O’Neal painted a vivid picture: “He [would] shoot at the same time. He [would] eat his Snicker bar at the same time. He [would] drive the same route. Everything [was] precise.” And it didn’t stop there. Reggie’s internal clock was so sharp that “he would look at the clock and know exactly what time it was without looking at his watch. Everything was down to the minute.” This attention to detail wasn’t just about Reggie; the team’s late media relations director David Benner also played a role, always bringing Reggie his Coke at the same time, fitting perfectly into this meticulous routine. According to O’Neal, “That’s what made [Reggie Miller] great.”
But here’s the wild part—Reggie wasn’t alone in that mindset. O’Neal connected the dots across generations: “Reggie, Steph, Ray, and Klay all had the same similarities. All those shooters had the same similarities.” That obsession with repetition, that superstition? It’s built into greatness. Tony Allen, co-hosting the podcast, agreed: “Sounds like they want to [involve] repetition [into] everything.” Whether it’s socks, shots, or Snickers, the great shooters keep things exactly the same—because that’s how they stay great.
Jermaine’s stories show how deep his respect and loyalty to Reggie Miller ran—playing alongside a legend meant embracing all those rituals and chasing greatness together. It wasn’t just basketball; it was brotherhood.
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