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A 7 foot 2 center tells you he nearly quit at 12, and somehow that’s the most useful part of his story. We sit down with Motiejus Krivas, Lithuania’s Šiauliai native who climbed through the Sabonis Academy and Jalgiris system before landing with the Arizona Wildcats in NCAA Division I basketball, to talk about what development really looks like when nobody is promising you minutes.

We get specific about the habits that travel across levels: going hard in practice, building real strength and conditioning, and using film study to see the game instead of just watching it. Motiejus explains why he didn’t even dream of college basketball at first, how the move to the United States happened late, and what surprised him most once he hit the Big 12: the speed, the wrestling-match physicality, and the reality that “most skilled” does not always mean “finishes games.”

The conversation turns honest when we talk injury, doubt, and the two-year stretch where progress feels slow. Motiejus shares how foot surgery reshaped his mindset into gratitude and patience, plus the recovery routine that helps him stay on the court: ankle work, mobility, compression boots, red light, stretching, sleep, and better nutrition. We also dig into advice for youth basketball players and parents who are weighing big moves early, and why grades and eligibility still matter in college recruiting.

If you care about youth basketball development, NCAA basketball preparation, and the mental side of earning trust, listen through the end and take notes. Subscribe, share this with a player or parent who needs it, and leave a review with the one routine you’re committing to next.

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