NBA teams spend a lot of time in
hotels, which can sometimes be an uncomfortable experience for people
who thrive on routine. There's no telling when a bed might not be up to
snuff, room service delivers an incorrect order (I said no tomatoes!),
or an opposing fan starts heckling. Pros have learned to handle such
distractions, but that doesn't mean they're not annoying.
Ayres: “You get in at whatever time. I took my room key. I could hear stuff in the hallway, like people in their rooms. So I’m thinking people are watching TV or whatever. So I get to my door, and my key doesn’t work, but it sounds like there’s somebody in my room. Like I hear a little baby, not crying but making noise. I’m like, ‘What the heck?’ I keep trying my key and it doesn’t work. So I go downstairs to get a new key, and I tell them (somebody’s in the room).
Read Full Story: Yahoo Sports“So they call the room, and nobody answers. They’re like, ‘We can get you a new key and send you up with security and make sure nobody’s there, because there shouldn’t be anybody in there.’ Then they’re like, ‘We’ll just get you a new room.’ It was the creepiest thing. I heard a couple of other guys heard babies in the hallway, kids running down the hallway. Creepy. I really heard voices and a baby in the room, and there wasn’t anybody in there. It was crazy.”
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