Arenas Converts House to 'Colorado Altitude'

WASHINGTON, Oct. 3, 2006 — -- Take a deep breath, and get ready for thelatest in Gilbertology: Washington Wizards point guard GilbertArenas is thinning the air in his house.

"I had my house converted to the Colorado altitude, so I amalways above sea level," Arenas said Monday at the Wizards annualpre-training camp media day.

Say what? He's going to live at high altitude in the nation'scapital?

"You know, that's kind of weird," Arenas said.

He'll get plenty of nods with that statement, but, yep, he'sreally doing it. Instead of going to the mountains to train -- assome endurance athletes do -- Arenas has hired a company to simulatethose conditions in a home environment.

"I had to put a tent in one room, and then they are going tocome during training camp and fix the whole house," Arenas said."Then I have a have a portable tent I'm taking on the road."

Arenas' hopes the living arrangement will give him more energyin the fourth quarter of NBA games, when everyone else is gettingtired from breathing the same old heavy air.

"How I start the game is how I finish the game," he said.

There's always something up with Arenas, whether it was hisrevelation last year that he played online poker during halftimes,or the multitude of ways he finds to keep chips on his shoulders.No wonder coach Eddie Jordan said last week that he hadn't spokenmuch to Arenas this summer because he could stand only so much"Gilbertology."

Despite the extra-curriculars -- or maybe because of them --Arenas is one of the best in the game. He was fourth in league inscoring last season, averaging 29.3 points, and made his secondconsecutive All-Star team.

Even so, there's a feeling he's never really been given his due.That's why he wears the No. 0 -- he was supposed to get zero minutesat the University of Arizona. Yes, he was an All-Star last season,but only as a late replacement for an injured player.

Fuel was added to the fire this summer, when Arenas was amongthe final cuts for the U.S. world championship team. The convenientexcuse was that he had a strained groin, but Arenas said heessentially withdrew after learning that he probably wasn't goingto make the team anyway.

Shortly afterward, Arenas vented his frustration, telling TheWashington Post that he was going to exact revenge on Team USAassistant coaches Nate McMillan and Mike D'Antoni by scoring 100points each on their respective teams, Portland and Phoenix.

On Monday, Arenas apologized -- not a bad idea if he wants tomake the Olympic team in two years.

"I said some things, and I vented out against Phoenix andPortland, but those teams actually had nothing to do withanything," Arenas said. "That was wrong of me. I really want tosay sorry for it and I want to say sorry to Mike D'Antoni. That wasthe immature Gilbert two months ago. I'm growing as a person, andI'm ready to be a leader for the Washington Wizards."

Even so, Arenas said the snub means he will be more motivatedthis year.

"There always someone out there who keeps me going," he said,"and I like it."

Washington teammate Antawn Jamison, who made the U.S. team, wasdisappointed that Arenas went public after getting cut. Then again,Jamison admitted, the snub will probably help the Wizards.

"Once again, he found a way to have a chip on his shoulder, andits going to be exciting to see what he pulls out of the hat thisyear," Jamison said.

That wasn't all of the Arenas news Monday. He's on huge newdowntown billboard - "Every kid, every NBA player dreams of havingtheir own billboard up," he said - and he said he got himself inshape for training camp with a week of boot camp with "a militarydude in San Francisco."

The regimen included running up and down the city's steep hills,sometimes on soft sand with 40-pound medicine balls.

"I wanted to cry a couple of times," Arenas said. "Whileyou're doing it, you're like, 'This is murder. This guy is killingme.' As soon as you're down, I was like 'Wow, I feel energized."'

Just wait until he tries the same workout in his high-altitudehouse.