This morning, people of the United States woke up more divided than they have been in a long time. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who seemingly picked up politics as a hobby over a year ago, became the President-Elect last night in rather stunning fashion.

If you didn't know which side L.A. Clippers guard Jamal Crawford took, you could easily tell from his Twitter account last night.

The Clippers take on the Portland Trail Blazers tonight, but the feel around this morning's shootaround in L.A. was shock, especially from Crawford.

“It's not a distraction, said Crawford regarding the election results. “I was just more shocked than anything. Shocked that things played out how they played out, but shocked that he even got that far, to be honest with you. That's most of America doing the voting so I guess the people have spoken.”

When asked how he and many others like him process this entire situation, Crawford had a simple answer.

“Just hope for the best on how to move forward.”

A total of 126 million people voted for the two major political parties in 2012, as Democrats Barack Obama and running mate Joe Biden sought a second term challenged by Republicans Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan. Obama won the popular vote by five million and thus earned his second term as President of the United States.

Although the final numbers are still coming in, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by a little over 200,000 votes, but at 59 million votes, she falls almost seven million votes short of Obama's 65.9 million. Trump, who brought in 58.8 million votes, won all the key states to eclipse the 270 electoral vote count necessary to win the presidency.

With that huge disparity in votes, Trump was elected President of the United States and will lead this country for the next four years. After all the things he's said during the debates and throughout the entire campaign, it just doesn't add up for Crawford.

“If you just watch the debates and all the things that came out of it, you're almost like ‘Well there's no way that this can continue on.' It's almost like a train wreck. Everybody's watching it and everyone had comments. I'm sure if you went through everybody's Twitter page that night, you guys were like ‘look at this.' So its amazing. Where amazing happens.”

With both the drastically lower voter turnout and a businessman-turned-politician in just a year winning the Presidency, Crawford said he considered voting important, but that now it seems like anything is possible.

“Yeah, [voting] is very important. When Kanye [West] said he wanted to be President I was laughing like ‘He's gonna be President,' but, I mean…” said Crawford looking at a loss for words. “The way things have played out, more power to him. Seriously, this is… Anything is possible…”

Aside from Crawford, a lot of other NBA players came out and spoke about the election results. Among the most notable were Bucks forward Jabari Parker, Cavs guard J.R. Smith, Kings center DeMarcus Cousins, and Knicks center Joakim Noah.