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Boys’ Basketball Royal Flush
A Q & A with Sixers guard Royal Ivey
by Matt Caputo
Slamonline.com
Royal Ivey’s nickname isn’t
tough, but his defense is. The fifth-year 76ers guard’s
alternate alias, “Cheese,” pays homage to the scene
in Pulp Fiction where Jon Travolta explains how McDonald’s
renames their famous Quarter-Pounder in Europe (“Royale
with cheese”) to acknowledge the metrics system. The
name is also fitting because, as a defensive specialist, Ivey
is known for covering things.
Ivey entered the League after
four years at the University of Texas as a second round pick
of the Atlanta Hawks. The back-up point man has earned a
rep as tough on defense and a steady contributor off the bench.
Last season, while playing for the Milwaukee Bucks, Ivey
posted the best numbers of his career and is excited to pick
up where he left off.
SLAM recently spoke with Ivey about his
place in the League, on the 76ers and the shoes on his feet.
SLAM: How do you like living in Philly? Are you getting used to
the fans?
Royal Ivey: It’s different, man. It’s good to
be closer to home. I’m about an hour and a half away
from the city. But it’s good. They’re pretty
rough, man. They’re die-hard fans, cause I’ve
been in a lot of cities, like Atlanta, where you got fair
weather fans. But Philly, they got the die-hard fans, whether
you’re
0-82 or 82-0 they’re gonna be there.
SLAM: How did you
actually end up with the 76ers?
RI: During free agency, my agent and I were looking around
for some teams and some teams were interested, one of them
being Philly. I liked the core group of guys they had—a
young, get up and down, youthful kind of group—and
it seemed like they were having fun playing with each other.
They play hard, they defend, and it looked like a good situation
for me so I decided to come to Philly.
SLAM: So you feel like
this is a good career move for you, no matter where you are
in the line up?
RI: Yeah, because in the League, it’s a long season.
People get hurt, people have ups and downs, so I feel like
when my chance comes I’m going to take advantage of it.
Just being patient and being ready when my chance comes is
what it comes down to.
SLAM: Talk a little bit about before
the NBA, you played on a really good high school team at
Cardozo (Queens, N.Y.) before you went to prep school.
RI: I played with some guys like Dallas Showtime Williams,
Brian Woodward, who had a good career at URI. We had a great
group of guys that throughout my years at Cardazo we were
competitive and one of the best teams in the city. In 1999,
we won that PSAL championship. That was a big thing for me,
leading Cardozo to the championship at the Garden and winning
MVP.
SLAM: Where do you feel you developed
your strongest skills, like your defense for example?
RI: Coming from the City, man, my whole mentality was to
be a defensive specialist. In New York, you got the point
guards and all that, so I had to find my niche somewhere
else, you know, go down a different path. So I put in my
mind that I was going to work hard on my defense. I wanted
to do something that many people don’t like doing.
So, from high school on, I had that attitude, I didn’t
want guys to score on me. I took it to college and became
a good on ball defender, and now in the NBA, you get a label
a lot of times, and mine has become defensive specialist.
But I’m still trying
to work on all aspects of my game.
SLAM: At Texas, what did
you learn about being an NBA player and when did you feel
like you had a shot at the NBA?
RI: Going into my second year, when T.J. Ford came along,
we had so much in common. Just hanging around him and picking
up stuff from him, and then getting on the court and actually
having that translate. I think I was averaging 2.8 points as
a freshman, and I ended up averaging around 11 as a sophomore.
So we felt like we could help each other get to where we wanted
to be. After that, I just put in work, didn’t take anything
for granted, and tried to be patient.
SLAM: When you got to
the League, who were some of the guys that help you adjust
and understand what it was to be in the NBA?
RI: Another New York guard, by the name of Kenny Anderson,
was in Atlanta when I was a rookie and he took me under his
wing and taught me things. He taught me about being confident
in my game, working on my game, and having composure down
the stretch. I took a lot from him. Plus, we had other vets,
guys like Kevin Willis. And I learned from our other rookies,
Josh Smith and Josh Childress.
SLAM: Your Dad wrote to us
once and we ran his letter in Trash Talk in SLAM #71. I’ll
read it to you so you remember.
(Dear) SLAM,
When I picked up the June edition, it opened right to the
SLAMup pull-out, and there was Warrick sitting on my
son’s
face. I told Royal not to worry, way to take the charge
and give up your body. At least you didn’t jump
and get dunked on by Charlie in Slamadamonth. Think
that made him feel better? Charlie came to Blair after
Roy, but they played together once at IS8. They came
off the bench behind Omar, Talik, Dre, Eddie Griffin
and Darius Miles for BQE. Good team? They lost in the
semis to the Panthers.
Proud Papa
P.S. say thank you to Khalid
Salaam for telling Royal’s
story in the In Your Face in the same issue.
What do you remember
about that Hakim Warrick dunk from the 2003 Final Four? The
image is still one of our most famous SLAMups.
RI: I was trying to win a national championship. Everyone
gets dunked on, but I was just trying to win and it was a
charge. But the funny thing about that was that every time
somebody comes up to me and talks about it, I tell them that
on the other side of the pull out, there was a full-page
article on me. So I was like, SLAMadamonth and an article?
That’s
what’s up!
SLAM: What was different last year in
Milwaukee? What changed from your time in Atlanta?
RI: In Atlanta, I started a lot of games but didn’t
really get the opportunity to play. I was on a leash. I didn’t
really get the chance to do all the things I felt like I
could do and wanted to do. Then, in Milwaukee, I was just
playing and not wondering what the coach was thinking and
if he was going to pull me or not. And I had some good games
where I feel like I helped my team win.
SLAM: Where do you
feel like you fit into the 76ers success?
RI: I think I fit in because, like I said, they’re
a young team that wants to get up and down. I feel like I
can bring a lot of energy to the court, as well as a defensive
presence.
SLAM: Was there anything that you spent
time working on this summer that you think you’ve improved
upon?
RI: My outside shooting, my decision making as a point guard,
not trying to make the home run play. Little things like that.
You got to work on your game in all aspects, but you know what
your individual weaknesses are so you got to put in the time.
And that’s not something you can really do during the
course of the season, you got to do it over the summer. So,
I was working all summer long to get stronger and better in
every way I could.
SLAM: Is there anyone on staff in Philly
that pulls you aside and tries to give you some one-on-one
help?
RI: All the coaches are great. Aaron McKie, Jimmy Lynam,
they all know their stuff. I’ve been around a few coaches,
but this staff is real sharp on their basketball IQ and their
knowledge of the game.
SLAM: You were suspended for the first
few games of this season for something that happened in Chicago
at the end of last season. How do you feel about the incident
now that it’s behind
you?
RI: I got caught up in the moment. If I could do it all over
again, I’d never do that. But I paid the price. I got
suspended, and it happened.
SLAM: What have the coaches been
telling you is your biggest asset in Philadelphia?
RI: My aggressiveness, awareness, and competitiveness. I
think will be able to help this team. Whatever the coach
wants me to do, I’m going to go out there and do it
and bring a little extra. I feel like, when I’m out
there, I’m
not going to hurt my team, I’m only going to help us.
You’re not going to put me in the game and not know
what you’re going to get. I’m going to go out
there, execute, and give it 100 percent.
SLAM: What will it
take for you guys to get to start winning regularly?
RI: We got to get used to each other; we got six new guys
on the team. Also, playing off of Elton Brand and Elton playing
off of us. He’ll be getting double teams, so we’ll
be getting open looks and got to knock down those shots. Plus,
playing better defense and having that winning attitude. When
we got a team down, we got to step on their throats and have
that killer instinct that all the good teams have.
SLAM: From
what you can see, who is the best team in the East and who
is the best team you’ve played so far?
RI: It’s hard to call, because it’s early in
the season. The Atlanta Hawks got a good squad; Boston looks
good; Cleveland, too. But, like I said, it’s early.
If you ask me 20 games in, maybe I could give you a better
answer, but right now it’s kind of hard to tell.
SLAM: What’s the most important thing for you to get
out of your NBA career?
RI: Consistency. I want to be consistent throughout my career,
so when I say, I played ten years in the League, and people
say what were you known for, I can say what I brought to the
table day in and day out. I want to leave my identity on this
League when I leave.
SLAM: Cory Underwood told me that they
call you Cheese. Do they still call you Cheese?
RI: Yeah, that’s my nickname. Cory got about a thousand
nicknames for me. They call me Cheese, Smoke, Royeasy, a
bunch of things.
SLAM: Where does it come from?
RI: You know the movie Pulp Fiction? One of my teammates
brought that up. In Amsterdam, you call a quarter pounder
with cheese a “Royale with cheese.”
SLAM: Tell
me, have you already thought about life after basketball?
RI: I come from a generation of school teachers. My degree,
which I’ll probably get next summer, is in elementary
education with a minor in social work. When it’s all
said and done, everyone’s got to have a plan after
basketball. Whether you’re making ten million or the
minimum, you got to have a plan. I want to start my own charter
school. I’m in the process of meeting with people and
finding out what I got to do to get my feet off the ground.
My parents are both artists—they paint, do murals,
they do it all. So, I’m helping them with that, hopefully
in the near future I’ll open up a storefront. Those
are some of the things I got in the works.
SLAM: So, you’re
playing in New Balance sneakers this year, right?
RI: One of my friends linked us up. I tried them out this
summer, and I was working out at Phillips Arena and people
were clowning me, like “look at the New Bees.” But I like ‘em.
They hook me up with the gear, they’re going to make
me my own shoe, so I’m straight.
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