Showing posts with label Kobe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kobe. Show all posts

Sunday, January 20, 2013

NBA News 2013: Lakers’ Dwight Howard Unhappy?

Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February ...
Washington Wizards v/s Orlando Magic February 4, 2011 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

There have been numerous reports of unhappiness between Dwight Howard and Laker star Kobe Bryant, although both have tried to defuse that idea in their own way.

However, with the NBA Trade Deadline roughly a month away, there is a sense of uneasiness surrounding Howard’s future.

For Howard’s part his camp says he is happy and content in LA with the Lakers and he’ll likely re-sign there as soon as he is able.

If that’s genuinely true, he’s done a terrible job conveying that to the Lakers because while publicly they are talking up their confidence in keeping Howard long-term, there is still a sense that until he’s signed on the dotting line, Howard is just too unpredictable to bank on

http://www.hoopsworld.com/lakers-dwight-howard-unhappy/

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

NBA News 2013: Lakers’ Kobe Bryant and wife, Vanessa, reconcile

English: Los Angeles Lakers Kobe Bryant
English: Los Angeles Lakers Kobe Bryant (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Lakers All-Star Kobe Bryant and his wife, Vanessa, have announced a reconciliation that will put an end to divorce proceedings that began in Dec. 2011.

Vanessa Bryant made the development official on her Instagram account.

“We are pleased to announce that we have reconciled,” she wrote. “Our divorce action will be dismissed. We are looking forward to our future together.”

The note was signed “Kobe & Vanessa.”

The couple has been married for more than 11 years and has two daughters. The Associated Press reported on Dec. 16, 2011, that Vanessa Bryant filed divorce papers in California, citing “irreconcilable differences.” In June 2012, TMZ.com reported that the couple was working on a reconciliation.

Bryant, 34, is in his 17th season with the Lakers. He’s earned more than $221 million in NBA salary over his career and is making $27.8 million this season. The highest-paid player in the NBA, Bryant will make $30.5 million next season, the final year of his current contract. Bryant also takes in an estimated $28 million in endorsements annually, making him the fourth highest earning athlete in 2012 — behind Floyd Mayweather, Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods — and the top-earning NBA player, according to SI.com’s Michael McKnight. Reports indicated last year that a divorce could have cost Bryant as much as $75 million.

Last week, Bryant finally joined Twitter. He used the social networking service to share photographs of his wife and daughters over the holiday season using the @NikeBasketball account.

http://nba.si.com/2013/01/11/kobe-bryant-vanessa-bryant-no-divorce/

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Sunday, December 23, 2012

NBA News 2012: Is the Lakers biggest problem really Kobe Bryant? No.

Kobe Bryant
Kobe Bryant (Photo credit: Boixoesnois)

While Steve Nash and Pau Gasol were out, Kobe Bryant has carried the Lakers. He is leading the league with 29.5 points per game, scoring more points per game than he has since before Pau Gasol arrived as a Laker. Back when Kobe had to carry Kwame Brown and Smush Parker (remember they both started).

But the Lakers have struggled to a 12-14 record — and that is after a three game win streak.

It has led some people to say, “Kobe Bryant is shooting too much.” He is back to being a ball hog and that is what is holding the Lakers back.

I think those people are wrong — Kobe is playing as many minutes but taking fewer shots per game than either of the Lakers most recent title years. With Nash out, the playmaking has to fall to him because you can’t let Chris Duhon do it. But that is different than being an inefficient gunner.

Still you hear it — “Kobe is shooting too much.” And it’s not just fans. This is an assistant coach from another team, speaking to Chris Broussard if ESPN (the story is behind their pay wall).

Thing is, who else on that roster (with Nash out) do you want to handle the ball? Darius Morris?

I think this scout hits the nail more on the head.

“Watching the Lakers play the Knicks this year was hard to watch because the other Lakers were just so bad. It was like Kobe was trying to do all he could just to keep that game close. And hey, if Dwight’s not going to try his butt off and if other guys aren’t going to try their butts off, then I’m going to give the ball to the guy that’s going to go for it, and that’s Kobe. I don’t think it’s that Kobe doesn’t trust his teammates; it’s just that he trusts himself more. A questionable shot by him still might be better than a good look for one of those other guys.

That has always been Kobe — he trusts himself to make plays more than he trusts anyone. If other guys are not knocking down shots early he will do it. The only question was always was he hitting shots and efficient or was he a gunner? This season has been his most efficient in a long, long time.

But it is no different than Kobe from any of the Lakers title years, particularly the most recent. He is who he is.

Let’s see what Kobe and the Lakers look like with Steve Nash in the lineup, then we can discuss what needs to change. But through it all, Kobe is not.

http://probasketballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/12/19/is-the-lakers-biggest-problem-really-kobe-bryant-no/

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Friday, December 21, 2012

NBA News 2012: Lakers' future hinges on Howard

English: Los Angeles Lakers Kareem Abdul-Jabba...
English: Los Angeles Lakers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar with Boston Celtics Robert Parish and Kevin McHale late 1980s (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Decade after decade, generation after generation, there have always been certain things Los Angeles Lakers fans could count on. They know their ownership is trying to win, win now and win big. And as 16 championship banners will attest, the franchise knows how to get there, and money will not be an obstacle.

The Lakers have risen and fallen during the Kobe Bryant years, as almost any franchise will do over the course of 17 seasons. But you can judge a franchise by its peaks and valleys. For Los Angeles, that's meant five more titles at the apex, and a floor of a single sub-.500, non-playoff season. In terms of their association with sustained, high-level team success, the only peers Bryant has in contemporary professional sports are Derek Jeter in baseball and perhaps Tom Brady in the NFL.

Now 34, Bryant has spent half of his natural life in a Lakers uniform and 17 years into his career he's carrying as heavy a load as ever, and doing it well. Despite the early struggles of his controversy-plagued team, Bryant leads the NBA with a 29.5 scoring average that only begins to tell his story.

Bryant's PER is the highest it's been in five seasons and is at a level he's reached in just three other seasons. He's putting up a career-best .602 true shooting percentage while using a third of the Lakers' possessions, and he's doing it while playing the most minutes in the league. It's a level of volume and efficiency that few players ever reach, and he's doing it after 17 years of pounding up and down the hardwood.

Current evidence to the contrary, Bryant can't keep going like this forever, not at this level. Oh, he can probably play for a long time to come if he wants to just exist or to chase Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's career scoring record, but as he eventually enters his mid-30s, it's impossible to imagine Bryant easing into an elder-statesman, glue-player role like Jason Kidd has filled in recent seasons. And then there is the specter of Michael Jordan in a Wizards uniform to serve as a cautionary tale. No, when Kobe can no longer be Kobe, he'll walk away. He's suggested that will be the case.

The Lakers' story this season really centers around Bryant. One title short of matching Michael Jordan, he's the one with the most at stake if the Lakers' season doesn't turn around.

http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/8758641/nba-kobe-bryant-sake-lakers-make-work-dwight-howard

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kobe's ego is Lakers' big problem

Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers drives t...
Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket against the Washington Wizards in Washington, D.C., USA on February 3, 2007 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The return of Pau Gasol and Steve Nash to the lineup is likely to mask most, if not all, the symptoms afflicting the underachieving Los Angeles Lakers. But the perennial all-stars will do nothing to address the disease lurking deep inside the foundation of the Lakers, the malady that will prevent the high-priced collection of veterans from getting past the Thunder, Spurs or even the Grizzlies come playoff time.

The disease isn’t bungling, overmatched executive vice president Jim Buss. It’s not bungling, overmatched coach Mike D’Antoni.

The root cause of the Lakers’ dysfunction has been consistent for 15 years. It is Kobe Bryant’s ego, his desperate pursuit of Michael Jordan’s legacy. L.A.’s Dwight Howard experiment is going to explode and implode in spectacular fashion unless someone in the Lakers organization is bold enough to kill Kobe’s Michael Jordan avatar so that Howard’s Bill Russell avatar can emerge and lead the Lakers.

You follow?

The wrong player is driving the Lakers. Dwight Howard is the second-most talented player in the league. He’s the single-most gifted defensive player the NBA has seen since Bill Russell. On a properly functioning, championship-chasing team, Howard cannot be a sidekick, a No. 2, Scottie Pippen. Can’t happen. The Heat tried it with LeBron James in Year 1 of the Big Three, and we know how that ended. Dwyane Wade is an awesome basketball player and a terrific leader, but he had to surrender the soul of the Heat to LeBron in order for the Heat to win a title.

Kobe has to let go and let D12. Has to.

Kobe has to accept that he is not the 34-year-old Michael Jordan. You see, at 34 Jordan was taking his final victory lap in Chicago, completing his second three-peat, securing his sixth title, winning his fifth MVP award and 10th scoring title. Kobe wants to duplicate that feat. He’s putting up MVP-like numbers. He leads the league in scoring. He’s shooting a career-high 47.8 percent from the field. He’s averaging five rebounds and five assists. He’s knocking down 38 percent of his 3-pointers. Oh, the numbers look great. The results? The Lakers stink.

You can blame that on the injuries to Gasol and Nash. You can blame it on the incompetence of D’Antoni.

I blame Kobe. He’s the guy stopping Howard from eating. Kobe is the guy giving Howard room to lose himself in his immaturity and hide. Here’s what Kobe has never understood about the Los Angeles Lakers. It’s an organization built to house and nurture giants. From George Mikan to Wilt Chamberlain to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to Shaquille O’Neal, the Lakers function best when the once-in-a-generation big man the organization acquires is allowed to be the man of the house.

Kobe emasculates his big men. Andrew Bynum politely admitted this week that Kobe stunted his growth.

“I think Dwight is a great player, but he’s going to have to get accustomed to playing with Kobe and not touching the ball every single play,” Bynum said.

The problem is deeper than touches. It’s a mentality that a big man must have in order to lead his team. Dwight Howard must enter every NBA arena with this mindset: “If I don’t hunt and kill, no one eats tonight.”

That’s Kobe’s mindset. But at 34, having played 1,186 regular-season games and 220 playoff games, Kobe doesn’t hunt and kill as effectively as Howard. Kobe isn’t the same as a 34-year-old Jordan. At this stage in his career, Jordan had played 873 regular-season games and 158 playoff games. Jordan was still a force of nature. Don’t get fooled by Kobe’s numbers. He’s not Kevin Durant or Carmelo Anthony, and Kobe damn sure isn’t LeBron James.

James, Durant and Melo can impose their will on the opposition. Over the course of a seven-game playoff series, they can mentally bludgeon an opponent into submission. We saw James do it to the Pacers and the Celtics in last year’s playoffs. Kobe is smart. He can be efficient. But he’s trying too hard right now. That’s why he leads the league in turnovers with 97. Kobe’s days of imposing his will in a playoff series are over. Howard’s days should just be beginning.

But Kobe’s ego is in the way. Howard can’t be the man of the house with Kobe sitting at the head of the table eating the biggest plate of food. As long as everything revolves around Kobe, as long as Kobe is on TV sitting across from Stephen A. Smith speaking in hushed, dark tones about the state of the Lakers, Howard gets to hide, gets to feel like the Lakers family can eat regardless of whether he chooses to hunt or not.

Kobe needs to fall back. He’s Dr. J right now and he needs to let Dwight Howard be Moses Malone. That does not mean turn the offense over to Howard. It means building a strategy and philosophy that revolves around Howard’s many gifts, which are mostly at the defensive end (and make the hiring of D’Antoni even more ridiculous). It means forcing Howard to mentally and verbally take full responsibility for the success of the team.

Howard is immature. We know that. We watched him in Orlando. Put some pressure on his ass. Make Howard explain why this team is underachieving.

I know this column will appear to many as hatred of Kobe. I don’t hate Kobe. He’s a wonderful player and terrific competitor. He simply has to make the mental adjustment that Dwyane Wade made last season. Come May and June, the Lakers are going as far as Dwight Howard can take them. Nash and Gasol might help the Lakers recover and get into the playoffs. And Kobe is certainly capable of continuing to put up big numbers.

But the Lakers are not winning a title if their second-best player continues to stunt the growth of their best player.

http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/kobe-bryant-ego-hampers-dwight-hoard-los-angeles-lakers-downfall-121812

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Saturday, August 25, 2012

NBA News 2012: Are the Los Angeles Lakers Dependent on Kobe Bryant Staying with Team?

English: Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, s...English: Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, stands ready to shoot a free throw during Tuesday nights pre-season game against the Golden State Warriors. Bryant was essential in bringing together a large point gap late in the second quarter, after the Warriors took the early lead. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Lakers should be fine without Kobe Bryant, so long as Dwight Howard's back is fixable.

They have positioned themselves well for the distant future, even if they have an incredibly pricey immediate future. In the 2014-15 season—when Kobe's current deal runs out—Los Angeles has no money committed. Between now and then, recent moves have ensured that they stay competitive.

Kobe Bryant is always a captivating presence, but in this season, it's especially true.

It's a transitional year for Kobe, as he must hand over the reins of the Los Angeles offense for that offense to thrive. And though Bryant is among the smartest players in the league (a subjective judgment, based on his interviews), recent returns suggest he might be unwilling to make the necessary move.

He played well in the Olympic gold-medal game against Spain, but would often sling contested shots throughout the NBA playoffs. Last season, despite having Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol as viable options, Bryant shot 23 times per game, the most since 2006-07. He also shot only .527 in true shooting percentage, less than the team average.

It's especially interesting that Kobe needs to let go because he's the NBA's highest-paid player.

Next season, he's set to make $27,849,149, and $30,453,805 in the season after that. You could be sympathetic to the Laker star, insofar as you can be sympathetic to someone making that much money. He's paid to be "the guy," and it might be hard to process the need for a lesser role under such circumstances.

But a lesser role is needed, as is a Kobe Bryant evolution.

The Lakers added Steve Nash, who has a history of running potent offense via the pick-and-roll. The "PnR" Nash action usually has to involve a big man, so as to stretch a defense. Perhaps you recall seeing this about 1,000 times over the course of Nash's seven-seconds-or-less reign of offensive terror.

To get Nash at his best, it likely means a heaping of plays that do not involve Kobe Bryant. For Bryant to be at his most helpful, the "off guard" must play off the ball.

The Lakers have to squander someone's skills, just because they have so much talent. There is only one basketball, and the shot clock goes for 24 seconds—not infinity.

In the meantime, the Lakers do need some iteration of Kobe. While they must be less dependent on him than ever before, he's nearly irreplaceable when you consider L.A.'s wing depth.

Metta World Peace (yes, that is still his name) put up an 11.0 PER last season. He can create little offense outside of the open three-pointer and he shot a meager .296 on threes last year. And yes, I know he has a habit of hitting the big ones.

The Lakers must actually get themselves in such a position where Metta's pressure-impervious ways can help them first.

In short, Kobe fills a need in the short term, but they also need less of him.

It's a bit of a paradox and might increasingly be one as the next two years pass. But, if the Lakers can sign Dwight Howard for the next five years, they should be creating a team from a position of strength.

Dwight is quite the building block, as wishy-washy as he may be. The Lakers will eventually, in theory, begin an era of Dwight Howard, plus no other commitments. It's no assurance of future success, but it's an excellent place to start anew.

Yes, the Lakers are dependent on Kobe. No, they shouldn't be in the future.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1301665-are-the-los-angeles-lakers-dependent-on-kobe-staying-with-team 

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

NBA News 2012: Dwight Howard or Pau Gasol, Who Should Be the Lakers' Second Offensive Option?

English: Pau Gasol boxing-out for a rebound.English: Pau Gasol boxing-out for a rebound. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Now that the Lakers have a fearsome foursome to bully the NBA with, there needs to be a pecking order within the team construct to give them consistency, offensive flow, and a plan of attack.

I think it’s fairly obvious that Kobe Bryant will remain the number one option on offense. Despite the tales of his demise and downward spiral, I still think his ability to score and scare the defense gives the Lakers a huge advantage in how they plan their attack. By having Kobe garner so much attention from the defensive focus, it should actually open up things for the rest of his teammates.

I know what you’re thinking: "but Kobe doesn’t pass."

He does and he doesn’t. He also doesn’t necessarily need to pass. Let’s say Kobe Bryant still decides he wants to take off-balance 20-footers over two defenders. I don’t believe most defenders on the perimeter can handle Kobe one-on-one. You almost always need to bring a second defender over to bother him.

By doing this, you’re leaving Pau Gasol and Dwight Howard battling the boards against inferior big man tandems while still being mindful of being outnumbered through the flight of that shot. But this isn’t about whether or not Kobe should be the first option on offense.

Should the second option be Dwight Howard or Pau Gasol?

It flip-flopped at various times last season, but Pau ended up cycling through being the second and third option with Andrew Bynum as the alternative. And the results were pretty much positive. The Lakers ranked 10th in the NBA in offensive rating.

In my opinion, the Lakers were at their best when they ran things through Pau to make plays for other teammates.

Assuming his back is okay, Dwight Howard is a lot better offensively then most people realize. And they will realize it this season when he gets the most coverage he’s ever seen. Despite being the only real offensive option to run the schemes through in Orlando, Dwight was still incredibly efficient with his possessions.

He ranked 95th in the NBA in points per possession with a 0.96 (which is really good). Considering he had over 1000 possessions in which he took either a shot attempt, ended up at the free throw line or turned the ball over, having that kind of usage rate and still approaching a full point per possession used is incredible.

The three best ways to utilize Dwight are by posting him up (55th in the NBA), rolling him in a pick-and-roll (2nd in the NBA and 74 percent from the field), and having him cut to the basket (17th in the NBA and 83.3 percent from the field).

Some people still seem to confuse Dwight Howard not having great touch with not having a post game. They are not the same thing. Dwight’s footwork in the post is pretty incredible. His feet are quick and nimble, getting him into great position when combined with his agility.

The problem for Dwight is that he has a hard time establishing deep post position because his base is so small. He doesn’t have a big butt or tree trunks for legs to root himself onto the block against defenders. He counters this by quickly moving through his post moves, but it can leave him at a bit of a disadvantage.

This is a move we see Dwight make a lot. He’ll go from the post position to facing up against his opponent. This is simply to get his defender to guard against the drive, leaving him a lot of room to get his spin move off. Once he does this, he does a great job of squaring up his motion to get off a good hook shot.

Guys without post games can’t spin to the baseline and put up a hook with their weak hand. Dwight doesn’t have a feathery touch, but he does have the ability to get off good hook shots with both hands, using a variety of different footwork to get into position for the shot.

It’s pretty obvious why he’s so devastating on the pick-and-roll. Throw it anywhere and he gives you a highlight. He has very good hands and can catch low passes, high passes, and lob passes before finishing with a thunderous dunk.

The same goes for when he’s cutting to the basket off of dribble penetration from a teammate. As soon as the defender leaves him some room to move toward the basket, he’s attacking in a straight line and signaling for the lob. And the beauty of lobbing it to him is it takes a fighter jet in the arena to prevent him from finishing the play.

The important thing to note on those last two highlights is that was Jameer Nelson making those passes to him. Replace him with the penetrating ability, scoring threat, and passing acumen of Steve Nash. Hold on—all of the blood just rushed away from my brain.

OK, I’m ready to continue.

As good as Dwight is on offense (and he’s very good), I still think Pau Gasol should be the second option. It’s not that I think Pau is a better player than Dwight, it’s just that Pau Gasol is the most skilled big man in the league today. He can score from every angle on the court. He’s better in the post than Dwight (21st in the NBA with 0.95 PPP on post-ups) and with his passing ability, he can make plays that few other big men can create.

On plays when Kobe isn’t initiating the scoring opportunities, a pick-and-roll with Steve Nash on the strong side or top side of the floor with Dwight Howard lurking from the baseline seems impossible to stop.

This play isn’t a pick-and-roll, but it shows exactly how you can’t game plan against Gasol as a moving target receiving the ball in the lane. His touch passing and vision are second to none at the big man position. Kevin Garnett used to be that guy, and once upon a time Chris Webber and Vlade Divac thrived making these plays. But as of right now, there’s Pau Gasol and then everybody else.

With Pau and Dwight on the court, the Lakers can do something nobody else in the league can by running the set through Pau. They can run a pick-and-roll with just their big men. Pau is a good enough dribbler and definitely a good enough passer to pull it off. If the defense sinks in to protect against the pass to Dwight, Pau can take the ball all the way to the basket. Otherwise, he can drop it down to Howard for an easy score.

By using him in the high post as the initiator, you can run players off of him as a screen and if the defense doesn’t dig down to protect against the pass, Pau will find his teammate for a layup.

He also is great at running those guys off of the attention he gets in the post. Here you have Steve Blake benefitting from confusion in the defense and Pau finding him for an open jumper. Now imagine Steve Nash spotting up for that jumper instead of Blake. Would the defense even leave Nash like that? And if they didn’t, wouldn’t Pau have an easy look at scoring the ball one-on-one?

Speaking of scoring, we’ve been discussing Pau’s passing ability, which helps open up the scoring chances for him in the post. A defense really can’t drop down and double him without feeling like he’s going to pick them apart with his passing.

Because you have to now worry about an agile Dwight Howard cutting from the weak side or Kobe spotting up for a jumper or Steve Nash being ready to drain a three, Pau should get more room to operate in the post. When he’s allowed to do this, his turnaround jumper is one of the best shots in the game. He can also adjust off the post defender and drop to the baseline for his patented left-handed hook.

And Pau is still quick enough to spin around his post defender and get to the basket for the strong finish. Some people seem to still label Pau with the “soft” label, and it’s just asinine. Gasol finishes around the basket as well as anybody, and he often goes up hard to finish plays.

Because of Pau’s versatility and the different ways he can kill the defense efficiently that Dwight can’t do, I’d definitely run Pau as my number two option more than Dwight.

Pau’s passing opens up his scoring and his scoring opens up his passing. He’s an underutilized weapon by the Lakers, who should be pounding the ball into him more to make things happen. Perhaps with Nash directing the offense, we’ll see this more and see how the team plays off of Pau controlling the ball.

It doesn’t mean that Pau has to average the second most shot attempts on the team or score the most points behind Kobe. It just means running him as the second option opens up everything for Dwight, Kobe, and Nash.

Remember how incredible Bynum looked last year receiving passes from Pau and  benefitting from the attention Kobe got? Now replace Bynum with Dwight, who put up better numbers while drawing the entire focus of the defense. If Dwight is dropped down to the third option on your team, he could put up the best offensive season he’s ever produced.

What’s scary is that the Lakers have so many options with what they can do on every possession. Run the ball through Kobe and have an advantage on the boards. Let Nash and Dwight or Nash and Pau run a pick-and-roll. Post up Pau. Post up Dwight. Post up Kobe. Run guys off of Dwight in the mid-post or Pau in the high post. Let Ron Artest take… never mind.

The Lakers offense has so many options of who can and should be the second option on any given possession that we should see a fast improvement in an offense that was already really good.

Let’s just hope they don’t forget one of their best weapons is Pau. Well, unless you’re rooting against the Lakers. Then you probably are hoping they have amnesia when it comes to what Pau can do in the half court.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1300219-who-should-be-the-lakers-second-offensive-option-dwight-howard-or-pau-gasol

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Thursday, July 12, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kobe Bryant is the Second Best Shooting Guard Ever

English: Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, s...English: Kobe Bryant, Lakers shooting guard, stands ready to shoot a free throw during Tuesday nights pre-season game against the Golden State Warriors. Bryant was essential in bringing together a large point gap late in the second quarter, after the Warriors took the early lead. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Kobe Bryant is going to keep chasing championships until he's fifty. At least that's what it looks like as he continues to play at an extremely high level ("Kobe on Team USA"). Bryant donned his first championship ring when he was just 20 years old. At 33, he's still got a good chance at winning more.

Michael Jordan remains the greatest shooting guard the NBA has ever seen, though Bryant seems to close the gap a little bit each year. The inevitable comparisons to Michael Jordan still show Kobe Bryant lagging behind in some key areas. In the championship department, Bryant is just one behind, but that's a big one. Kobe Bryant has had an incredible career, but his five championships are short of Jordan's six.

Michael Jordan is ahead of Bryant in a few other areas as well, with more league MVP awards, more scoring titles and more career points. Oh, and Jordan 's got more retirements too, but we don't have to talk about that.

Chances are good that Bryant will end his career ahead of Jordan in total points but behind his Airness in MVP awards. The championship tally could still grow for Bryant too. If Bryant manages to match Jordan's six titles and surpass his scoring total, will Bryant's career be considered to be on par with Jordan's?

Will Kobe Bryant finally be part of the G.O. A. T. conversation?

Some people say Bryant is already there and some people say there's nothing he can do short of winning another three or four championships to earn his way into a Greatest-Of-All-Time conversation that includes Bill Russell, Michael Jordan, and Wilt Chamberlain.

Regardless of what the future holds, Kobe Bryant has already earned a place in history. In the ranks of the all-time greatest shooting guards only Michael Jordan ranks higher in my estimation. You might disagree, but here's my argument.

Who makes the list of the NBA's greatest all-time shooting guards?

Oscar Robertson had a truly stellar career as an NBA guard winning the league MVP award once and winning one NBA title in 1971. Bryant's five rings put him above even this all-time great (and at this point Kobey Bryant is ahead of Robertson on the all-time scoring list too).

After Oscar Robertson, there really are no other shooting guards that have careers comparable to Bryant's. Pete Maravich, Reggie Miller, Clyde Drexler, Allen Iverson, Ray Allen, Jerry West, George Gervin and Dwyane Wade are other outstanding shooting guards but they all fall short of Bryant's success.

Championships make a big difference. Drexler and Wade each helped teams win championships, but none of these shooting guards won as many titles as Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant.

Of all the shooting guards to ever play in the NBA, only Michael Jordan has scored more points than Kobe Bryant. Scoring is obviously not the only measure of success in basketball, but it is significant. You've got to score to win. Scorers help their teams win. The real story is not quite as simple as this, but this story makes clear the impact that certain players can have.

Only four players in NBA history have scored over 30,000 points. Bryant is set to join this select club very, very soon.

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Saturday, July 7, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kobe Bryant and Steve Nash are joining forces in an attempt to win an NBA title

Español: El jugador canadiense de baloncesto S...Español: El jugador canadiense de baloncesto Steve Nash. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
This is the week Kobe Bryant went from acknowledging his advancing age to accepting it. Yes, there is a difference. It's one thing to say and joke that you're old; it's another thing to let that fact dictate your actions. I can't imagine Bryant teaming up with Steve Nash as recently as, say, 2010. But that's what two more years and two early playoff exits will do. They create urgency, which creates unlikely alliances.

So now Kobe is down to playing with Nash. The same Steve Nash who walked away with the most valuable player award in 2006, the year Kobe averaged a career-high 35.4 points per game. The same Nash whose Phoenix Suns put Kobe's Lakers out of the playoffs in back-to-back years.

Kobe always held it against him. Even though there was turnover on those Suns teams from the front office to the roster down to the guy in the gorilla suit, as long as Nash wore that uniform, Kobe sought revenge against the Suns. Do you really think it's a coincidence that Kobe's two highest-scoring games since March 2009 both came against Phoenix?

"I won't let it go," Bryant vowed after dropping 48 on Phoenix Jan. 10.

Only now he has. He's over it. He's welcoming Nash to Lakerland. The trade that brought Nash into the Lakers' $8.9 million trade exception and sent four draft picks to the Suns didn't go through before Kobe and Nash talked things over, discussing exactly how they could make this work. This deal had Kobe's blessing. His desire to win outweighs his desire to win at Nash's expense. It's created a willingness to help Nash win if it will benefit himself.

An indication of the thaw came in March. After a game against the Trail Blazers, Kobe was asked what qualities he had in common with veteran Blazer Kurt Thomas. Yeah, Kobe was as surprised as you were that the question even came up, but he gave a good answer.

"Professionalism and how we approach things," Bryant said. "You talk to him, you talk to Grant Hill, you talk to [Derek Fisher], Steve Nash, you'll find a lot in common. Ray Allen. There's not too many of us walking around."

I found it interesting that Kobe included Nash in that group. I'd never heard him go out of his way to compliment Nash before. But eventually longtime adversaries have no choice but to respect an opponent who refuses to go away. Still, I didn't imagine they eventually would become teammates.

Maybe Kobe, at 33, didn't like being the oldest player on the team after Fisher was traded, so he wanted the 38-year-old Nash around. More likely, Bryant didn't like the way the next wave was taking over the league. Kevin Durant beat him. LeBron James won it all. The kids -- the guys who wear "weird glasses and skinny jeans and all that stuff," as Bryant dismissively said in a "Gran Torino" moment during the playoffs -- aren't waiting to get next anymore. They're here holding the court.

Kobe's chosen antidote for these youngsters is to go older. Go with someone he can relate to. Someone who grew up listening to cassette tapes, not iPods, like he did. More importantly, someone who's just as desperate as he is. Kobe thirsts for that sixth championship, an accomplishment that would give him irrefutable equal status with Michael Jordan in the category that matters most. Nash just wants a single ring. Even a trip to the NBA Finals would be new territory for Nash.

If you don't think there's value in desperation, you didn't watch the NBA Finals. How else can you explain 33-year-old Shane Battier making 60 percent of his shots during the series, or 32-year-old Mike Miller hitting seven 3-pointers during the closeout Game 5? Those were the acts of two men who had waited more than a decade for this chance and had reason to doubt they'd ever get another opportunity. They produced because they had to. Maybe Nash is capable of a similar finishing kick.

Of course, there's a fine line between old and too old. And there's a stage where players are better off doing less. In the case of Nash and Kobe, it will help to have someone else to initiate the offense. Last season they had two of the worst turnover rates in the NBA. Nash had a league-high 5.6 turnovers per 48 minutes, while Kobe checked in 11 spots behind him with 4.4 turnovers per 48. By pairing together, they won't feel obligated to force the action as often.

Kobe shouldn't have to force bad shots, either. His 43 percent shooting from the field last season was one of the worst of his career. Nash should create better looks for him (and Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol and everyone else on the roster). An NBA coach said the lock of the year is that Bryant will lead the league in scoring next season. Not a very bold prediction, considering Bryant finished a tenth of a point behind Durant this past season. Nash has to be worth at least two-tenths of a point per game, right?

But one of the lessons the Lakers learned was that although Bryant still can score with the best of them, his points alone can't make the Lakers elite. He had 42 points on one of his best shooting nights of the season in their last playoff game against the Thunder, but the Lakers still lost by 16.

One reason is that after playing 1,161 regular-season and 220 postseason games, Kobe can't be expected to log the type of minutes LeBron did in this year's playoffs (43 minutes a game) and remain effective. Mike Brown took a calculated risk in that Game 5 finale and rested Kobe for the first two minutes of the fourth quarter. In that time the Lakers went from a six-point deficit to a 14-point deficit, effectively ending the game before he could get back on the court.

The start of the fourth quarter also has been Nash's resting time for the past few seasons. Half the period might elapse before he returned to the floor. Can Brown afford to sit Kobe and Nash every game during that stretch? That's one adjustment he'll have to make.

Kobe will have to get used to playing without the ball more often. There's no point in having Nash around if he's not going to run the offense. Then again, for most of Bryant's career he's never had (A) a point guard of Nash's caliber or (B) a need for one while playing in Phil Jackson's triangle offense.

Keep in mind, the Lakers had defeated the likes of Nash, Deron Williams, Russell Westbrook, Tony Parker and Jason Kidd on their way to winning championships under Jackson. As much as Lakers fans yearned for a great point guard, the lack of one never kept the team from winning. Now the Lakers need one. They're not running the triangle anymore. And the league is veering in the direction of point guards.


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Sunday, June 17, 2012

NBA News 2012: Kobe Will Not Win Another Title with Lakers

Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers drives t...Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket against the Washington Wizards in Washington, D.C., USA on February 3, 2007 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The Los Angeles Lakers are in a difficult position. They have the talent to be a playoff team for the next few seasons. However, they are not necessarily among the elite of the NBA. They can certainly make offseason moves, but the Lakers do not have a lot of options. Therefore, I think it may be safe to suggest that Kobe Bryant is not going to win another championship with the Lakers. Kobe has his rings, but he will not win any more in Los Angeles.

Lack of options

The Lakers have a number of holes. They need an upgrade at point guard and small forward. They could use several contributors off the bench. In addition, the Lakers need to decide if Andrew Bynum has the maturity and drive to be the type of player that Los Angeles can build a team around. Unfortunately, the Lakers have sizable contracts, no cap space, and no draft picks that could be used on young talent. Reloading will very difficult.

Time to rebuild

Los Angeles is not very tolerant of losing teams. The Lakers have been fortunate enough to avoid the long droughts that inevitably befall teams that must go through a rebuilding process. Fans may not be happy about it, but the team may need to go through a patient retooling process from the ground up. This can take a number of years. Unfortunately, Kobe Bryant's salary and his expectations about playing for a perennial contender may be a deterrent to the construction process.

Two years and then?

Bryant has two years left on his deal, and he also has a no-trade clause. I have to assume that Kobe will expect the Lakers to patch together a group of veteran players that are willing to come to the Lakers for less money. If Los Angeles makes moves that are geared towards the future, perhaps #24 will change his tune and ask to be traded. However, I think Kobe wants to retire with the Lakers, so maybe he will stick around and just apply pressure to the club until his contract runs out. At that point, it is hard to know what the Lakers might do, but I would be surprised if they re-signed Bryant to another deal.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/kobe-not-win-another-title-lakers-fan-reaction-042200694--nba.html

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

NBA News 2012: What's Kevin Durant's motivation?

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 23:  Kevin Durant #35 ...OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 23: Kevin Durant #35 of the Oklahoma City Thunder reacts with teammate Russell Westbrook #0 in the first quarter against the Dallas Mavericks in Game Four of the Western Conference Finals during the 2011 NBA Playoffs at Oklahoma City Arena on May 23, 2011 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
The one thing Kevin Durant lacks is a means of defining himself, of setting the parameters for which he should be described. It's always a generic "better." He wants to ascend to huge heights, but he's never named a specific mountain he desires to scale.

When Kobe Bryant entered the NBA, it was clear that Michael Jordan was both his template and target. Maybe that's why Kobe's the closest thing to Jordan. Since Kobe is so good at specifics, we should let him describe what the ultimate manifestation of Durant could be.

"A 6-11 me," Bryant said.

Now there's a terrifying prospect. Someone whose eyes are trained on hell-bent destruction of the league, from the vantage point of someone 5 inches taller than Bryant.

Nate McMillan, who has coached both Durant and Bryant with the world championship and Olympic teams, finds them similar because "you can't picture them doing anything else. They were created for this game.

"Spending time with Kobe and Durant, you know that basketball is 90 percent of what they think about all day long."

But Durant is so much nicer than Kobe. A lot nicer on the court than Chris Paul, too. While Durant runs over to his mother before every home game, Paul has made it clear he would run over his mother to win a game. Does Durant have that inner fire, that nasty edge, that … that …

"That dog in him?" Bryant asked. "He's got it in him."

For proof, Bryant cited a 14-point burst in the final 3½ minutes of a playoff game against Denver last year and game-winning shots against the Dallas Mavericks this year, in both the regular season and the playoffs. Since Bryant said those words, in the midst of the second round, Durant went on to hit a game winner against the Lakers, drop 16 points in a fourth-quarter barrage against the Spurs and pour in 17 points in the fourth quarter of Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

He's getting it done. But while we, the sports-watching society, fixates on results (ask LeBron), Durant chooses to focus on the method.

"I've really been looking at the mental aspect of the game, how [Bryant] approaches it, watching film, studying opponents, just making sure he's vocal every time down," Durant said. "Posting up, the footwork that he uses posting up and how patient he is on the offensive end. I'm learning, every single day. I know that I work hard. It's going to take me some time, but I know that I'll get there."

And that's one of the few times you'll ever get a sense of what Durant considers "there." Even though he didn't say it explicitly, you have to assume he was talking about Bryant's level, since he was asked to reply to Bryant's description of him.

In many ways, Durant already has moved past Bryant. This season, he beat Kobe out by a tenth of a point to claim his third straight scoring title, one more than Bryant has in his career. He finished second in the Most Valuable Player voting, two spots ahead of Kobe. And he knocked Kobe out of the playoffs.

Late in Game 5, Durant glanced at the sideline. He saw Bryant get up and head to the scorer's table to check in for one last shot at taking down the Thunder and salvaging the Lakers' season. Durant's eyes followed Bryant down the sideline, but his expression hardly changed. No fear, no apprehension, just a look that said, "So be it." If Durant wanted to advance, he knew he had to slay Bryant.

Not only did he beat Kobe, whom Durant called "probably the greatest player of my time," he also vanquished reigning champion Dirk Nowitzki and bested four-time champ and two-time MVP Tim Duncan. If he can get by the Miami Heat and LeBron James -- the only player to finish ahead of him in the MVP voting this year -- and win a championship, that will account for all the immediate tasks before him. Once he conquers the contemporaries, he would have no choice but to aim at the legends.

"By the time he's done, if he can stay healthy and have good fortune in that regard, he'll be considered one of the all-time greats," said Derek Fisher, Durant's newest teammate but one of the league's oldest and wisest players. "His ability to play the game at an efficient level is impressive. He has all the facets."

That includes the right situation, a strong set of teammates to help him win the championship rings he needs to be allowed a seat at the table. That includes Russell Westbrook (in whom Bryant sees similar canine qualities as Durant), James Harden and Serge Ibaka. So if he gets a championship or two, then what?

"He just always talks about getting better," said Randy Williams, a close friend since Durant's lone college season at Texas. "Working out, getting better and just putting time into the game."

And the accolades? His place in history?

"He never talks about it," Williams said. "He just feels like, if he puts in the work, that will come. It's just all about getting in the gym and working hard.

"They might mention him in a name with, like, Kobe and them, but he always feels like, 'I'm not at that level.' I'm still working on my game. There's some more I can do.'"

Durant is relentlessly self-critical. You can see it when he looks down and slaps his hands together after a bad play. You can hear it when he describes his rookie season, in which he scored 20 points per game but shot only 43 percent -- including 29 percent on 3-pointers.

"I pride myself as an efficient player," Durant said. "I wasn't efficient that year. I didn't take efficient shots. I wasn't locked in as a player. I was just going through the motions sometimes. That next year I just came back more focused and preparing myself every single game to get better, and film sessions and shootarounds to get locked in. It helped. Ever since then I've been shooting the ball a little better and taking good shots."

He has made at least 48 percent of his shots in three of the past four seasons while making at least a third of his 3-pointers every season. He has become a better passer and better defender as well.

But as he climbs the rankings of the game's best players, he's so low-key around the house that it's easy for those close to him to forget how good he is.

"When you see him on the court, you're amazed … like, gol-lee, you're doing all this?" Williams said.

The on-the-court version of Durant has been astounding since he was a kid. Thunder assistant general manager Troy Weaver's hometown is near where Durant grew up in Maryland, and he first saw Durant play when Durant was about 10 years old.

"He had focus in his eyes," Weaver said. "You could tell he wanted to be good and he loved the game. Even as a young kid. He just had a focus on the court. He wasn't easily distracted. You could tell the guy enjoyed being on the floor.

"A lot of kids toyed with different things. He found his first love early. That's the way I would describe it."

The story going around is that Durant was so smitten by the relationship, so locked in on playing basketball, that he never even bothered to go to the prom. Durant amends it: He did go to a prom; it just wasn't his school's prom.

As long as Weaver has known Durant, he still can't pin down a specific goal that Durant has set.

"I think he's thought of having a few targets," Weaver said.

"I won't say I'm as good as Tim Duncan and Russ is as good as Tony Parker," Durant said that night, "but just that chemistry they had, and just their personalities fit us, I think pretty well."

Later, Durant was asked by reporters about what aspects of the Duncan-Parker duo he hoped to emulate and he said, "Longevity, wins, championships."

It was the word "longevity" that caught Thunder general manager Sam Presti's attention. For as many conversations as he's had with Durant, he found that comment to a third party to be very revealing. Presti thought it was unusual for such a young player to be thinking that far down the road, to not be so caught up in the moment that he wasn't prepared for the future. But it's a window into what Durant wants from this game, how he desires to be viewed. It shows in the little things, such as the ice bags on his knees after morning shootarounds, the type of treatment normally seen by 10-year veterans.

"The beauty about him is, he understands process," Weaver said. "Getting better every day."

"He never has a bad day of practice because he just wants to shut it down," said Thunder coach Scott Brooks. "He gives us effort every day, and our guys see that. We all follow."

How far will Durant lead them? Where does he want to go?

"Man, I don't know where this guy will end up as a player," Weaver said. "I do believe he's a generational player. It's hard to find that blend of commitment, work ethic and talent. It's rare to find that. The guy is 23. Let's sit down and talk again when he's 27. Who knows where this guy will be? I don't like in sports how we all want to pigeonhole guys. The great ones, you can't do that."

At the highest levels, the subjectivity overwhelms. Do you value stats or winning, individual greatness or team play? How can you truly measure that coveted quality of making teammates better?

There is an objective, fixed number that's out there for Durant: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's record of 38,387 career points.

Through five seasons, Durant has scored 9,978 points in 380 games. In Abdul-Jabbar's fifth season he had scored 12,172 points in 402 games. The 66-game, lockout-reduced schedule obviously set Durant back, but playing a full 82-game schedule next year could allow him to regain ground; Kareem played only 65 games in his sixth season because of injuries.

Durant's biggest advantage is entering the league at age 19 after spending just his freshman year at Texas; Kareem was 22 his rookie season after staying at UCLA through his senior season, as all college players did in the 1960s. Durant doesn't have to play until he's 41, as Kareem did. If Durant plays at least 80 games a year and averages 26 points per game for the next 14 seasons -- through age 37 -- he can hit 39,000 points.

http://espn.go.com/nba/playoffs/2012/story/_/page/Evolution-120613/nba-finals-oklahoma-city-thunder-kevin-durant-motivation

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