For the second time since this month’s Rio de Janeiro Olympics began, Stephen Jackson blasted former San Antonio Spurs teammate Tony Parker for “selfish” play during the 2012 NBA Playoffs.

After describing Parker as a “double agent” on ESPN’s TrueHoop podcast, Jackson doubled down on SiriusXM NBA Radio. “I was not the only guy seeing his selfish ways,” he said of their 2012 Western Conference finals series against the Oklahoma City Thunder. “I’m the only one who had balls to say it.”

Parker’s actions during a two-week stay in Rio that spanned Jackson’s comments speak louder than any words the four-time All-Star point guard could have offered in response to ol’ Captain Jack.

As Jackson ripped a player he shared the court with for less than a full season, Brazil’s O Globo news outlet published the heartwarming story of Parker’s response to Olympic basketball volunteer Vitor Galvani’s harrowing tale of being robbed at knifepoint on his way home from a Team France game.

View photos Rio volunteer Vitor Galvani poses with French national team star Tony Parker. (Facebook) More

As the story goes, while Galvani waited in a bus station outside Rio’s Olympic Park following France’s victory against Venezuela, a group of teens grabbed his cellphone, and when the volunteer gave chase, one of the robbers revealed a knife. The following day, when the French national team’s trainer noticed Galvani was shook up, the Brazilian shared his story. The trainer in turn told Team France.

Galvani, 23, majored in physical education and works as a club basketball coach in Joinville, Brazil. He made the 12-hour trip to Rio to he serve as a volunteer locker room attendant. To his good fortune, Galvani drew star-studded Team France, each of whose members approached him about the robbery. Parker was the last in line, and the four-time NBA champion offered to replace Galvani’s cell phone.

[Related: American runner receives special Olympic medal for sportsmanship]

At first, the Brazilian declined, not wanting to distract from France’s quarterfinal matchup against Spain. But Parker insisted. Not only did the Spurs star provide Galvani with a new phone, he delivered a bag full of Olympic swag, including Beats By Dre headphones and Lacoste sunglasses. When Galvani joked he’d be robbed again, Parker arranged for a car and security to ensure he made it home safe.

View photos Team France hooked Vitor Galvani up with all sorts of Olympic swag. (Facebook) More

“I wept like a child,” Galvani told O Globo, ” I hugged him — I could see the person he is.”

Parker wasn’t the only Frenchman enamored with Galvani. NBA veteran Boris Diaw called the Brazilian volunteer out of the blue, sharing Team France’s tradition of filling a box with fines for minor infractions like late arrivals, which the team then uses to pay for dinner at the end of the tournament.

Galvani wondered why Diaw was telling him this story, worrying perhaps he’d violated a team rule. That’s when the Utah Jazz forward told him, “But this time we decided to give it to you. You helped us in a way unimaginable, always willing.” The money was enough to pay for Galvani’s entire trip to Rio.

[Related: Polish discus thrower will auction off his silver medal to help child]

Story continues