When I shoot, I'm square with the rim.

All of my shots are dunks or are around the rim.

The rim is looking bigger and bigger every game.

I feel like I can make plays, finish around the rim.

Sometimes you've got to be able to finish at the rim.

Going to the rim, you either get fouled or get an easy two.

In golf, 'close' is like the north and south rim of the Grand Canyon.

I've hit my head on the rim a couple number of times, back in high school.

I honestly don't know whether I can ever top the experience of 'Pacific Rim.'

I just try to attack the rim as hard as I can. Try to get the crowd pumped up a little bit.

Charge-taking can be one effective way to affect the rim, but the whistle's gonna blow a lot.

I'm just trying to be aggressive. Be aggressive with my shot. Be aggressive going to the rim.

I can think of a lot better things to do with my hands than to cut them up on the rim of a drum.

Making 'Pacific Rim' was a lot like what you imagined making movies would be like when you were 12.

I do all the dirty work: play defense, grab rebounds, block shots and finish strong around the rim.

When I think about it, it's kind of weird, but I do take shots without looking at the rim sometimes.

American future lies in the East. The great free markets of the Pacific Rim are the American destiny.

I would love to have more original material developed. 'Pacific Rim' has made that slightly more possible.

I wrote a lot of 'Driving on the Rim' by giving myself the gift of being just as eccentric as I felt like.

I know from watching other players that they have great games by getting to the line and getting to the rim.

My dad programmed me to be aggressive as a young player. He always told me to go to the rim. Live in the paint.

I try to space the floor and use my athletic ability to get to the rim... I try to get the best of both worlds.

Whether I'm starting or coming off the bench, bigs have to protect the rim and can't give nothing easy to nobody.

When I was younger, I was a guy who always wanted to get to the rim and attack the rim and just dunk the basketball.

I'm a playmaker. I'm always attacking the rim and have somewhat of a reckless style. I try to be everywhere at once.

I think, for me, I'm making the right plays and finding my teammates if I'm not open and finishing strong around the rim.

I put out on Twitter that the only thing I terrorize is the rim. People know me, my teammates know me, everybody knows me.

What is laid down, ordered, factual is never enough to embrace the whole truth: life always spills over the rim of every cup.

I don't like to fall short. It's tough. Just make the right play when I'm open, and I'll thrust to the rim and be aggressive.

I do a lot of things to help my team winning - set screens, roll into the rim, finishing. I think I can be even more than that.

I don't wanna be labeled as just a defensive player or a rim protector or someone who can dunk. I feel like I can do everything.

We wanted it to be that you could go to the comic shop and read about the back story of 'Pacific Rim' and the drama inherent in it.

If I could pick any story idea or script I had that I wanted everything to go exactly right for, it would probably be 'Pacific Rim.'

Legendary is in the unique position in that they have the resources to take risks, which I think has really benefitted 'Pacific Rim.'

If you look at the history of technology gadget makers, hardware makers, it's littered with the corpses of Palm and RIM and companies like that.

I don't really want to be cocky when I say this, but I really feel I can be one of the best rim protectors in the league, you know, as a rookie.

Myself and Tony Parker must be aggressive and attack the rim, because when we do so, we are at our best, and that opens up perimeter opportunities.

I'm 6-foot-4. If my life depended on it, I could still dunk a basketball. Then I would need assistance from a first responder to get down from the rim.

You've got to be the anchor of the defense at that five position. Call out pick-and-rolls, screens. The five is usually around the rim, so you see everything.

I gotta defend, I gotta protect the rim, I gotta rebound, I gotta set good picks for the guys, finish on offense, and I think that is not going to change much.

At night if I'm in a hurry, I'll just put on a lot of mascara and black pencil all the way around the inner rim. It's a totally sexy eye in a minute and a half.

I try to take whatever the defense gives me, have a sense of urgency, know who's guarding me and pick my spots, get my teammates involved and also attack the rim.

'Pacific Rim,' for me, was a chance to touch on those old Toho monster movies. 'Godzilla' and 'Rodan'... and then 'Ultraman' and 'Robotech' and all those kinds of things.

It's a different animal when you're in the NBA. You come in this league and you've got 7-footers who play 7 foot who are going to protect that rim come hell or high water.

My favorite player growing up was Julius Erving, because I loved the way he played above the rim, all of the tricks with the ball, big hands, and just phenomenal showmanship.

I tipped one in college and dunked in high school. I can still touch the rim. I've always been a guy who has been able to get off my feet. I've still got a little hop to my game.

In 'Pacific Rim' I had to have a haircut I wouldn't usually rock. However, the moustache I had in the film - that might have to come out again. It was a good moustache. Good times.

There's a lot of possibility in the 'Pacific Rim' universe for additional stories to be told, whether that's additional graphic novels or animated series or video games or movie sequels.

Everything I do, I do it with the hope that people will watch it more than twice. Whether it's 'Pan's Labyrinth' or 'Pacific Rim' or the opening of 'The Simpsons,' I do it with that hope.

In the NBA they've taken away so much of the hand-checking and the physicality of how guys are able to guard you. So if you touch me, I'm gonna throw the ball toward the rim and get shots.

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