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Draymond Green: "Steve Kerr took over, and Steve Kerr brought in a way of winning that none of us had ever experienced. He had won at a level that none of us had ever won at, and he brought that to the fold. He brought a new offense to the fold, um, that really unlocked and unleashed Steph Curry and Klay Thompson and myself. Um, I started—David Lee got hurt. I started, you know, that changed some things. Uh, Shaun Livingston signing to the—to the Warriors. Uh, Andre Iguodala the year before signing to the Warriors. You know, I think there were several things that happened. You know, getting Leandro Barbosa, Speights—like, we shored up our bench. We had incredible depth, you know, and so... I think, uh, just like the other teams that was trying to get over the hump and didn’t the first time, I think it was a little bit of the same for us."

"I've said this to you guys a million times. Who are those stabilizers in our run over the last decade? It's Andre Iguodala. It's Shaun Livingston. It's David West. You need them at different positions because Steph and Dray need stability around them to get them organized and to help them navigate the game and to get Steph the ball. "So Will Richard checks all those boxes. The whole team, the whole organization, recognizes this -- which means everybody's on notice. Take care of the ball, because we've got people who will do that. And they're ready to step in."
Greivis Vasquez: In the NBA, 90 percent of players are role players. There’s only one LeBron James, one Steph Curry, and a few other superstars. The rest fulfill specific roles. Young players coming into the league shouldn’t focus on being the star, but on what they can bring to the team that’s different from the stars. My career was about fulfilling a role. I never had the chance to play for a team like Golden State, where a role player like Shaun Livingston thrived. But we were similar players, able to run a team. If I had been in the same position as him, I believe I could have done the same thing. You have to understand that most players in the NBA are there to complement the stars, not be the stars themselves.
Shaun Livingston: "When KD came in, it was a shock. I was sitting in the barber’s chair, and I remember seeing on my phone, 'KD to the Warriors.' I showed the barber, and he was shocked. It really hit home when he got into training camp and walked through the door. I played in OKC with James, Russell, and KD in their first two years when they were young guys. But by this time, it’s KD. Watching him, I remember watching him warm up and go through his workout for the first time. I was just sitting there like a fan. We already won a championship by this time. We felt like we were made men, but we were watching him like a fan."
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Shaun Livingston: "After I got injured, it was just me battling myself every day. You don’t get that rise out of going against someone else. It’s you against you. You’re going to physical therapy six days a week, learning how to walk again. I’m already skinny, lost all the muscle in my leg. I’m looking at myself like, 'Damn, I’m really looking like this?' When you first look at yourself after the injury, you’re like, 'What did you think?' I thought I’d be alright, I’d be cool. I’ve been injured before, but I didn’t realize the severity of it. It was real trauma, a car accident type of injury."
Dallas head coach Jason Kidd has found Exum’s resurgence reminiscent of Shaun Livingston, the lanky ball-handler who joined Kidd’s 2013-14 outfit in Brooklyn, and parlayed that strong campaign into a three-year deal with the champion Golden State Warriors. Livingston was the fourth pick out of high school in 2004, a promising 19-year-old rookie, before a devastating knee and leg injury curbed his third season. “[Exum] had setbacks with injuries," Kidd says. "Coming back and finally getting into the league. Understanding his basketball IQ is extremely high. He knows how to play the game.”

Starring Keith David, Salli Richardson and Michael B. Jordan, Pastor Brown was released in 2009 and later aired on TV through Lifetime. A 2008 story from The Hollywood Reporter describes Oakley and former NBA player Shaun Livingston as executive producers. Not only was Oakley unpaid for his investment in Pastor Brown, but he wasn’t paid any profits, either. Worse yet, Oakley asserts, Belser illicitly used Oakley’s NIL to assuage additional investors “that Pastor Brown had legitimate and substantial financial partners” and then enter into various production agreements.
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“The Bay!” Shaun Livingston said, raising his voice. “Being in Oakland, the fans, seeing the passion that the Bay had. The diversity. All of it was attractive. And they accepted me as one of their own. It was good. The first thought that comes to mind is, ‘Thank you!’ The fans, and I’m talking about the real ones, the people that were there before there was the Splash Brothers, before all the nicknames and brands. To the real fans and the people that supported the team and the players, investing their time and energy and money, I just want to say: ‘Thank you.’”
“It was the timing,” Livingston, 37, said of his decision to leave Golden State’s front office. “It was more about home and family, watching my kids grow up. Being there for the kids. They’re at the age where I want to be more involved. I don’t want to miss out on those moments. “This was about doing what’s important. I don’t want to look back and regret this. I’d rather regret not working with the Warriors than not being there with my kids.”

Clutch Points: “[Kobe] shot a fadeaway with the left on me, like, how disrespectful is that? Just that he tried it, you know what I’m saying? In an NBA game!” Shaun Livingston shares a story of playing against Kobe Bryant early in his career 😂 (via @shobasketball) pic.twitter.com/W00M5F5jRL
“[Kobe] shot a fadeaway with the left on me, like, how disrespectful is that? Just that he tried it, you know what I’m saying? In an NBA game!”
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) June 20, 2023
Shaun Livingston shares a story of playing against Kobe Bryant early in his career 😂
(via @shobasketball)pic.twitter.com/W00M5F5jRL
Dalton Johnson: Source: Shaun Livingston will not be with the Warriors next season. He spent the last three seasons in the front office as director of players affairs and engagement The decision was Livingston’s to spend more time with family. Livingston won’t be living in the Bay Area