Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 19
NBA Players Keep 1-Game Rituals Alive, From Jason Terry’s Opponent Shorts to Rondo’s 5 Showers
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 19

NBA Players Keep 1-Game Rituals Alive, From Jason Terry’s Opponent Shorts to Rondo’s 5 Showers

5 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 19
  • Jason Terry said his superstition streak began in 1997, when he and Mike Bibby slept in full Arizona uniforms before winning the NCAA title over Kentucky.
  • Terry carried the habit into a 23-year career, wearing opponents’ shorts to sleep before games, keeping signature “CATS” socks and later tattooing the Larry O’Brien Trophy before Dallas won the 2011 NBA title.
  • He said the rituals did not always hold: without his custom socks in a 1998 NCAA Tournament game, Terry went 0-for-9, then scored in double digits after the socks were FedExed in for the next round.
  • Other former NBA players described similarly fixed routines, with Eldridge Recasner requiring a gameday nap and salute to his late father, and Tim Hardaway sticking to the same driving route at home and the same meal on the road.
  • The report places those habits in a broader NBA tradition that has included Michael Jordan’s UNC shorts, Ray Allen’s timed head shaves, Rajon Rondo’s five showers and Kevin Garnett’s pregame PB&J ritual.
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