Orlando Magic point guard Markelle Fultz says he has a “different mentality” now compared to when he was playing at the University of Washington.

Fultz told reporters on Wednesday he watches his college highlights “all the time.” The guard was a monster in college, averaging 23.2 points and 5.9 assists in his lone season at Washington while shooting 47.6 percent from the field and 41.3 percent from beyond the arc.

Finally healthy again after a long rehab from Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome, Fultz says his new mentality is to kill everyone on the court.

“Where I’m at now mentally, I think I’m going to be better than that because I’ve learned so much stuff, that I have a different mentality that I didn’t have when I was in college,” Fultz said, via Josh Robbins of The Athletic.

“Because even in college, my mentality wasn’t to kill everybody. I was just out there enjoying the game. But now I have a different mentality. I don’t take the game for granted because it’s been taken away from me. I’ve learned to, every time I step on the court, give it my all and just dominate every time I can.”

Markelle Fultz has worked diligently in recent months under the careful supervision of at least two members of the Magic's player-development staff. All the hard work has paid off, as Fultz is going to practice with Orlando once training camp starts next week.

The Magic exercised their fourth-year team option on Fultz for the 2020-21 season, so the franchise clearly has faith in the former No. 1 overall pick.