Saying basketball wasn't the most important thing to David doesn't mean to me he wasn't trying as hard as anyone else was. He viewed it as his duty, and he is all about his duty. He's probably more about his duty than guys who want to win championships are about winning championships, so when his duty is to win an NBA championship, he puts out just as much effort as guys who are totally consumed with winning a championship.
Let's look at this way, at these great compe ors that wanted it so bad...
Shaq? Shaq routinely took the regular season off and got his operations done on company time.
David never did that.
AI? AI doesn't like practice. Getting David to practice was never a problem.
Hakeem?
Hakeem routinely would tank it during the regular season if he wasn't happy with his contract or his team.
Barkley? Barkley tanked it to force a trade, from a team that couldn't make the playoffs to one that could.
David never did that. He made the playoffs with whatever he had. By showing up to play every night.
Most of these guys would shut it down when they were physically injured too.
David on the other hand played through the Olympics with a hernia and basically ended his career as a Superstar in the process.
Michael Jordan? Michael loved the game so much he retired from it 2 or 3 times. To do other things...
David never did that either.
David may not have wanted to win a le just for the sake of winning a le as those other guys did...that doesn't mean he wasn't trying just as hard. All evidence points to the fact that he tried much harder, because his sense of duty dictated he do so.
Plus...let's face it, after busting his tail to get his team to the playoffs over an 82 game schedule, there's no way David just stopped caring at that point. He put all that effort into it, and as soon as he won a le, he would know he fulfilled his duty, at the least.
And the important way it translated out...when David said he was going to do everything in his power to bring a le to SA, he absolutely meant it, even if it meant idiots would not give him credit. He wasn't about getting the credit, he was about his doing his duty. If David cared about getting the credit so people would know what he did...he probably would not have, as Pop said, tutored his own superstar replacement unlike anyone else to ever play in this league. And that's probably why the Spurs are the only twin towers combo to win a le.
David's not really hard to understand...understand this, he's a good guy, and he wants to keep his word and fulfill his responsibilities. And do his duty, whether that be civic, personal, or if it's his simply his job. It's pretty simple actually.
David showed up much harder night in and night out throughout the grind of regular season games that just about every one of those guys that allegedly, "wanted it more". That why his teams were always in the playoffs, and appeared to be much better teams than they actually were. David showed up to play every night, he did all that unglamourous crap coaches wanted.
David = Good, strong, commited. Not weak, soft, ambivalent(about his obligations).
The only difference you saw on the court was when the Spurs finally raised the trophy, David looked relieved instead of overjoyed as everyone else was. Off the court it meant David stopped thinking about it as soon as he had done his daily duty, then he focused on what he was in love with. Music? Family? Chess? Who knows.
Simple as that.