

So why is Beverley here? On the surface, it seems that the Sixers could be getting into the Beverley business slightly too late.
#Color me mine pottery classes plus
He gets the most out of his six feet plus an inch, though he joked Monday that he wished his mom had found a dad who was a little bit taller. is what has allowed him to carve out a niche as a role player despite his physical limitations. The same competitive juice that inspires him to challenge LeBron James for the title of the best team in L.A. If nothing else, Beverley is honest, perhaps to a fault at times. Very honest with me, I love that about the city already, the honesty of it.

Gave me shit, gave me a hard time, like yeah, you doing this shit wrong but it's okay it's your first time. "The ladies from the pottery made it easy, like I was from there, like I was a student.

Everyone here is working together collectively for a common goal." It's not like crabs in a barrel, everyone trying to pull each other down to kind of get up. "Everybody's welcoming, no matter what color no matter what race. "The people here are very different than what I've been used to my last couple of seasons," Beverley said Monday. He spent his first morning in the city at a pottery class at the Bok building in South Philly, and his first impression of the city has been a good one. He is a tough, defensive-minded player who grinded his way through Europe in order to create his opportunity back home, a "blue collar" player insofar as a member of the NBA fraternity can be one.įrom the mouth of the man himself, Beverley buys into that idea of being Philadelphia-ready, too. It was assumed that Patrick Beverley would fit right in as a Philadelphia citizen long before he ever signed to play for the Sixers, though if you've tracked his career up to this point, you hardly needed to call it an assumption.
