(EDITORāS NOTE ā Orlando Magic rookie and No. 1 overall draft pick Paolo Banchero is doing a periodic diary with The Associated Press this season to chronicle his first year in the NBA. This is his second installment, the first since the regular season started. The Magic are an NBA-worst 5-20 through the first 25 games of his rookie campaign. Heās averaging 21.7 points and 6.8 rebounds.)
Iām learning.
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The first few weeks of my first NBA season, I would say itās been a lot of learning, a lot of learning on the floor, off the floor, habits, learning what works, what routine works for me, stuff like that. And then just learning how this league is, how you got to bring it every night. You got to learn how to win. Itās not just going to be handed to you.
I think Iāve learned that. Weāve all learned that and weāre doing it the hard way, including me, just being a rookie coming from Duke, coming from always winning my whole life. Now itās a little different. Iāve got to learn how to prepare the same way, still have the same love and joy for the game ā and focus on how we can get wins and get competitive.
There is a lot to like here. All the guys are close. We all communicate when weāre not in the arena or the AdventHealth Training Center. Itās honestly a great vibe every day around here. Itās not like guys donāt speak to each other. Itās not like thereās any turmoil. Everything off the court is smooth and everyone likes what weāre doing. Itās about just kind of trying to figure out how we can bring that camaraderie to the court, to the games and help each other win. And weāve dealt with a lot of other stuff, injuries and whatnot. We just want to see each other get healthy. Then we can try and build.
Itās about patience. Thatās the main thing. (EDITORāS NOTE: Banchero missed seven games with a sprained ankle.) I had never been injured before. High school, my sophomore year, I had a concussion that kept me out two weeks. But as far as injuries go, I never had any. I hadnāt missed any game in college. Outside that concussion, I didnāt miss any games in high school. I just had to learn to listen to my body and be patient. Iām still not as explosive as I was before getting hurt. I feel like Iāve gotten my wind back pretty much, but just as far as explosion and movement-wise, Iām still trying to just speed it up and get back into the flow. Itās a daily process.
There have been good āWelcome to the NBAā moments. There have been some that werenāt as good. I had the dunk in my first game. (EDITORāS NOTE: Banchero dunked over Detroitās Cory Joseph in his debut game in October.) I mean, it was a nice dunk. I think I had one in high school that I would deem better than that one. Iāve never had a dunk where someone tried to take a charge ever in my life. All the dunks Iāve had on people have been when they try and jump to block me. And even a couple of my close friends were like, āWow, that was crazy to see.ā
Iāve had some moments where you realize, this is what the NBA is like. Whether itās going against Kevin Durant and he goes for 45 and only misses five shots, or my having 30 in two games, you learn from all of it. And you realize, āHey, Iām here. I can do this.ā
Before the season, I was definitely one of the guys who would say, āThis is going to happen this season, we can do this and we can do that.ā And then you look up and weāre 5-20. For me, itās just a reality check. You canāt just come into this league and just get wins and have success. You got to work for it. Itās going to take multiple years.
We know itās not going to happen in a week. Itās not going to happen in two weeks. Itās not going to happen with one player or one adjustment. This could take one year, two years, three years. Itās not just an overnight success. We have a working mindset and just knowing that weāre at the bottom right now, thereās nowhere to go but up. So, weāll take the small victories, whether thatās one win, whether thatās a good quarter or a good half, and then just move on to the next thing and try and just pile those up and let it continue to grow.
This is a process. And whether it results in immediate wins or not, I just want to see us play better basketball, see myself continue to learn and stay committed. We canāt let whateverās happening discourage us. Weāve just got to keep with it, stick with it, because you never know what can happen. Letās come in every day with a fresh mind, fresh soul and just be ready to get better.
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