When commissioner David Stern steps to the podium Thursday night at Madison Square Garden and tells Chris Bosh which team will make him a millionaire in the NBA draft, it won't be the only time you see Bosh on TV that night.

Bosh found time between individual workouts with a handful of NBA teams to film an EA Sports video game commercial in San Francisco last week with fellow lottery-locks Carmelo Anthony and Kirk Hinrich. The ad will air throughout ESPN's draft telecast.

"I hope it's funny," Bosh said, with an inkling of doubt, from his Lancaster, Texas, home Sunday afternoon.

Having a rare day of relaxation in the "whirlwind" that has followed since he entered the draft after just one season at Georgia Tech, Bosh isn't worried about much else. The 6-foot-10, left-handed forward led the Yellow Jackets in scoring (15.6 points per game), rebounding (9.0), blocked shots (2.2) and field-goal percentage (56 percent). He is expected to be a top-five pick this week.

Bosh displayed his skills Saturday to the Denver Nuggets, who hold the third pick. It was his final drill until he hugs his family, adjusts a new ballcap and shakes Stern's hand in three days. Bosh says it doesn't matter which team picks him.