"Something All Our Own", The Grant Hill Collection of African American Art.

Tamia is a chart-topping R&B artist with four Grammy nominations.

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Grant Hill signs on as exec. producer for Duke documentary

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Press

By Charlie McSpadden
April 22, 2010

Duke basketball legend, African-American art collector and current NBA star Grant Hill can now add another title to his already impressive resume: documentary film producer.

Hill, Trinity ’94, officially signed on as an executive producer for Starting at the Finish Line: The Coach Buehler Story, a sports documentary about former Duke University track coach Al Buehler that Amy Unell, Trinity ’03, has been working on since October. Hill’s engagement with the documentary began when Unell interviewed Hill this past January. Hill, a former student of Buehler’s, immediately noted Unell’s passion and the necessity to present Buehler’s life to a wider audience.

“This story is so close to home,” Hill said. “We’ve had this unbelievable individual, teacher, leader and coach in our backyard and family, and I don’t know if a lot of us know the true story behind his enormity of experience.”

Buehler has been at the University for 55 years. He’s won ACC championships, coached Olympians, served as the chair of a department and was elected into the Duke Sports Hall of Fame. In addition to all of his accolades, Buehler now lives with a benign brain tumor that was diagnosed this past fall.

“His story is a story that needs to be told, to be shared, to be learned from,” Hill said. “If we can give the story justice in how we present it, we’re doing the right thing.”

Unell, also a former student of Buehler’s, is thrilled at Hill’s executive producer status, especially at the possibility of connecting to a much broader audience.

“In terms of reaching our goals and having a really successful film that honors Coach and his legacy, Grant coming on board takes the documentary to this whole other level,” Unell said. “He opens so many doors, [allowing] more people to see it and be a part of the process and the celebration.”

Helping to bring the story to life is an undergraduate class that Unell has overseen this past semester. The students have helped build a website, utilize social networks and prepare for the documentary’s rough cut screening Sept. 24, this Fall’s Homecoming Weekend. Sophomore Molly Himmelstein, a member of Unell’s Arts of the Moving Image course, echoes her professor’s excitement about Grant’s involvement.

“Grant makes our message more universal,” Himmelstein said. “He’s so dedicated to the project, he’s an invaluable connection.”

The commitment of the Phoenix Suns forward could be a testament to the lasting bonds between student and professor. The summer after his sophomore year and 1992 NCAA National Championship, Hill took “History and Issues of Sport” with Buehler, a class that is still offered to undergraduates. While studying history at Duke, he found the course beneficial because of the relationship he formed with Buehler in addition to the course material.

“Getting to take the course with him and being able to spend time with him really was a treasure on my part,” Hill said. “I took away a great deal from understanding those that paved the way before me, the sacrifices [of] the athletes.”

Knowledge gained in Buehler’s class extended beyond important dates, names and facts.

“I learned that you can lead without being a rah-rah kind of guy—that you can do it in a kinder way, a more intelligent way and a more productive way,” Hill said. “I got that from [Buehler] and apply it in my own life.”

When asked about Hill, Buehler, ever the history professor, traces the basketball star’s family geneology to his grandfather, who worked at a steel mill in order to pay for his son Calvin to be formally educated, eventually at Yale. Buehler fondly remembers when Hill brought his father, a former NFL running back, into class for a presentation.

“That was the best lecture about why education is worth something,” Buehler said. “That’s why Grant Hill was where he was.”

Equipped with an astounding mental Rolodex of information, Buehler also notes Hill’s mother roomed with Hillary Clinton while at Wellesley. This racially progressive pairing is in line with Buehler’s own quiet racial victories involving the all-black North Carolina Central University track team in the 1950s. Buehler sees sports as an essential component on breaking down racial barriers in both American and global history, a belief that has become an important storyline of the documentary.

“[In terms of race] sports have led the way in most cases, not all,” Buehler said. “We may not have been number one, but we had the biggest clout.”

In the same way that sports can promote social progress, they can also benefit the world of culture. Hill has utilized his fame and success to bring art into the public eye.

“Grant Hill went beyond being an NBA player,” Buehler said. “He’s got the foremost Afro-American art collection of anybody around, he plays the piano… he’s got some culture, other than just shooting a basketball.”

The documentary has become yet another venture of Hill’s, one he’s been interested in for some time.

“I wanted to get involved in telling stories; I love documentaries in general,” Hill said. “There are so many life lessons… as a result of experiences, and a documentary is the perfect opportunity through which to explore [them].”

With Starting at the Finish Line, Hill has entered into the documentary realm from the business side but has expressed interest in eventually flexing his creative muscles, including a “really big idea” that he “couldn’t let out right now.”

Hill’s experience with making the documentary, especially his interactions with Unell, has provided a wealth of production knowledge.

“Amy has allowed me not only to participate but to really learn a great deal from her,” Hill said. “She’s been tremendous, very patient and persistent.”

The feeling is beyond mutual.

“It has been a serendipitous collaboration,” Unell said.

In a career of ups and downs, Grant Hill is happy to still be along for the ride

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Grant Hill

Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 26, 2010

PHOENIX — You wouldn’t think a team with serious postseason aspirations would turn to a 37-year-old to help rescue it physically, but that’s exactly what the Phoenix Suns did after losing Game 1 of their first-round playoff series to the Portland Trail Blazers.

Nobody on the Suns could do anything with Portland’s Andre Miller, who torched Phoenix for 31 points, so they threw Grant Hill, the third-oldest starter in the NBA, at Miller the next game. And Hill, nearly 20 years removed from his championship days at Duke and seven years removed from contracting a potentially fatal infection after a major surgical procedure, answered with the kind of flashback defensive performances that once upon a time helped make him one of the best players in the league.

Hill held Miller to 12 points in Game 2 and 11 points in Game 3, both Phoenix victories. And if the Suns are going to win this series, now tied at 2-2 with Game 5 to be played Monday night here in the desert, Hill — an All-Met Player of the Year at Reston’s South Lakes High in 1990 — may have nearly as big a role as Amare Stoudemire and Steve Nash.

To contribute that heavily to winning a playoff series would be fitting, because even though Hill won consecutive NCAA titles at Duke (1991-92), is a seven-time NBA all-star, and recovered from ankle and related hernia injuries that destroyed what should have been the prime of his career, he has never won a playoff series.

With the national media once again paying attention to the Suns, Hill increasingly gets asked whether he’s obsessed with getting out of the first round.

“No, I’m not,” he said recently. “I stopped doing that a long time ago. When you’re young, you think about your legacy, about perhaps making the Hall of Fame. But when you lose the things you had before, when you face something life threatening . . . the things that obsessed you once don’t any longer. I’m thankful to be here, to still be playing, to contribute to the team and hopefully help these young guys develop.”

After 15 seasons of play and the wear and tear of nearly 900 career games (including the playoffs), Hill is no longer the player who twice averaged more than 20 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists in a season. Hill tells a story about how his wife pulled up some YouTube clips one night and Hill was astonished to see just how great he was during his first six years in the league, playing for the Detroit Pistons. The real stunner is that Hill played in all 82 games last season (for the first time in his career), then 81 of 82 games this season.

Nash, Hill’s closest friend on the Suns, said recently: “I’ve been amazed. Forget the intelligence and skill level . . . For him to be this athletic and durable and this fast from baseline to baseline and jump like he does at this stage of his career, given what he went through . . . Even at 37, he’s one of our more athletic players. Obviously, he had to be a superior athlete before. I’m not just completely impressed, I admire him.”

The man who coached Hill for much of his time in Detroit, Doug Collins, now gets to watch Hill in his role as a TNT analyst. And what Collins notes now is how “Grant has become a voice, a leader. He says what’s right, the truth . . . Grant, remember, was a protocol kid. He’s the only child of two only children [Calvin and Janet Hill], and he was taught to always, always do the right thing.”

But as his coach, Collins would tell Hill, ” ‘Grant, you’re going to have to ruffle some feathers to be a leader, to say what’s on your mind . . . I want to hear your opinion, what you really think.’ He started off as a sure-fire Hall of Famer. People forget, when he played for me he was a point guard or point forward. He was third in the MVP voting one year . . . He was just so good.”

Told of Collins’s comments, Hill nodded. “I didn’t get it then,” he said. “I do now . . . But it’s also something most people need to grow into . . . But I’m more secure now. My role is different. It’s more fulfilling, more gratifying.”

Hill could have gone to the Boston Celtics last summer but didn’t. Something felt good about the Suns’ direction to him, even though most prognosticators picked them to miss the playoffs or finish eighth in the Western Conference. They finished third.

“When I re-signed here this summer,” he said, “part of it was the mentor thing. Conventional wisdom in July was that I should go to Boston and get a chance to win it all.” But the Suns had a much better season than the Celtics; Hill averaged 11.3 points and 5.5 rebounds along the way, not that it’s easy.

He arrives at the gym around 3:45 p.m. for a 7 p.m. game. He didn’t stretch at all when he was a young Piston, but now does about 20 minutes of table work before every game with one of the trainers. He lifts weights the mornings of games. He shoots. He does 15 minutes or so of what he calls “corrective exercises.” He spends an hour with heat packs in front of the television, usually watching that night’s opponent.

He could have been three years into a career split between television and business ventures right now but wanted to give it one more chance. And what most would consider a surprisingly good season leads him to say, “Like anything else, anything that is taken away from you . . . you appreciate it more when you get it back . . . And, maybe I shouldn’t put it out there like this, but there’s a chance . . . It’s like we’re figuring it all out. Everything kind of kicked in.”

It’s a small club he’s in now, players nearing 40. There’s Shaquille O’Neal in Cleveland, Juwan Howard opposing him in this series with Portland, Kurt Thomas in Milwaukee, Jason Kidd in Dallas. If it seems like a long time ago that he starred for South Lakes, that’s because it is. Asked if there was ever any real chance for him to play before folks at home, Hill said, “I talked to Michael Jordan back when he was president of the Wizards . . . I think it was in April of 2000 . . . We talked about me coming home, playing for the Wizards. But I didn’t do it for the same reason I wouldn’t go to Georgetown . . . too close to Janet and Calvin.”

Hill laughed and headed for the arena exit. Players say all the time they’re happy to be with a team, happy to still be playing. It’s difficult to imagine any could mean it more sincerely than Grant Hill does. He’s still needed; the Suns aren’t going to win this series without him slowing down Andre Miller. And there’s the chance that even at 37, Hill could get out of the first round, and 16 years into a career of distinction, realize a first.

Grant Hill Wins 2009-10 Sportsmanship Award

Monday, April 26th, 2010

NEW YORK – Grant Hill of the Phoenix Suns is the recipient of the Joe Dumars Trophy presented to the 2009-10 NBA Sportsmanship Award winner, the NBA announced today.

A 15-year veteran, Hill (Pacific) was one of six divisional winners, which included Atlanta’s Al Horford (Southeast), Boston’s Ray Allen (Atlantic), Cleveland’s Antawn Jamison (Central), Denver’s Chauncey Billups (Northwest) and Houston’s Luis Scola (Southwest).

Hill received 96 first-place votes (2,485 total points) of a possible 315. Hill becomes the first three-time winner in the award’s history (2004-05, 2007-08, 2009-10).

For the sixth consecutive year, NBA players voted on this award, with eleven points given for each first-place vote, nine points for each second-place vote, seven points for third, five points for fourth, three points for fifth and one point for each sixth-place vote received. Each team nominated one of its players for the award. Former NBA players Mike Bantom, Mark Jackson, Tom “Satch” Sanders, Kenny Smith and Eric Snow then selected the six divisional winners.

The NBA will make a $10,000 donation on behalf of Hill to the WellCare Foundation.

The NBA will also make a $5,000 donation to each of the divisional winner’s charities of choice: The Ferst Foundation on behalf of Horford; Ray of Hope Foundation on behalf of Allen; Hammer and Nails and Cleveland Police Athletic League on behalf of Jamison; Porter-Billups Leadership Academy on behalf of Billups; Manu Ginobili Foundation on behalf of Scola;

The annual award reflects the ideals of sportsmanship — ethical behavior, fair play and integrity — in amateur and professional basketball, a key focus of the league’s NBA Cares program efforts. The trophy is named for former Detroit Pistons guard and Hall of Famer Joe Dumars, the award’s first recipient.

Following is a list of this year’s voting totals and all-time winners of the NBA Sportsmanship Award:

2009-10 NBA SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD VOTING TOTALS
Player, Team 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th Points
Grant Hill, Phoenix 96 88 47 45 22 17 2485
Chauncey Billups, Denver 79 48 64 53 35 36 2155
Ray Allen, Boston 48 72 63 37 43 52 1983
Antawn Jamison, Cleveland 45 43 67 72 53 35 1905
Al Horford, Atlanta 13 37 49 68 90 58 1487
Luis Scola, Houston 34 27 25 40 72 117 1325

Grant Hill Among Divisional Winners Announced

Thursday, April 8th, 2010
Suns forward Grant Hill is among the divisional winners for the the NBA Sportsmanship Award.
(NBAE/Getty Images)
Posted: Apr 5 2010 5:41PM

Posted: April 5, 2010

Already the only two-time winner of the NBA Sportsmanship Award, Suns forward Grant Hill could win a third Joe Dumars Trophy this season after it was announced today that Hill is among the 2009-10 divisional winners. Atlanta’s Al Horford, Boston’s Ray Allen, Cleveland’s Antawn Jamison, Denver’s Chauncey Billups and Houston’s Luis Scola were also selected by a five-member panel of former players as divisional winners for the 2009-10 NBA Sportsmanship Award.

The NBA Sportsmanship Award, designed to honor a player who best represents the ideals of sportsmanship on the court, is voted on by NBA players. The NBA will announce the winner after the regular season.

The 2009-10 NBA Sportsmanship Award winner will be presented with the Joe Dumars Trophy, named after the Hall of Famer and former Detroit Pistons great who played 14 seasons in the NBA and was the recipient of the inaugural NBA Sportsmanship Award in 1996. The six-time All-Star was selected in honor of his distinguished and dignified career and for symbolizing the tradition the NBA wants to recognize with this award.

Former NBA players Mike Bantom, Mark Jackson, Tom “Satch” Sanders, Kenny Smith and Eric Snow selected the six divisional winners from a pool of 30 team nominees. Each team nominated one of its players for this award.

The annual award reflects the ideals of sportsmanship — ethical behavior, fair play and integrity — in amateur and professional basketball, a key focus of the league’s NBA Cares program efforts.

Following is a list of the all-time winners of the NBA Sportsmanship award:

ALL-TIME NBA SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD WINNERS

Inaugural: Joe Dumars (1996)
1996-1997: Terrell Brandon, Cleveland
1997-1998: Avery Johnson, San Antonio
1998-1999: Hersey Hawkins, Seattle
1999-2000: Eric Snow, Philadelphia
2000-2001: David Robinson, San Antonio
2001-2002: Steve Smith, San Antonio
2002-2003: Ray Allen, Seattle
2003-2004: P.J. Brown, New Orleans
2004-2005: Grant Hill, Orlando
2005-2006: Elton Brand, Los Angeles Clippers
2006-2007: Luol Deng, Chicago
2007-2008: Grant Hill, Phoenix Suns

Hill Brings Back Memory of Breakfast Club

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

By Stefan Swiat, Suns.com

Posted: March 9, 2010

The problem with consistency is that sometimes it’s taken for granted.

One becomes so accustomed to it, that it becomes expected. Therein exists the rub with Grant Hill.

Unassuming and matter-of-fact, Hill virtually has gone unnoticed during this recent hot streak by the Suns. The Suns co-captain has helped propel Phoenix to an 8-2 record in their last 10 games, while averaging 15.5 points, 6.4 rebounds and shooting 52 percent over that stretch.

It is a decent little hike in the 15-year veteran’s scoring average this season, which currently rests at 11.8. Hill averaged 12 points a game last season.

But even more important for the Suns has been Hill’s ability to emerge as the backup point guard in the absence of Goran Dragic (sprained ankle) and Leandro Barbosa (wrist surgery). It’s his steadying influence on the reserves that has glued that second unit together.

So what’s been the difference with the seven-time All-Star recently to account for his little spurt?

“I don’t know really,” the Duke graduate admits. “I’m just lifting on game days. Other than that, nothing different.”

Not too long ago, the conventional wisdom in coaching was that basketball players shouldn’t lift too many weights because it would mess up their shot. Then, as the game evolved and weight training became more sophisticated, ballplayers such as Karl Malone and Tim Hardaway became renowned for pumping lots of iron.

Then, like he always did, Michael Jordan revolutionized when to lift weights. Contemporaries of Jordan also lifted during the offseason and some even kept up with it on their off-days during the season, but the rule was never to lift on a game day.

But not Jordan.

Jordan, as well as fellow Bulls teammates Ron Harper and Scottie Pippen, formed a little group that they nicknamed “The Breakfast Club.” The group would get together on game days and lift weights the morning of the game.

“The Breakfast Club” credited their morning workouts with improved flexibility and for a boost of energy for the game later on that night. Hill can attest to similar results.

“It helps me get legs and body moving a little bit,” Hill said. “We don’t practice as much and usually I do those lifts on off-days, but I’ve been using those off-days for rest and coming in early and getting a lift in. My body usually feels pretty good after a lift and it’s helping because I feel really good at night during game time.”

Hill has even begun using the method to help power him through back-to-backs. He lifted before the Clippers game Wednesday and totaled 16 points and eight boards, only to come back the next night to notch 17 points and seven rebounds.

The only two-time winner of the NBA’s Sportsmanship Award says that he lifts at 8:30 in the morning on game days, usually before shootaround. There has been an even more dramatic spike in his numbers over the last four games, averaging 18.5 points and 7.8 rebounds a game over that span.

But the 38 year-old forward isn’t crediting just the lifting for his improvement.

“It’s the meditation,” he joked as he made a yoga-like motion with his hands.

But maybe a mental adjustment wasn’t too far from the truth?

“I guess I see the finish line,” he said. “It’s time to turn it up a bit.”

Grant Hill’s Game Day Routine

Friday, February 19th, 2010

By Austin Burton

Photo by: Keith Allison
NBA players are mostly creatures of habit. Whether it’s the superstars or the guys fighting for roster spots, you’re likely to uncover a similar pattern of routines: from workouts to eating and sleeping rituals to post-game relaxation tactics employed on a daily basis.

At 37 years old, Grant Hill has endured injuries that would have ended other men’s careers, and yet he still excels today thanks to discipline with old habits and learning to adapt to new ones as his health becomes increasingly crucial. The 15-year vet, averaging 11.3 points and 5.3 boards as the Suns’ full-time starting SF, takes us through his typical game day routine:

MORNING
I get up at 6:45, eat breakfast at home, take my daughter to school at 7:30, then get to the (Suns) facility early. When I get there I’ll do some corrective exercises, go to the weight room, and get some shots up. Then I head to shootaround, which lasts from 9:45 to 10:45. Then it’s 10 minutes in the cold tub, shower up, go home and eat a light lunch.

I wouldn’t say I always eat the same thing, but it’s pretty consistent. For breakfast I usually eat oatmeal pancakes or oatmeal waffles. The lunch I eat at 12:30, that could be anything. The lunch when I get up from my nap, I’ll usually have fish and sweet potatoes. So two of the three meals, I mostly eat the same thing.

The most important thing is to get my body up and running. The corrective exercises, that’s a program I set up with the team’s strength and conditioning coaches: abdominal work, strengthening my glutes, basically stuff that works on your core. I get those in before every practice and before every game.

NOON
I sleep from 1 p.m. to three. I’ll get up and eat again at 3:45, leave the house and get to the arena at 4:30. Then for the next hour and a half or two hours, it’s just getting myself ready for the game. That’s my routine — I don’t like to deviate from that.

Like you said, athletes are creatures of habit. We like routine. Whether it’s what time you eat or what time you go to sleep, we’ve got to do the same thing. From the time I wake up until the game starts, I do the same thing every day.

It differs a little bit when you’re on the road. If we’re on a back-to-back, we might get up at 11 a.m. and have a breakfast meeting because we normally get in pretty late from the last game. We might watch film during breakfast and have a walk-through. After that most guys go back to their room, lay down and take a nap, then grab something else to eat and check out of the hotel. Sometimes I like to put on my headphones and go for a walk to get my body moving. I listen to all kinds of music — whoever, whenever. On my iPhone I’ve got ’80s pop, I’ve got Motown music, I’ve got hip-hop and R&B. It just depends on what mood I’m in.

NIGHT
When the game is over, the routine is off. Sometimes I’ll go straight home and go to sleep. Sometimes we’ll go out to eat if my wife goes to the game, sometimes I’ll go out to eat with the guys. There’s no rhyme or reason. Me and my wife will be like, “Do we have any food at home?” Then go from there.

The one consistent thing is to eat right. I’ve always been pretty healthy, except for maybe my first couple of years in the League — but the older you get, you pay more attention to what kind of food you put into your body. It’s not really dieting, it’s just how I live. It’s a lifestyle. As an older player I’m very cognizant and very aware of what I put in my body. I know I’m more sensitive to certain things. When I was 21, I could eat fast food and it wouldn’t affect me. Now, I’m pretty sure it would.

It’s not that tough to maintain when you’re on the road. We stay in nice hotels, so they always have healthy options on the room service menu, at least something like salmon with vegetables. If I go out to eat with the guys, we might go to, like, the Hard Rock Cafe, and you can find something healthy on their menu.

I just try to be smart about it, because it’s crucial to your performance and still being able to go at a high level.

Suns’ Hill overcomes injuries to live healthy, fit lifestyle

Monday, January 11th, 2010

hillswim608
Grant Hill spends summers doing a lot of non-basketball workouts.
All photos by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images

By NBA.com
Posted Jan 7 2010 6:47PM

After 15 years in the NBA, Grant Hill just reached a major milestone — he completed his first calendar year without missing a game. Quite a big deal, considering it appeared Hill was on the brink of retirement due to ankle injuries earlier in his career, playing in only 47 out of 264 games during a five-year period.

Perhaps no NBA player understands and appreciates the importance of healthy living and physical fitness than Hill, who went six for six in All-Star appearances with the Pistons and Magic before the injuries struck.

To commemorate NBA FIT Week, Hill, 37 (but who says he feels like 30), spoke with NBA.com’s John Hareas and discussed how his approach to working out, diet and nutrition has evolved over the years and why it’s important to him being an NBA FIT member.

NBA.com: You just completed your first year without missing a game in the NBA. How much has your approach to physical fitness played a role in being more durable as you’ve gotten older?

hillbench200

Grant Hill: I think it’s played an important role. For me, it’s been an ongoing discovery learning about your body and what it takes to stay healthy and certainly that was tested during some of those challenging years when I was hurt.

Instead of feeling sorry for myself at that time — I’m a seeker by nature — I really used it as an opportunity to learn more about the body, more about nutrition, more about health overall in general, not just in regards to getting back and playing on the court but having an active, healthy lifestyle as I get older in life.

NBA.com: What did you learn during this time?

Grant Hill: Learning to listen to your body. Your body talks to you and you have to learn how to listen to it. When you’re young and your ego is involved, you think you can overcome or override anything.

Also, understanding diet and nutrition and the role it plays and constantly trying figure out what’s best and what works for me. I think diet plays an important role. Managing your body, little tricks, such as using ice, massage theraphy, sleep, stretching, how you work out — all of these things, you become smarter and you figure out sort of what works and what doesn’t work.

I’m constantly trying to learn as much as I can. I don’t feel like I know it all but I certainly have learned a great deal over the last five or six years.

NBA.com: How has your diet and food choices evolved over the years?

Grant Hill: I think early on you learn the importance of cutting out fast food. As you get older, you stay away from sugar and a lot of the sugary drinks and drink nothing but water. Eat a lot of fruits and vegetables, fish, occasionally chicken.

I think the thing for me is that it’s not so much what works for everybody but what works for me. I think certainly there are some things that are consistent. I think a lot of the bad foods, the heavy foods, the fried foods, I think those are things everyone can learn from, stay away from or at least in moderation.

hill200.2I don’t pretend to know the answers necessarily or pretend to have the perfect diet but I know certain foods that are good for you or are healthy don’t necessarily work well with me. I don’t feel as good when I eat those foods. Everybody is different. Everybody reacts differently to different foods.

NBA.com: How different is your offseason now than earlier in your career?

Grant Hill: When I first came in, the offseason was an opportunity to play a lot. I played a lot of basketball. I played year-round, whether it was pick-up games or playing with some of my teammates in the NBA. Whatever the case may be, I was always on the court.

Then I spent many years in the offseason doing rehab and trying to get back out onto the court, recovering from injuries, surgeries and things of that nature. Now, I’m at the point where I’m healthy, which in the last few years has been kind of uncharted waters.

What I’ve found is that cross training is a neat way to stay in shape, staying away from the physical and mental grind of playing basketball every day. What that consists of — and I try to do a lot of recreational activities outdoors — kayaking, standup paddle surfing, tennis, cycling — fun, outdoor activities that you can’t do during the season.

Living in Florida in the offseason exposes you to the sun, which I think is good. Things that I’m getting a workout in but it doesn’t feel like I’m working. It feels like I’m going out and having a good time.

Sometimes, you can just go out for a nice five-mile walk, going out for a walk with my wife. I think the important thing is to try to get the body moving every day. Obviously, I will lift weights and I will use the elliptical machine. If I don’t have access to weights or if I’m in a hotel room, I’ll do push ups, sit ups. The main thing is really trying to get a sweat every day, get the body moving.

The body is meant to be moved. If you don’t move it, you certainly lose it. I know it’s a bad cliché but it really hit home for me when all of those years I’m in a cast and the muscles in the cast around the ankle atrophy and that’s because they’re not being used. Seeing the visual of that really reinforced the importance of getting a sweat every day, getting out and moving and getting some exercise. You don’t always have access to a bike or a health club, but as long as you have a little bit of room, you can get a work out right in your hotel room or right on your living room floor and that’s what I try to do.

NBA.com: Is working out year-round a motivating factor to end your career on your terms opposed to an injury?

Grant Hill: It doesn’t drive me necessarily. Freak things can happen and obviously I’ve been through a lot and I don’t want to go out that way. I would like to be able to say you know I’ve had enough, it’s time to move on. I do understand that as you get older, it’s more important how you train. You can’t not do anything for two months and then expect to pick it back up and be able to play or work out at an intense level and not risk a chance of getting hurt. You really have to be smart. You don’t necessarily have to work long but you have to work smart at what you do. My motivation is, I want to be healthy. I want to fit in my clothes when I’m 50 (laughs). I figure by then whatever’s in fashion now will be back in fashion at that time.

As you get older the one thing that you have to fight is gaining weight and certainly weight gain has a lot to do with a lot of the diseases that are out there. How you eat, how you move and exercise, your attitude toward life, how you train, how you get your rest — all of these things are factors, I think, in how you age. Not that I’m vain or anything like that but hey, I’m an athlete, something that’s been great to me my whole life. Up until now, I’ve benefitted greatly having a father as a professional athlete — being one myself — and I would like to continue to be active as I get older in life.

If there is one thing I’ve learned throughout the ordeal of my injuries was how to take care of myself and how to hopefully prepare myself as I get older.

Look, retirement is going to happen. Injuries — you can do everything right and something freakish can happen. I certainly lived that, actually my colleagues have told me that as well, but the main thing is that it’s not a sprint but a marathon and life is a marathon and hopefully I can be as active as I can and be healthy as I get older in life.

NBA.com: Why is it important to you to join the NBA FIT cause?

Grant Hill: I think anything that spreads the message — I like to say that the NBA is one of the biggest PR firms in the world and the fact that they are putting their name, their brand behind the idea of staying in shape and being fit is important.

Look at the issue in our country with healthcare — certainly that’s been very polarizing. Even childhood obesity — you look at a lot of the problems in our country as it regards to health, wellness and fitness and certainly getting out, eating right, staying in shape, being fit, studies have shown reduced the chances of all different types of diseases and so forth.

So, if we can get young people, older people to get out and do that, then that’s great. The fact that the NBA’s doing it, I’m so excited to be a part of it and hopefully with more and more interviews, we can continue to spread the message.

Grant Hill has found the fountain of youth with the Phoenix Suns

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Josh Robbins
NBA Insider

People who wander through the desert hope to stumble upon an oasis.

Thirty-seven-year-old Grant Hill plays basketball in the Arizona desert and he’s found the fountain of youth.

Hill missed 374 games during his disastrous seven-season tenure with the Orlando Magic, but he has enjoyed a career resurgence with the Phoenix Suns. He played in all of the Suns’ games last season, and he’s played a significant role in his team’s strong start this fall.

“My daughter gave him the name ‘Benjamin Button’ last year,” Phoenix Coach Alvin Gentry said. “He seems to be going the other way.”

Hill looked relaxed in his visit to Orlando last week to face the Magic. Working with Phoenix’s renowned training staff has rejuvenated him. Aside from the specs of white that dot his dark goatee, he more closely resembles the player who started his NBA career in Detroit than the one who hobbled throughout most of his time with the Magic.

“There were times last year where I did things and I’m running down the court [and I say to myself], ‘Man, I haven’t done that since I was in Detroit,’” Hill said.

That has continued this season. Hill is averaging 13.3 points and 8.6 rebounds per game. Best of all, Phoenix has started the season with a 7-1 record that includes an impressive road victory against the Boston Celtics.

(more…)

Hustling Hill Making an Impact

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Gratn Hill - 2009 - 2010 SeasonPulling himself up off the deck after taking a charge is nothing new to Grant Hill. Doing it multiple times in the Suns’ first full-contact session at training camp is another matter.

Still, that sums up the competitive spirit of the 16-year veteran, a spirit that is by no means tamed, even in intra-squad scrimmages.

“With the season around the corner, it’s important to play all out,” Hill explained.”You want to show up and work hard. And that’s what we’ve done. Coach (Alvin) Gentry has acknowledged that and said guys have worked hard and haven’t complained about it. We’ve come out and handled business. We’re trying to improve on some things, but so far the effort has been great. That’s the important thing. As long as you have great effort, you can always get better and camp will be productive. You want to get off on the right note.”

That sentiment is shared by teammate Steve Nash, who has certainly appreciated the Duke alum’s contributions to the Suns over the last two years.

“Grant is fantastic,” the point guard said. “He’s such a great professional and a terrific player, but he’s also a smart teammate. He has all the intangibles, let alone his obvious skills. The fact he has overcome so much in his career, he is one of my all-time favorite teammates.”

Hill escaped the injury bug last season, playing in a team-high 82 games, before re-signing with the club over the summer.

“Going through a tough season here last year made me want to stay even more,” Hill said. “We as players bonded. We didn’t get to the playoffs and it certainly wasn’t a Hollywood story at the end, but coming together will hopefully help us this season. For me, this just feels right, and I’m glad I did come back.”

As for the rest of the team trying to match Hill’s level of intensity this early in the preseason, it’s a safe bet that will occur sooner rather than later.

“Alvin and the rest of the coaching staff,” he continued, “they have a good feel for what we need, knowing when to let up a little bit. It’s a fine line. You want to get things done and accomplish as much as you can. You don’t want to kill people out here. It’s hard to be subjective since I’m one of those running around here, but I like the three days of two-a-days. Preseason is next week, so we’ll have to see when we throw it up for real.

“Our offseason is officially over. 2009-10 has started.”

Suns Tip Off Training Camp in San Diego

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Amid a chilly start to their first day of training camp in Southern California, the Suns certainly wasted little time working up a sweat.

Phoenix took to the University of San Diego’s Jenny Craig Pavilion for two practices Tuesday, which featured a little bit of everything, including plenty of running, shooting, instruction, weightlifting, stretching, drills and even a little five-on-five action.

“It’s practice, back to the hotel and practice,” said Suns President of Basketball Operations and General Manager Steve Kerr.” It’s a beautiful setting, but it is training camp. It’s work. Training camp used to be even tougher. It’s still tough for the players. The first few days, your body has to adjust. Even though they’ve been training the last couple of months, it’s not the same. Your body goes through shock, but it responds. The guys will be fine.”

Running his first Suns training camp as head coach, Alvin Gentry is grateful to have returning veterans like Steve Nash, Grant Hill and Amar’e Stoudemire to help him and his coaching staff show the younger players and offseason acquisitions the proverbial ropes.

“They know we have a purpose to work hard,” Gentry said. “Steve, Grant and Amar’e have played this way four out of the last five years. Some of the things we’ve put back in the offense will just come naturally to them. I don’t see it as a learning curve. Just getting into basketball shape will take care of it.”

League rules mandate only one contact session per day, so while the morning session was comprised mostly of instructional drills, the evening became a bit more heated, competitively, of course.

“The morning, there is no contact,” Gentry continued, “so we do a lot of teaching and covering the basics. At night, we’ll come back and ‘put on the pads,’ as they say. We only have a few days to get ready to play a basketball game.”

With an intra-squad scrimmage slated for Saturday afternoon at the facility, not to mention exhibition games vs. Partizan Belgrade, Golden State and Oklahoma City over the next two weeks, the Suns are looking forward to a productive, yet low-key camp.

Nash believes it’s a benefit heading into 2009-10 without the distractions that hovered over last season’s squad, namely “two coaching changes, a blockbuster trade and losing a teammate to injury.”

“Hopefully we can have a great training camp and continuity from there on out,” the point guard said. “We’ll be a much better team this year.

“San Diego is great for us. We’re pretty lucky guys to get to come to a great city and a beautiful part of the world. This is a great facility, too, so it should be a spectacular training camp for us.”

Hill added, “It is camp. It’s tough, but you count the days, count the practices and just try to get to Sunday. At the same time, you try and get a lot accomplished in a short period of time. Today was pretty productive. We have two-a-days, and less than a week from today, we’re playing our first preseason game so we need to make the most of our time. We go over a lot of things. The pace will be fast. Thankfully, a lot of guys have played for Alvin. The other guys will have to learn on the run, but we’re not here to hang out, have fun and enjoy the weather. We’re here to get something done, and today was a good first day.”