When foot and ankle injuries limited Grant Hill to 47 games over four years, he told himself that he would make up the missed time on the back end of his career.
That optimism occasionally broke through the darkness of wondering if he would play again. "It was something to get you through bad times," Hill said.
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Now, as the season ends Wednesday night, his health is getting him through otherwise bad times with the Suns. He still has not won a playoff series, but he will play in all 82 games this season, a career first. It's a massive feat, considering the troubles that injuries caused from 2000 until 2006, a year before he came to Phoenix.
At 36, Hill will be the oldest NBA player not to miss a game this season, when only about 30 players overall will do it. For everything that could have gone wrong and all the charges he takes and launches to the rim, Hill was the only Suns player standing all season.
"You may not be the smartest kid but you have perfect attendance," Hill said.
He can be happy with more than his availability. Hill was the Suns' best defender. He shot 53.2 percent from the field, a career best that ranks 12th in the NBA. He averaged 11.8 points and 4.9 rebounds despite early-season struggles as a reserve.
He wants to play more years with the Suns but joked that he could play at the Central Florida YMCA. "I feel better than I felt four or five years ago," Hill said. "I still feel like I can run up and down the court with anybody. I still have a pretty good quick step, and I can get by people. For the most part, I can stay in front of guys at my position.
"Coming out here, it was like I was going to play two years and call it a day, but I still think I can play."