Smith, 35, has enrolled at North Carolina A&T and is attempting
to make the school's golf team.
Smith revealed his plans to reporters at the PGA Tour's Wyndham
Championship on Wednesday, where he was playing in the pro-am.
NBA legend Ray Allen got Smith interested in pursuing college
during a conversation they had while on a vacation to the
Dominican Republic.
"He was talking about some of the things he was doing by going
back to school, challenging yourself and stuff for us athletes,"
Smith said.
Smith, who says he has a 5 handicap, will pursue a liberal
studies degree at NC A&T, an HBCU in Greensboro, N.C.
The 16-year NBA vet last appeared in the league in 2019-20, when
he saw game action six times for the Los Angeles Lakers. A
former first-round pick of the then-New Orleans Hornets in 2004,
the guard has career averages of 12.4 points, 3.1 rebounds and
2.1 assists per contest over 977 career games (395 starts).
He played for the Hornets (2004-06), Denver Nuggets (2006-11),
New York Knicks (2011-15), Cleveland Cavaliers (2015-19) and
Lakers.
In recent years, he's perhaps best remembered for dribbling out
the clock at the end of regulation in an NBA Finals Game 1 when
he believed the Cavaliers were in the lead, but the score was in
fact tied -- frustrating teammate LeBron James.
With golf, Smith said he's looking forward to the individual
nature of the sport.
"Golf is one of those games that can have you feeling really
high or bring you down to your knees and humble you," Smith
said. "To have that feeling and knowing that all of the game is
pretty much on my own hands, and I don't have to worry about
teammates to pass the ball to or receiving passes and playing
defense. I can just play my game and just have fun."
--Field Level Media
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |
|