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NBA

Magic Don't Want Vince Carter Fitting In

Vince CarterORLANDO -- Ever since he was traded to the Orlando Magic almost three months ago, Vince Carter has said all the right things. He's talked endlessly about fitting in with a team that reached the NBA Finals last season, about altering his game to fit with center Dwight Howard, and about being happy to change the way he has played his entire career.

On Friday, coach Stan Van Gundy finally asked him to stop.

He doesn't want Carter fitting in. He wants him standing out.

"I don't want him stepping on the court thinking about fitting in. He can fit in, in the locker room. We didn't bring him here to be a guy who is just moving the ball,'' Van Gundy said. "We want him attacking. I want the guy who has been so good all these years. I want all his greatness."

Carter chuckled Friday when told about Van Gundy's remarks. He is a seven-time All-Star with a career scoring average of 23.5 points. The Magic gave up promising Courtney Lee, veteran Tony Battie and point guard Rafer Alston to get him. The Magic lost Hedo Turkoglu to free agency this summer, and they want Carter to more than replace him.

The Magic, like a majority of NBA teams, open training camp this Tuesday.

"Yes, he (Van Gundy) has told me, he wants the guy who beat him in the past, the guy who scored 42 on him," Carter said Friday. "He said he wants it each and every night. I told him I can still be that guy. But I also said I didn't care if I averaged 23-25 points a game. I want to average 55-60 wins a season."

Carter, 32, hasn't stopped smiling about being traded to Orlando. He grew up in nearby Daytona Beach. He has spent his offseason in Orlando for the last five years. He never has played with a center like Howard. And he never has been past the second round of the playoffs.

"The timing is perfect for me," Carter said. "I've wanted this opportunity since I came into the league. In my 11 years, I've seen it all, done it all, been through it all. My game has matured. Now I want to win it all."

The Nets traded Carter as part of their rebuilding efforts and desire to create massive salary cap room for next summer. He has two years remaining on his contract, paying him $16 million this season and $17 million next. The Magic want to win the NBA title this season. The biggest issue is whether the loss of Turkoglu and the addition of Carter will change the delicate but very successful team chemistry.

Carter has been a regular this summer at the Magic's training facility, working the past few weeks with almost the entire roster of players. He went to Philadelphia and point guard Jameer Nelson's home for a week last month with most of the team for a bonding session.

Van Gundy already has changed his playbook for this season to include a few of the plays that Carter was successful with during his years in Toronto and New Jersey. Howard remains the centerpiece of the franchise, but Carter is expected to be his co-star this season.

"I think I proved last year that I still got it," Carter said. "I can be what they want me to be. I'm just so excited to be here. I'll do anything. I'm a team guy, and we'll see where that goes."

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