Words matter. These are the best Julius Randle Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
If you look at the big picture, you start losing your focus on the little things.
I will say this about Thibs, he’s a tough coach if you don’t like to be coached or if you don’t like to play or do things the right way, then he’s tough.
I’m 6-9. But somehow I’m lucky enough to where I can go into Neiman’s and find a shirt I like and it fits just right.
I got the extreme confidence and belief in myself.
I can play small ball because I can guard multiple positions because I can really move.
Before I ever had the idea of doing the partnership and deal with Celsius, I was already drinking it at my house for over a year. My family, everybody loves to drink it. It’s authentic to me in that sense and as far as energy drinks it’s really hard to find a good option as far as being healthy.
I’m protective kind of aggressive, a caring personality. I guess it’s just kind of who I am naturally, once I get to really know somebody.
You can get all the knowledge and wisdom and advice you want. But, it’s up to you to put in the work.
Thibs is dope. Honestly, he’s a players’ coach.
I grew up a huge fan of Kobe.
Just to be able to compete is fun.
For me, as someone who takes the game seriously, really loves the game of basketball, just looking at the trajectory of my career and every year I’ve done something to improve.
I’m a person who wants to affect a lot of people’s lives in a positive way. That’s what God put me on earth to do.
You’ve just got to take every game in stride and play every game like it’s your last.
If you look at every star in the game, everyone has tendencies.
Not much can really shake me.
There are things I know I need to work on and things I can get better at.
My grandmother left an incredible legacy and mark on my life and my family.
For me, it’s about getting better from game to game, improving as a player.
You put an extreme amount of hard work in and things don’t always go perfect.
I don’t sweat bad games.
Kobe’s going to challenge you and push you. If you have a certain fire, a love for the game, that doesn’t bother you.
It’s crazy how style changes.
For me, as a 19-year-old kid going to L.A.? I ate whatever I wanted. I ate all the fast foods, the sweets – that was nothing to me. Now, I’m very conscious of what I eat.
I know you only get one chance to make a first impression in a city – and I was so disappointed in myself for how that first season in New York had gone. It felt like a blown opportunity. It felt like I’d cemented my reputation in the opposite way that I’d wanted to. Selfish. Not a leader. Not a winning player.
I’m pretty in tune in with fashion, what designers are doing.
One of the things I learned from Kobe: You focus on what you’re dealing with now.
Highs and lows of life happens for a reason.
All my teammates, everybody, they trust me and empower me. I just wanna thank them for allowing me to lead them. And then my family, my wife, my son, everybody, like everybody, has played a part in helping me continue to become the best version of me on and off the court.
Like everything else in the league, you want to be wanted.
I’m not scared of anybody.
Kobe was my favorite player from just the way he went about competition. He was so skilled, but his mindset and his approach were really what I took away from him more than anything. How tactical, passionate and detailed he is about the game – he really loved the game.
I think that’s when people get the most disappointed. Things don’t go as perfect as they want it to go and they feel like they’ve done everything up to that point to prepare for it and that’s just life. That’s how it is. Everything’s not perfect.
A lot of things about my way of leadership is to be vocal, but I try to lead by example – how I approach work and study the game. Do the things the right way. It’s a great responsibility I love to have.
I’m like, ‘No, I don’t wanna be the next Shaq. I wanna be Kobe.’ So I always just dribbled the ball everywhere I went… It was kind of a natural thing. I don’t even work on it, honestly.
I care about my teammates.
I want to be coached.
I’m damn proud to be a Knick.
It was just my mom, my sister and me. And from a young age, my mom always said I was like the man of the house. I really became the man of the house. And I really took that responsibility very seriously: being the man of the house, the protector.
I know not to get too high or too low.
I think I can fit in multiple styles and adjust to multiple styles just because of my skill set.
I don’t care what anyone says – there’s no tougher place to play than New York with the media and the fans who know and love the game. It’s a tough place to play.
I come into the game prepared, put the work in, put the time and effort into my game.
Sometimes you gotta go through something, sometimes you gotta learn.
Not having my dad in the house really wasn’t tough for me because my mom in the house is really all I know.
A lot of people may have had their doubts or whatever in me. And that was just motivation, that was fuel.
I meditate before every game, I try to meditate every day.
Everything in life happens for a reason.
You’ve got to do what’s best for your body.
I feel like I have a foundation of how I want to play. Because of that, there’s so much room for me to grow because I know how I want to play.
I just worry about every year trying to add something to my game, come back a better player.
If you ask Thibs the most important thing is winning games, so that’s all he cares about – that’s all we care about.
I’m a glass-half-full kind of guy, not half-empty.
In the state of Kentucky, all they know is Kentucky basketball. It’s the same thing in L.A. They love the Lakers and they expect nothing less but championships.
My mom is my biggest supporter. She’s been there since day one. She’s always going to have my back.