Orlando Sentinel

Vince Carter is content in Atlanta

- By Tim Reynolds

Vince Carter could have gone anywhere.

To a contender, to chase a ring. To retirement, because he has nothing left to prove. To television, which seems like it will be his next vocation whenever his playing days end.

Instead, he chose Atlanta — a young team, a rebuilding team, a team that probably has minimal chance of making the playoffs. And he’s happy. “I’m with a great bunch of guys,” said Carter, a Daytona Beach native. “I enjoy helping young guys who want to learn, who are willing to be coached and let you coach them and ask questions. It’s a small thing, but it’s a major thing — because if you’re asking questions, that means you’re trying to learn and grow. And these guys are all great.”

He’s the NBA’s oldest active player, someone who turns 42 next month. When he was drafted in June 1998, neither Trae Young nor Kevin Huerter had been born yet. And they’re the starting backcourt for the Hawks this season, Carter’s 21st in the league, with Atlanta being the eighth team he’s played with.

Carter talked with Dwyane Wade during the offseason about their options; Wade was considerin­g retirement and Carter was deciding where to play next.

“It’s very cool,” Wade said. “I think everybody on the outside has what they think someone should do. I was like, ‘Man, it’d be cool if he went back to Toronto.’ I had my story for him. But he decided to continue to do things the way that he’s done it, and I think it’s him understand­ing the importance of what he has to offer to the game and young players, and an organizati­on that wanted him to come in and give that.”

There are no regrets. Barring a change of address or another season — which is possible — Carter’s career will end with him getting to the conference finals only once, and never appearing in the NBA Finals. The closest he got was with Orlando in 2010, when the Magic lost the Eastern Conference finals to Boston in six games.

“It’s easy to go sit on the bench and watch your team win and not really contribute,” Carter said. “Yeah, with my voice, I could contribute. But I want to do both.”

So Carter is hanging with the kids.

“It’s good for me,” Carter said. “Keeps me young.”

Historic: The Warriors are the second team in NBA history, joining the 1961-62 Lakers, to have three different players with a 50-point game in the same regular season. Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson have reached 50 already this season.

The 1961-62 Lakers’ trio to do so: Jerry West, Elgin Baylor and Rudy LaRusso.

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