A quick Google search produced:
"He possesses true grit, a surprisingly complete game and an abiding understanding of what it takes to win. Most important, he has no qualms about doing all the dirty work needed to build a real team.
“It’s about persistence and going to work every day,†Lynch said in a recent telephone interview after a New Orleans Hornets practice. “A lot of kids think you gotta be Kobe Bryant or Kevin Garnett. That’s not the case. You’ve gotta do the little things that make a team better. Defending, rebounding, making the extra pass. You’ve got to know your role, know your limitations. And you always have to work to get better.â€
That’s why Lynch, 34, continues to work on his jumper, because each season he wants to take and make a few more of the open looks he gets each game.
“If you watch Sports Center, you think it’s all about the crossover dribble and dunking,†he says. “That’s not it.â€
A veteran's touch. Roanoker George Lynch's NBA legacy is hard work.
It’s all about making yourself coachable and giving yourself over to team chemistry, he says.
In 2000, he helped drive the Philadelphia 76ers to the NBA championship series, only to break his foot late in the playoffs. Without his trademark toughness, the ’Sixers fizzled against the Los Angeles Lakers.
Chemistry has always been important to him. That’s why he still keeps in touch with many of his North Carolina and his Patrick Henry High School teammates, which isn’t always as difficult as it might sound. PH’s Russell Turner (who starred at Division III Hampden-Sydney) is now an assistant coach with the Golden State Warriors, and Curtis Blair, who was once drafted by the Houston Rockets, lives and works in Richmond and also doubles as an official in the NBA’s Development League.
Although his father still lives in Roanoke, and Lynch used to return here in the summers for youth-related activities, he now makes his off-season home with his wife and two children in Dallas, where he is building an athletic training facility that is scheduled to open next year. There, working with athletes in a variety of sports, Lynch hopes to show them that the intangibles permeate every phase of competition.
“I want to work with younger people,†he says, “and show them how to be coachable.â€
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