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http://seattletimes.com/html/jerrybrewer/2022180988_brewer03xml.html
...Crawford says he doesn’t feel like a 14-year veteran in the twilight of his career. He enters this season feeling healthier than he has in his career.
He doesn’t smoke. He doesn’t drink. Candy is his only vice. Throughout his home, you can find the evidence — in a drawer downstairs, in his gym bag, everywhere.
As a player, he is sensitive to two criticisms: that he’s a poor defender (he’ll admit he can improve his defensive intensity), and that he’s selfish.
He can’t stand the selfish label.
“It’s the worst thing anyone has ever said to me,” Crawford said. “If you know me, then you know I’m a people pleaser. Early in my career, when someone would say I was selfish, I wouldn’t shoot the next game. It would get in my head.”
Now, though, he understands who he is. He’s a scorer who has the quickness and athleticism to get off his shot whenever he wants.
“It’s a gift and a curse,” he says.
A gift because Crawford can score at will. A curse because, whenever he exhibits poor shot selection, he receives the nastiest label he can imagine.
Crawford, selfish?
You’ll never be able to cram him into that box.
“He’s one of the trailblazers of the current era of Seattle basketball,” Conroy said. “No question about it. Because you can reach out and touch him, because he lets you reach out and touch him, he made it believable to all of us that we could make it. Everybody looks at him like, ‘That’s Jamal.’ He’s the big brother. Everybody embraces him for that.”
Big brother now has an answer to that question he hadn’t considered.
“Why did I make it?” Crawford says. “I think God knew, if He put me in this position, I would give back and help other people. Life isn’t just basketball. I’m not special because of what I do on the court. To me, I owe Seattle everything. It helped raise me. I always want to fill a void and do stuff that Seattle can be proud about.”
