn't work in something they "LOVE" and a lot of those who do, end up losing the love for that field because it became a job. You are viewing the world through inexperienced lenses.

  • @KyndallNicolee

    @KyndallNicolee

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kb5509 that’s why he said “anything else will lead to depression”

  • @andyanane773
    @andyanane77311 ай бұрын

    This podcast is constantly putting out great insightful content.

  • @tientrinh943

    @tientrinh943

    11 ай бұрын

    Who paid you

  • @oeloel2653

    @oeloel2653

    10 ай бұрын

    This is actually AI

  • @BlakeAlexander12

    @BlakeAlexander12

    10 ай бұрын

    Is it?

  • @andyanane773

    @andyanane773

    10 ай бұрын

    🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @alvinsheczlek5243

    @alvinsheczlek5243

    10 ай бұрын

    Brought to you by Nike, Espn and Disney

  • @LeapingRat
    @LeapingRat10 ай бұрын

    The thing they dont mention is the constant stress of not being an all star player. Draymond and PG still have to perform but they still have some leniency and reputation to take them to long careers. But other players deeper in the depth chart are constantly fighting for their spot against new rookies every year to players in the G-league and now overseas. These players are now probably playing the way the team needs them to play and not the way they enjoy it. Players that were top dog in high school and college are now barely getting playing time and when they do, its not the iso scoring they are used to, its very niche or particular. Also keep in mind the garbage time players that maybe play 50 total minutes in a season but grind with the team every day. Its all work and no glory. Although the paychecks and lifestyle probably make up for all of that

  • @lukeshen1661

    @lukeshen1661

    10 ай бұрын

    Well said

  • @theronquishow5837

    @theronquishow5837

    10 ай бұрын

    The paychecks and lifestyle does ease the stress a little, until all the hanger-ons and family members wanting their share comes into the picture.

  • @rumbajuice
    @rumbajuice11 ай бұрын

    Episode 4 of the Last Dance resonates well with this topic, when Dennis Rodman was talking about the bullshit outside "I'll play this game for free, but the bullshit that comes along outside of this zone, I can go without"

  • @blanefulkerson8903
    @blanefulkerson890311 ай бұрын

    This is literally applicable to any career ever

  • @mrdan523

    @mrdan523

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah that whole “ you can’t handle the stress” is so out of touch. Have they never heard of being a salesman?

  • @rell4219

    @rell4219

    11 ай бұрын

    @@mrdan523imagine if you had all that stress and were still in poverty 🤔 most don’t have to imagine because that’s their reality 😂

  • @zayteer1657

    @zayteer1657

    11 ай бұрын

    I won't mind stress if I was on 30m a year

  • @mindyourbusiness1811

    @mindyourbusiness1811

    11 ай бұрын

    Not really these guy literally play a game for living and make millions. Most jobs are actual work

  • @sup9542

    @sup9542

    11 ай бұрын

    If your job is described as "playing" then you should never brag about how much hard work goes into it and how all the plebs and peasants and peons of society couldn't handle the workload. "I play basketball." "I play music." "I play characters in movies." On the other hand you don't play boxing or combat sports, so those athletes can talk about hardship and I'll listen.

  • @oicsaywhat
    @oicsaywhat11 ай бұрын

    Draymond and Paul are spot on, it’s all of stress and pressure to play NBA, I always hear my brothers big mouth saying that ain’t a job, it’s insane the amount of work these guys put in to stay in shape, eat right, mentally prepare themselves and hear the nonsense noise from a hole fans on a daily basis. These guys are the elite of the elite in sports and only like a quarter of a percent reach it. So my respect to you guy speaking on this matter.

  • @scottallen8499
    @scottallen849910 ай бұрын

    Draymond always speaks his mind and shares his opinion on anything. Agree or disagree with him, I love his unapologetic mentality. I have so much respect for him 👍

  • @ReneThaBeast
    @ReneThaBeast11 ай бұрын

    Crazy how we went from KAT lie the whole podcast to the most insightful conversations with players like Dray

  • @jacobhouts8713

    @jacobhouts8713

    10 ай бұрын

    as a minnesota fan, watching that podcast confirmed I wanted KAT to be traded

  • @dumbassdude8372

    @dumbassdude8372

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@jacobhouts8713KAT's value is down. You can trade him but you wont get championship pieces

  • @gh-co1uk

    @gh-co1uk

    10 ай бұрын

    That episode was crazy 😂 😏

  • @mauricioalonso2157

    @mauricioalonso2157

    10 ай бұрын

    @@dumbassdude8372 a non champioship piece for another non championship piece in kat? Sounds like a deal for the wolves

  • @GeronimoPlaz

    @GeronimoPlaz

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@dumbassdude8372Some team should sign some guy in hospice for $42M for one year and trade him for Kat. As a wolves fan, I'd be thrilled about that trade.

  • @KingCobraLolcow
    @KingCobraLolcow11 ай бұрын

    I agree with Dray. I used to be professional overseas and its tough hooping and training everyday.

  • @karatechap555

    @karatechap555

    11 ай бұрын

    you aint no player overseas lmao. you got a leggo icespice and dora the explorer as your display picture

  • @PointlesslyNecessaryConvos

    @PointlesslyNecessaryConvos

    11 ай бұрын

    So apparently overseas pros can’t have funny profile pictures

  • @yerrrr3315

    @yerrrr3315

    11 ай бұрын

    @@PointlesslyNecessaryConvosthey cant not ice spice leggo lmao

  • @Gunit867899

    @Gunit867899

    11 ай бұрын

    Its also tough going to 9 to 5 for not millions and most likely not hundreds of thousands

  • @Onemore984

    @Onemore984

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@PointlesslyNecessaryConvosthat funny to you? Lmao

  • @JonnyyBoi
    @JonnyyBoi11 ай бұрын

    Appreciate the question being asked and answered 🔥

  • @John-bu4ik
    @John-bu4ik11 ай бұрын

    Great content. Laid back. Makes me help me feel better understanding of how nba players think

  • @pranavakesava

    @pranavakesava

    11 ай бұрын

    Best nba podcast

  • @mrfatuchi
    @mrfatuchi10 ай бұрын

    I wont lie I was surprised when Shaq said when he came to Nba he realized alot of guys were depressed and then I realized why... There is quite a difference between being a star, which has its own challanges, and just being a random player who struggles to get minutes, to get contracts, fear of injuries, fear of losing your spot, envy of others making more money, more recognition etc. I can see how it takes a toll mentally.

  • @kingsoindabuildin8036

    @kingsoindabuildin8036

    10 ай бұрын

    Facts

  • @amf-v1093

    @amf-v1093

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@kingsoindabuildin8036 Facts? If normal stuff is stressful then they shouldn't be there. That's the fun and the love of the game. You don't play it to be famous or to watch others wallets. You play because you love it, right? All the other things then fall into place. Those participation trophy kids are grown up now.

  • @kingsoindabuildin8036

    @kingsoindabuildin8036

    10 ай бұрын

    @amf-v1093 No, if you want to play basketball because you love it then you play at the park or the local YMCA . The NBA is a job. People do it for money.

  • @amf-v1093

    @amf-v1093

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kingsoindabuildin8036 You know that it's a lot of work going into it, right? Sounds like a mighty excuse for the "world's greatest athletes". No different than the lawyer, cop, student, teacher, plumber...etc. Most jobs are a job, my guy. I thought I was conversing with an adult.

  • @mrfatuchi

    @mrfatuchi

    10 ай бұрын

    @@amf-v1093 Stop it man. Nobody is saying other people's jobs arent difficult but lets not act, money aside, proffessional athletes deal with pressures we know nothing about. Most of us just go through life doing good enough at whatever we are doing. But you dont get to the Nba or any top of the sport just doing good enough. And again all we see is the final product, nobody guaranteed any of them that their work will pay off.

  • @Joshologic
    @Joshologic11 ай бұрын

    shoutout to Dray for keeping it a buck. one of the few who aarent gonna give those canned NBA 2K responses that most of these players give in real life.

  • @rmelo2382

    @rmelo2382

    11 ай бұрын

    he is a bum . all he does is complain all the time

  • @elijahnewcomb6230
    @elijahnewcomb623011 ай бұрын

    Im a cavs fan who truly hated draymond during the cavs/warriors finals but ive grown to appreciate him a lot more as a player and especially for his insight. Great explanation without being ungrateful for an opportunity many would kill for.

  • @DigitaIJustice
    @DigitaIJustice11 ай бұрын

    This is so well put. Work is work. Money ruins everything. But it can give a lot.

  • @CharlieCoops

    @CharlieCoops

    11 ай бұрын

    Completely disagree. There are far more stressful jobs than being an NBA superstar. “You couldn’t deal with the stress” of preparing for a basketball game?? 😂 These guys are so detached from reality…how do you think doctors, nurses, armed forces, firemen, police etc etc feel about their day to day work? What children. Would love to see someone like Charles Barkley shut this ‘pity me’ bullshit down…

  • @DigitaIJustice

    @DigitaIJustice

    11 ай бұрын

    @@CharlieCoops it’s not about pity. Calm down. Something can be bad and something can be worse. Why does someone having a hard job mean that another person has to enjoy every single day at work? They never asked for pity. But even an artist painting every day can love it, until they are being made to paint every day for a roof over their head. Then you do not do it for enjoyment, you crank it out to pay the bills. Bigger paycheck, is all. Don’t get so defensive

  • @shamsielshahar120

    @shamsielshahar120

    11 ай бұрын

    ​​​@@CharlieCoopsah yes, the typical "my job is harder than you so your stress is invalid" argument. Never gets old.

  • @DigitaIJustice

    @DigitaIJustice

    11 ай бұрын

    @@shamsielshahar120 and you know this guy doesn’t do any of those things listed

  • @spendsshanks6050

    @spendsshanks6050

    11 ай бұрын

    @@shamsielshahar120They’re professional bball players. What they do isn’t privilege compared to most jobs people have to take. The empathy runs dry when those people don’t like to hear others complain who have it infinitely easier than them

  • @gcalfitness4784
    @gcalfitness478410 ай бұрын

    This is dope🔥🔥Thank y’all for the amazing content 🙏🏽

  • @brice1481
    @brice148111 ай бұрын

    very good to have draymond and talk about this subject. Very very good content

  • @jaspindersingh9906
    @jaspindersingh990611 ай бұрын

    Very fair points. This is a question I wish I could hear Kobe’s answer and perspective on

  • @pauloshman6188
    @pauloshman618811 ай бұрын

    The balance between PG and Draymond. It's cool and They could just do the show together.

  • @robertmonfort7794
    @robertmonfort779410 ай бұрын

    Respect and thank you for the honesty.

  • @nellyville69
    @nellyville6911 ай бұрын

    Paul George and Draymond Green have great chemistry 🧪

  • @thunderstar254
    @thunderstar25411 ай бұрын

    Fantastic question and segment

  • @vickjr98
    @vickjr9810 ай бұрын

    This podcast is actually good. I'm impressed lol

  • @user-tq2fi5fg2e
    @user-tq2fi5fg2e11 ай бұрын

    Another Great vid P

  • @vukans595
    @vukans59510 ай бұрын

    Love they are honest!

  • @Kavell2nd
    @Kavell2nd11 ай бұрын

    Love these 7 8 minute clips easy digestible

  • @Disis960
    @Disis96011 ай бұрын

    Pg mentioned being efficient, I feel that. I'm a heavy truck repair technician and my pay is based on efficiency. It's not flat rate for those who understand what that is, I still get an hourly rate with a bonus at the end of every month. The bonus is based on efficiency. Somedays I don't get to work in the heated shop in the winter and sometimes in the summer even a fan can't cool you down while in the shop. Work is work, no matter what you do. Being famous throws a wrench in it I'm sure, but at the end of the day they've set their families up for generations. I hope I can leave a little something for my kids when I pass. You bet your ass though, if I could ball like these guys, I'd be happily enjoying the nba as well. I just hope players don't forget where they came from or what their lives might look like if they weren't blessed with talent. I love how charles barkley always gives props to us blue collared folks. He's the only nba person that I can think of that does it on consistent basis. I wish Ja would see how lucky he is and what he's got. He's extremely talented but he's trying to throw it all away. I'm all in favor for the second amendment but different jobs have different requirements and rules that must be upheld, or you lose said job. Look at Carmelo Anthony's young life, dude had it rough but used basketball as a way to get out of it and away from it. PG and draymond seem like real down to earth dudes though. Lovin the PG podcast lately

  • @noodlemans
    @noodlemans10 ай бұрын

    I love hearing about the day to day routine/grind behind the scenes of nba life. People have no idea how hard it is.

  • @jgreenberg
    @jgreenberg10 ай бұрын

    I think many people who do jobs they truly love can definitely relate to this, especially in highly specialized fields, not just sports. Definitely relatable. I hate the paperwork and bs surrounding my job but once I'm doing it, it feels like the reward for the other work.

  • @humblereal3951
    @humblereal395111 ай бұрын

    It's the genuine truth for every job!

  • @sonoftheallfather4215
    @sonoftheallfather421511 ай бұрын

    I dig PG to the fullest. He's a real one. Draymond grew on me over the years. I respect them both.💯💪🏾

  • @zayteer1657

    @zayteer1657

    11 ай бұрын

    Everyone used to hate Pat Bev soon he start doing podcasts everyone his fan now lol. It's weird how podcasts can change people's views.

  • @sonoftheallfather4215

    @sonoftheallfather4215

    10 ай бұрын

    @@zayteer1657 Cause we're getting a different version than the competitive athlete.

  • @sonoftheallfather4215

    @sonoftheallfather4215

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Surfy- In my opinion. It's mostly being caught up in a few moments. I didn't like when Draymond hit LBJ in his nuts. I thought that was dirty and punching a teammate unconscious. Then I see Draymond and LBJ are best friends and Poole ask for those problems with Draymond I eventually found out. So all is forgiven.

  • @sonoftheallfather4215

    @sonoftheallfather4215

    10 ай бұрын

    Same here.

  • @corinthianharris2
    @corinthianharris210 ай бұрын

    I'm glad Draymond put it out the way he did. So many will never really understand.

  • @AleksandarGvozden
    @AleksandarGvozden10 ай бұрын

    very honest discussion, respect

  • @dtgtentoe8467
    @dtgtentoe846711 ай бұрын

    Like Dennis Rodman said “Anybody can play the game, it’s just the bullshit they pay you for”.

  • @LXBalla4414
    @LXBalla441410 ай бұрын

    I played at semi-pro level in Europe. And I completely agree with Draymond. Gamedays are super stressful. The anxiety, the anticipation, etc….

  • @Miguel.Garcia

    @Miguel.Garcia

    10 ай бұрын

    Did you make 20 million plus a year?

  • @magnol1a_

    @magnol1a_

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Miguel.Garcia Why is that relevant?

  • @crown_resident
    @crown_resident11 ай бұрын

    watching this from a 9-5 perspective 😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @petarveljkovic4906
    @petarveljkovic490610 ай бұрын

    People were legit hating on Jokić and saying he is “faking” the persona of not having crazy reactions after winning the chip. They really dont understand of how down to earth Jokić is, he was very happy of course he was, but if y’all expected him to cry and roll over for winning the NBA championship y’all were dead wrong. He puts family first beyond anything and its how we Serbs and Balkan people in general are. Family values are something we take pride in, maybe someone else from the Balkans would be more ecstatic than Jokić because he’s more of a mellow guy in itself but at the end of the day i dont know how y’all can just expect them to cry their shit out like Lebron and Jordan did and when they dont do that call them fake and hate on them for having a realistic outlook on life. Wow family matters to him more than basketball does, how dare he! Smh

  • @nikolastamenkovic7069

    @nikolastamenkovic7069

    10 ай бұрын

    Druže, femicid u Srbiji na granici neverovatnog - o kakvoj "porodici na prvom mestu" govoriš? Čak se i Jokićeva braća ponašaju ko divljaci. Ne mislim da Jokić glumi, ali takvo ponašanje je svojstveno njemu samom i ne bi ga trebalo poistovećivati sa ostatkom zemlje. Malo ko je skroman, malo ko nije alav i bahat.

  • @rickyricardo2006

    @rickyricardo2006

    10 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Plus, why would I need jokic to say “everything is possible” or cry his eyes out, when he is putting monster numbers end EFFORT.

  • @cortlandsimmons6241

    @cortlandsimmons6241

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@rickyricardo2006 because he's your great white hope

  • @TAHJ1987
    @TAHJ198711 ай бұрын

    Love this topic..and I understand it...obviously I never made it to the nba..but playing overseas..definitely man was a trip...some of the best moments of my life..but it's a grind...it's like having 2 jobs...you got skill work in tje morning..then full practice...then more skill work after practice...then later on..conditioning..possibly weight training...then after that it's film study...but unlike the nba..was not traveling in style...more like old Chevy ASTRO vans....alot of the times I was In the jungle...some places were hostile and crazy as hell...but it was the best...but yes if your committed it's definitely a grind...

  • @ricardorivera7549

    @ricardorivera7549

    11 ай бұрын

    why...u...talk...like....this....

  • @SugarBlood15

    @SugarBlood15

    10 ай бұрын

    Where did you play at bro?

  • @TAHJ1987

    @TAHJ1987

    10 ай бұрын

    @@SugarBlood15 little bit in Spain...then also dominan republic

  • @solovarium9652
    @solovarium965211 ай бұрын

    these are life lessons yo

  • @chengsaetern9073
    @chengsaetern907311 ай бұрын

    I can agree even as a firmware engineer. Doing it for fun, as a hobby is one thing; but doing it for a job?... That takes the joy away from it.

  • @nicolasrodriguesdossantos1881

    @nicolasrodriguesdossantos1881

    10 ай бұрын

    For me is teaching. I find it very easy to communicate, to explain English to my students in the school I teach. But by the middle of the week I'm already tired of explaining, talking, correcting text compositions and tests. Now imagine training from 8am to 8pm and then playing for real for 82 games to have a chance to play more games. Oof 😢

  • @joshuarenouf4328
    @joshuarenouf432811 ай бұрын

    Loving the content PG! Hope ur have a great season with the clippers. I know u and kawhi gunna bring ur A game!

  • @TheCuteLittleD
    @TheCuteLittleD11 ай бұрын

    Why did I think of Ben Simmons after listening to this?! 😂 Really hope he will find back his love for Basketball,

  • @mopsicworldwide4646
    @mopsicworldwide464611 ай бұрын

    The fact they are complaining about being rich and famous is laughable. An now I see y some people don't support sports and call them "spoiled athletes"

  • @DrMario90
    @DrMario9011 ай бұрын

    I think the nature of humans is to think the grass is always greener. This tends to breed discontent for your occupation as we focus on the negatives and take the positives for granted. Being in thr NBA has some amazing positives. Money, fame, travel, exclusive access, etc. All the things they are complaining about are part of being a professional. And any occupation at a high level is going to require time, commitment, studying and sacrifice.

  • @ajdoienekdkndmwk9147

    @ajdoienekdkndmwk9147

    10 ай бұрын

    I dont think they are discontent. I think they are just recognizing the realities that come with the glamour. Draymond even said, he wouldn't trade this job. All of these guys could retire right now if they really want to.....So they aren't discontent. It is just less fun having to constantly prove yourself day in and day put and being under a microscope. Also, know matter who well you do millions people going to want you to better. Jokic for example, is a two time MVP, finals MVP and the 41st pick. People still talking trash once he won the MVPs. Now that he has the 'ship he is now having people say well he isnt an all time top 5 center. His fans are expecting another 'ship next year and will be disappointed with anything less. That's alot of pressure and can take the fun away from something when a person is getting criticized even when being elite.

  • @fredgrissom1097
    @fredgrissom109710 ай бұрын

    I'm sooo blessed. I looooove what I do. I love my job

  • @triumphTLG
    @triumphTLG10 ай бұрын

    Pg might just have made my favorite podcast

  • @guccimane60
    @guccimane6011 ай бұрын

    i agree everyone hate they job whatever they tell you its just a question of does the payment on a job go beyond the hard parts of the job and in the basketball they sure do

  • @blingwraith6951
    @blingwraith695111 ай бұрын

    Honeslty what they're saying is true for any job, except normal people don't make millions doing it. Any job in business, tech, law, medicine, etc. is filled with stressed overworked people juggling all kinds of tasks to appease shareholders and meet deadlines.

  • @bilindabutcher8913

    @bilindabutcher8913

    11 ай бұрын

    Facts

  • @IconSince87

    @IconSince87

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah they too far removed from regular life to make them understand.

  • @drazzzpoppp5022

    @drazzzpoppp5022

    11 ай бұрын

    Other jobs don't require u to be in insane fukin shape most of the time, year after year.Otherwise we would never have fat,out of shape doctors, scientists, etc.Most people don't want to suffer being in shape ,vomiting running spints an so on

  • @mindyourbusiness1811

    @mindyourbusiness1811

    11 ай бұрын

    Playing a game for living can’t be more stressful than someone with a regular job living pay check to pay check

  • @blakefrancisboggs7526

    @blakefrancisboggs7526

    10 ай бұрын

    Sorry but no. It is not the same as being an ELITE athlete. You have to put in everything just to GET to that level and then to maintain being there.

  • @john_mark4127
    @john_mark412710 ай бұрын

    I like the co host,cool af. And ask good questions

  • @MDSkai
    @MDSkai11 ай бұрын

    they say dont make your hobbies your career. it never feels the same once you HAVE to do your hobbies. It's nice however to say "if i had to do something, I'm glad it's this", then make millions on top of it. could be doing something you actually hate to do and pays the bare minimum to survive.

  • @rowsic159

    @rowsic159

    11 ай бұрын

    🤯🤯

  • @DmitriDreamEstates
    @DmitriDreamEstates11 ай бұрын

    I work in customer service and this is the lowest (I feel) when it comes to a job. I wish I was 6’6 and get to play ball everyday 😭

  • @dougvuillemot8670

    @dougvuillemot8670

    10 ай бұрын

    That's the thing I hate. Dealing with customers.

  • @JDougyJ
    @JDougyJ11 ай бұрын

    I couldn’t deal with the stress of a game day? You severely understand how much stress I’m constantly under.

  • @HoopDiamonds
    @HoopDiamonds11 ай бұрын

    There's a very small group of people in the League who truly LOVE basketball, and the fact that it's their job. It's pretty obvious who they are too.

  • @seize3

    @seize3

    11 ай бұрын

    KD, Bron, and Kyrie come to mind. They always talk ball and even Kyrie took care of some WNBA players

  • @that_dudemr1286

    @that_dudemr1286

    11 ай бұрын

    exactly people dont realize some players are just using basketball as a living and there's nothin wrong with that

  • @seize3

    @seize3

    11 ай бұрын

    @that_dudemr1286 Charles Barkley once said that guys worked their asses off just to stay in the league. One of them said we'll this is all I know so I'm gonna try for as long as I can

  • @that_dudemr1286

    @that_dudemr1286

    11 ай бұрын

    @@seize3 I agree with that. Even if you do the most work and be the most loyal an organization will turn on you and fans will turn on you. A perfect example is Dame to me. I can’t believe the heat he’s gettin

  • @pandabear1576

    @pandabear1576

    11 ай бұрын

    @@that_dudemr1286he’s getting heat because for the last three seasons he’s acted like he’s wanted to leave by having his agent mention leaving then publicly would disavow the statements. His love of the “grind” was fraudulent. He wanted to leave and should’ve stood on it years ago

  • @rafaelvega538
    @rafaelvega53810 ай бұрын

    Good real conversation. I love working in power plants. Been doing it for 30 years. But I HATE the 12 hour rotating shift!!!!!

  • @ctrlaltdelete11111
    @ctrlaltdelete1111111 ай бұрын

    I understand what they’re saying to some extent…but some ppl put in as many hrs as they do, if not more, as there is no off season in a lot of jobs, and they do not get to retire around 38 yrs old. They also deal with the same sort of politics etc. and make close to minimum wage. They also don’t get to play sports/workout because they are too busy or can’t risk getting injured etc.

  • @jey524
    @jey52411 ай бұрын

    Facts I like draymonds answer

  • @lexis4490
    @lexis449011 ай бұрын

    I am glad they are being honest about this, and telling it from their perspective. I still would take your job over mine. I got a job that pays $75,000 a year, and if I mess up or not on top of my game, we lose money, while policies and the politics of my job keeps changing. Literally we just had a rule change the other day, no discussion or debate, it just changed. And I got to remember that because the company I work for doesn't want to write down that rule change.

  • @deykno87
    @deykno8710 ай бұрын

    That’s everybody you just get to enjoy the best things in life doing it

  • @TreeSnackz
    @TreeSnackz10 ай бұрын

    Dope dialogue

  • @arvinpaculaba7013
    @arvinpaculaba701311 ай бұрын

    I belong to the percentage of people that think you shouldn't make your passion your job because eventually you will grow to dislike it. So for me, I have a day job and play the sport that I love recreationally. I love basketball!

  • @hoanpham4545

    @hoanpham4545

    11 ай бұрын

    Most people can't afford to pursue their passion so there's that...Most want stability in their lives so they do jobs that they are good at. Not hobbies they enjoy. I truly think pro athletes are the same. If the NBA salaries were a lot lower -- how many of them truly will 'make it' their passion?

  • @Jaymake
    @Jaymake10 ай бұрын

    Great insight on how playing in the NBA is a job that’s not fun almost of the time. Everybody not meant for it. It doesn’t mean ppl can’t do it. If we are out in a position for the opportunity we can show up. We just not all talented for specific roles like playing in the NBA bc of height, basketball IQ, & the luck it takes to get in the nba… getting in the nba is a harder job than staying in for most ppl lol

  • @bigdicdaddy6042

    @bigdicdaddy6042

    10 ай бұрын

    They get pay millions to play a game for a hour.

  • @danieldreasvold2072
    @danieldreasvold207210 ай бұрын

    Beyond🙌🏻

  • @guitarhero0000
    @guitarhero000011 ай бұрын

    What he said at the end can really be life changing. Having a schedule/having good habits can really make even a really dumb or untalented person be really successful in life.

  • @joe-say-did-it6201
    @joe-say-did-it620111 ай бұрын

    "ITS WORK!!!" AGREE!

  • @LaCheleWallace
    @LaCheleWallace11 ай бұрын

    Players also have to worry about being disrespected and thrown out like a piece of trash. It happens in every industry, but in basketball...whew! Some players end up being "what ifs" after all the work they done put in over the years. I fight for Mr. Penny Hardaway all the time, but he's constantly written off as a "what if." Anyhow, folks on the outside do not understand the grueling schedule and discipline that you must have in order to make things work. These agencies are always looking & booking ahead so get in the game and do the best you can. Oh, and be ready for the comparisons. They're gonna compare you to three players.

  • @FieldUpgradesJ
    @FieldUpgradesJ11 ай бұрын

    Can’t hate your job and say that you wouldn’t trade it for another one

  • @LatryLeland

    @LatryLeland

    11 ай бұрын

    They just think they philosophers because they have a filthy amount of money its a joke

  • @VOLUMEnightclub
    @VOLUMEnightclub10 ай бұрын

    Love Dray but clearly he never had a regular job…he just described basically every job and say “you couldn’t handle it” 😂

  • @jamalrobinson7890
    @jamalrobinson789011 ай бұрын

    Bless you 3 Gods

  • @jimough2441
    @jimough244110 ай бұрын

    One of the reasons why I like and respect Draymond Green.

  • @MACNTOSFAM
    @MACNTOSFAM10 ай бұрын

    amen to that! love my job. but i hate what comes with it. as in, the admin part, the supervision, the rules & regs… etc.

  • @YildizWarzone
    @YildizWarzone11 ай бұрын

    Jokic is the truth! =) he rather chills with fam and his life stock

  • @Charismaticrich
    @Charismaticrich10 ай бұрын

    I love draymond😂

  • @KurapikasChains727
    @KurapikasChains72711 ай бұрын

    Paul George has 2 jobs then: playing in the NBA & rehabilitating in the NBA.. technically 3, podcasting away from the NBA. Playoff P is him!

  • @trumanauman9388
    @trumanauman938811 ай бұрын

    Y’all should talk about pg’s and roy hibberts fishing trip😂

  • @naseemburks6214
    @naseemburks621411 ай бұрын

    It’s crazy Kyrie speaks on this all the time!

  • @tillman40
    @tillman4011 ай бұрын

    Nick Diaz paraphrasing: you have to hate it to love it

  • @user-wi9pu1kr7u
    @user-wi9pu1kr7u10 ай бұрын

    This podcast is constantly putting out great insightful content.. This podcast is constantly putting out great insightful content..

  • @Diamante777
    @Diamante77711 ай бұрын

    jackie really rockin the no mustache with beard boy out here looking like a puerto rican lmaooo

  • @johnwinston4761
    @johnwinston476111 ай бұрын

    Where’s Dallas tho? But on a positive note, Jackie is becoming a better interviewer while still keeping it light. PG’s pod is actually very legit 💯

  • @guyrobinson2085
    @guyrobinson208510 ай бұрын

    i like the way they think the ONLY problem i have is the way they way they say “you can’t handle the stress” as if there’s not fields that are way more stressful when you’re preparing to have to be your best or your life is over such as Military, Police, Fire Fighters , Pilots , Pathologist , Engineers , Mechanics , etc. all these fields one mistake your life could be over in the blink of an eye. If they screw up a few nights and get benched they’ll still get paid ; if they get cut they have years of money they’ve made over the contracts they signed to still take care their family with the idea that they invested correctly ! still much respect to the profession of basketball though !

  • @bm4__
    @bm4__11 ай бұрын

    ASAP !

  • @eastsidepicasso
    @eastsidepicasso11 ай бұрын

    These guys obviously never worked a 9-5 making $40k a year. I would have 0 complaints to get paid for hooping. But, I understand the point they're making.

  • @MikeOwensMusic_
    @MikeOwensMusic_11 ай бұрын

    I think Draymond sound crazy saying you can’t handle the stress of a game day. Regular people have just as much stress if not more, without the incentive of getting millions of dollars monthly. I know money isn’t everything, but I’d rather have their stress than mine.

  • @hoanpham4545

    @hoanpham4545

    11 ай бұрын

    It's stress if you're not used to it. Just like NBA guys will not function in normal jobs because they are used to those stress.

  • @lp2457
    @lp245711 ай бұрын

    Having an NBA job is like one of the best in the world, you're flying first class and staying in 5 star hotels when you travel. You have a very long summer off, you make 100's of millions of dollars, even lower level guys nowadays will clock out 100mil due to expansion of the game. The hard part is just upkeeping your body, but even then Draymond pretending like it's that hard "You can't make it to the game". You're coddled by top level medical staff to make sure your body is always on par, you have parties of people looking out for your best interest because of just being an NBA player. Don't give me that shit where he's saying "You won't make it to the game", average people work harder than NBA players, and it's not even close. 2 hour game times and working out at the gym and getting "therapy", that shits easy money.

  • @vizard350z

    @vizard350z

    11 ай бұрын

    NBA players are in the top %1 of their sport. If you don’t understand how much work they’ve put in to better than millions of other players you don’t want understand them as people

  • @je6522
    @je652211 ай бұрын

    Its an interesting conversation. Most ppl even if they love their job dont love 100 percent of their job. A doctor may love treating patients but hate all the paper work. A programmer may live to code but hate documentation and meetings. So I think that's where the convo gets a bit skewed, cuz Draymond keeps saying i hate it. Tbh, i think he says these type of things to sound eclectic, respectfully. Also as much as they dance around it and don't call it out, i think how u get compensated for ur job impacts how u feel or approach it. Just thinking aloud, maybe until it becomes ur normal. If u pay me 100 bucks to mow ur lawn, just the pressure and calculating how many lawns I need to cut to support my family would impact how i feel about it tbh. Those with integrity and honor would disagree . Nevertheless if im making 10k to cut ur lawn, idk how that doesn't impact how i feel about it. Both scenarios have pressure to perform, just one is getting paid 100x the money. Also on top of the financial security, i know im getting the best equipment and doing it alongside some of the best ppl in my profession. Its just not comparable to most jobs. Then bro said u can't make it to game day. Lol.

  • @zekerton7262
    @zekerton726211 ай бұрын

    Draymond: “When you wake up at 9 or 8 and have a game that night…” Wait, wait, wait, what time do you wake up for this hard job? 😂

  • @vincentvega9747
    @vincentvega974711 ай бұрын

    A job is a job whether you like it or not

  • @jlui21

    @jlui21

    11 ай бұрын

    -- Draymond is 90% right. However, these 2 are getting paid $25M plus million. They are both won the genetically lottery to becoming 6'7-6'9. They worked hard to get into the NBA AND STAY in the NBA. There is a grind but there ONE year salary is life changing money. But type casting a majority of fans that they "cannot" do what they do is disingenuous. However, I think it came out wrong. Regardless, if I was a FOOT taller, you'd best believe I'd be grinding to get into the NBA. Working 80 hours/s week in restaurants, roof tops, and hospitals is way more dangerous than being an NBA player.

  • @vincentvega9747

    @vincentvega9747

    11 ай бұрын

    @jlui21 yea exactly that's why dray said he doesn't take it for granted I mean they know that but you gotta respect the work that goes into it as well but they've had the privilege to get paid to do something they love and very well paid at that. That's why I hate players that load manage and have an excuse for it and make it sound like they're going to die if they play more than 80 games

  • @powerbadpowerbad

    @powerbadpowerbad

    11 ай бұрын

    EXACTLY.

  • @cottonmather8146

    @cottonmather8146

    11 ай бұрын

    @@vincentvega9747 Players load manage so they can get into the playoffs healthy. The Nuggets just did that towards the end of March because they already had the 1st seed and didn't want someone like Murray getting injured like he did two years ago. And guess what? They were rewarded with a ring. I'm not trying to see my team give up their playoff run because they went too hard in the regular season

  • @vincentvega9747

    @vincentvega9747

    11 ай бұрын

    @cottonmather8146 ok that's fine in March if your starting to rest a bit that's fine but to load manage a whole year is different

  • @KobeBX
    @KobeBX11 ай бұрын

    Super real by Draymond. Everyone hates their job whether it’s 100 mill or 100k or 30k

  • @olisabosah4292
    @olisabosah429210 ай бұрын

    Beyond

  • @jeromemackey9683
    @jeromemackey968310 ай бұрын

    I always felt like the hardest part of the NBA for me would have been lasting 82 games cuz growing up as a Hooper I remember playing two three times in a day six seven eight hours a day but by the time I get to the third day my legs are dead no way could I make it 82 games for a whole season My body just wouldn't hold up and I know that and I realize that at a young age.... hats off to the guys who can

  • @SamuelRichard-fy6nb
    @SamuelRichard-fy6nb11 ай бұрын

    People saying it's not a job are having a bad take. You have a contract with demands and things need to be done. Literally a job it's just a dream job. It's like saying you love science and it's your passion so being a scientist is nor a job 🤨 their job is entertainment.

  • @hoanpham4545

    @hoanpham4545

    11 ай бұрын

    It's a job...You are expected to show up at a certain time and leave at a certain time. You just don't show up for games.

  • @SamuelRichard-fy6nb

    @SamuelRichard-fy6nb

    11 ай бұрын

    @@hoanpham4545 exactly.

  • @monoloworld
    @monoloworld10 ай бұрын

    Dray has a gift for putting the fans in the mindset of players and expressing the psychology of basketball everybody thinks being in the league is easy if it was everyone would make it.

  • @TheHauntedKiwi

    @TheHauntedKiwi

    10 ай бұрын

    It also requires being 6'8'', that's not exactly the product of hard work.

  • @LilRichhhie
    @LilRichhhie10 ай бұрын

    🔥

  • @SuperSuperswag101
    @SuperSuperswag10110 ай бұрын

    They should have on Carlos Vela from LAFC in the MLS he can relate to this conversation a lot

  • @seanwilliams2107
    @seanwilliams210711 ай бұрын

    Nobody: Jackie: BEYOND 😭😭😭

  • @AmirKhan-so4pn
    @AmirKhan-so4pn11 ай бұрын

    Are we ever going to get a Kawhi episode?

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