Utah Jazz Brice Sensabaugh Shares What He Like Do Off The Court

Brice Sensabaugh of the Utah Jazz speaks during an interview about his off‑court interests.

In the NBA, free time comes in short bursts. A flight lands late, a treatment session runs long, and the next game is always waiting.

 

That is why the small choices matter. What a player reaches for in the gaps can say as much about his rhythm as what he does under the lights.

 

Utah Jazz forward Brice Sensabaugh still sounds intentional about what he does away from the gym. When he was asked by PlayersTV what he enjoys off the court, he rattled off a top three that felt equal parts Utah, modern, and hands-on.

“Well, to be honest, in my free time, I like to do, outdoorsy stuff, so like hiking and stuff like that. Obviously, I’m in Utah, so there’s a little opportunity for that. I like video games a lot. I’m actually pretty good. So that could be, like, Tech is a something I’d be interested in. I love cars too, like building cars, stuff like that. So that’s probably my top three. Probably”

 

Hiking. Gaming. Cars. Three lanes, three different speeds.

Hiking Where He Plays

The first hobby is the most Utah answer possible, and Sensabaugh does not try to dress it up. Outdoorsy stuff. Hiking. Taking advantage of where he is.

For athletes who spend months living in controlled spaces, arenas, practice facilities, hotels, planes, the outdoors can be a rare kind of control. A trail offers a routine that does not care about a stat line. It only asks for breath, steps, and time.

You do not have to win a hike.

In a league that can shrink the world to film sessions and schedules, being outside can feel like a reset button you can actually touch. It is also a simple way to learn a city. You figure out where you are by moving through it.

 

Gaming, Tech, And Competition

Sensabaugh’s second lane is gaming, and he says it with a grin you can hear through the words.

“I like video games a lot. I’m actually pretty good.”

That is not just a pastime. It is pride. Competitive players tend to find competition wherever it lives, even when it is on a screen.

Gaming also fits the NBA calendar. It travels. It fills hotel nights. It connects teammates and friends back home in the same space, even when the schedule spreads everybody out.

He links it to a wider curiosity, too. “So that could be, like, Tech is a something I’d be interested in.”

 

It is not a polished pitch. It sounds like an honest interest. The smartest moves after basketball often start as questions, not press releases.

 

Cars, Craft, And Patience

Then comes the third hobby, the one that feels the most physical.

“I love cars too, like building cars, stuff like that.”

Car culture is detail work. It is problem-solving. It is patience. You cannot rush a build. You either learn how the pieces fit or you learn what it costs when they do not.

There is also a creative pull to it. You can tinker, improve, customize, and watch the result change right in front of you. For a player whose work is judged in real time, a project like that can be its own quiet space.

Progress becomes personal again.

A Glimpse Beyond Basketball

PlayersTV followed with the natural question: Does Sensabaugh see himself driving race cars after his NBA career?

“I wouldn’t got that far, but It could be a possibility, though, for sure.”

He does not oversell it. He does not shut it down, either. He leaves the door cracked, which is often the most honest place for a future idea to live.

The Personality In The Details

Off-court habits are not trivia. They show how a player manages stress and attention in a job that demands both.

Sensabaugh’s list is simple but revealing. Get outside. Compete in a different arena. Build something with your hands.

Those are not just hobbies. They are outlets.

For fans, it is also a reminder that players are not only their roles. Sometimes the most telling scouting report is the one that has nothing to do with a jumper and everything to do with how someone spends a quiet afternoon.

It does not promise anything on the floor. It is not supposed to.

It is just a clear look at how he stays grounded.

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