Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
AAP
AAP
Sport
Shayne Hope

Retiring Bogut has one basketball regret

Australian basketball great Andrew Bogut's only regret from his illustrious career is not stopping to smell the roses during the good times.

The seven-foot centre, who announced his retirement on Tuesday, won an NBA championship with Golden State in 2015 during a decorated professional career that included 14 seasons in the United States.

He also represented Australia at three Olympic Games and starred in two NBL seasons with the Sydney Kings.

Bogut declared he couldn't carry on through to the postponed Tokyo Olympics - a target he had coveted - citing the physical and mental toll a series of significant injuries had taken on him.

"The only regret I really had was probably not enjoying the moment more when I was in the bubble," the 36-year-old said on his 'Rogue Bogues' podcast.

"When you're in your prime as a professional athlete you probably lose sight of (the fact) it's still enjoyable and fun, but at the same time it's still a job and you take it seriously.

"You take losses hard, you take a bad game hard and you take getting traded or cut or whatever ... you take it hard as an athlete."

Bogut admitted professional athletes can be "selfish a**holes" at times, but deemed the narrow focus a necessity in the cut-throat environment.

"You kind of have to be because it's a dog-eat-dog world," he said.

"You're always competing against someone else growing up and you just get moulded into kind of being selfish because you have to be."

Bogut was the NBA's No.1 draft pick in 2005 and stayed the course in the world's premier basketball competition despite enduring a long list of injury setbacks, including breaking an arm and a leg in separate incidents during games.

He returned to Australia in 2018 with the aim of using the NBL's lighter schedule to prolong his career and guide his battered body through the Tokyo Olympics.

Bogut was named NBL MVP in 2019 and led Sydney to a grand final series early this year, before parting ways with the club in May.

His Tokyo dream was ultimately cruelled by serious ankle and back injuries that required surgery after the NBL season, as well as the Games being pushed back to 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

"The last two years have been a real challenge for me just to get out of bed in the morning some days, let alone go to a training session or a game," Bogut said.

"The body, probably from 2018 onwards, was hanging by a thread.

"It was real challenging and from the 2019-20 season that thread was completely frayed and in little pieces.

"It was real frustrating for me."

The Boomers will now chase an elusive Olympic medal without Bogut - leaving Patty Mills, Joe Ingles, Aron Baynes and Matthew Dellavedova to form the core of Brian Goorjian's squad, as the availability of Ben Simmons remains uncertain.

"I just can't physically and mentally get to 2021 with the way the body has been," Bogut said.

"I mean, I could on a lot of painkillers and with a lot of physical and mental anguish but it's just not worth it at this point in my career."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.