NBA
Lakers' Kobe Bryant gives his all, but some still want more
It's the story of his career: Bryant finishes a game any ordinary player would have left with a sore back, but his overtime performance draws criticism.
Kobe Bryant will play Wednesday, I learned Monday.
Actually, I didn't learn it as much as divine it from years of watching Bryant, who would play if they had to wrap him from head to foot like a mummy.
Two things are certain with Bryant: 1) he's the gamer of gamers and 2) he'll never take a breath without creating a controversy, as he did once more Sunday.
Only one thing kept Bryant's performance in Game 4 from rising to the mythic level of Willis Reed limping out for Game 7 in 1970 and the flu-ridden Michael Jordan beating the Jazz in 1997 . . .
The Lakers didn't win.
Otherwise, it would have been one for the ages: Bryant looking like Charlton Heston in "El Cid" whose body was tied to his horse and sent back into battle, leading them back from a 12-point deficit in the last 3:59 of regulation.
If Lamar Odom had made his three-pointer to put them ahead with :13 left and they'd gone on to win, people would have talked about this game as long as there was an NBA.
Instead, the Lakers lost in overtime . . . and Bryant was critiqued for all the shots he took in overtime?
We're not getting a little hard-boiled, are we?
An ordinary player wouldn't have even seen the fourth quarter, much less found a way to lead the rally that forced the overtime.
Gee, haven't we been at this point before . . . annually? Or to put it another way, welcome to Bryant's career.
After all the soap operas he has starred in, he's perceived more as a cartoon character than a person.
The all-timer was last week's most-valuable-player ceremony when ESPNews anchor David Lloyd was apparently surprised to learn Bryant actually knew his teammates.
"I don't think I knew that Kobe was a well-liked guy on that team until this press conference," said Lloyd after watching him joke with the other Lakers.
"He's become a part of that team. I'm not sure he was before."
He's become a part of that team?
Who do people think the Lakers are, some crew out of a video game such as "Grand Theft Auto"?
Their soap opera notwithstanding, Bryant turned the corner playing alongside Shaquille O'Neal years ago, with his assist totals rising annually until he set his career-best of 481 in 2002-03.
Of course, being Kobe Bryant meant he could also go back and turn that corner heading the other way. Nevertheless, since Phil Jackson's return in 2005, Bryant's leadership of, and involvement with, his teammates has been unquestionable.
Actually, since Bryant tried to trade this set of teammates for another in Chicago last fall, I should say since Kobe's return in 2007, his leadership has been unquestionable.
Actually, I didn't learn it as much as divine it from years of watching Bryant, who would play if they had to wrap him from head to foot like a mummy.
Only one thing kept Bryant's performance in Game 4 from rising to the mythic level of Willis Reed limping out for Game 7 in 1970 and the flu-ridden Michael Jordan beating the Jazz in 1997 . . .
The Lakers didn't win.
Otherwise, it would have been one for the ages: Bryant looking like Charlton Heston in "El Cid" whose body was tied to his horse and sent back into battle, leading them back from a 12-point deficit in the last 3:59 of regulation.
If Lamar Odom had made his three-pointer to put them ahead with :13 left and they'd gone on to win, people would have talked about this game as long as there was an NBA.
Instead, the Lakers lost in overtime . . . and Bryant was critiqued for all the shots he took in overtime?
We're not getting a little hard-boiled, are we?
An ordinary player wouldn't have even seen the fourth quarter, much less found a way to lead the rally that forced the overtime.
Gee, haven't we been at this point before . . . annually? Or to put it another way, welcome to Bryant's career.
After all the soap operas he has starred in, he's perceived more as a cartoon character than a person.
The all-timer was last week's most-valuable-player ceremony when ESPNews anchor David Lloyd was apparently surprised to learn Bryant actually knew his teammates.
"I don't think I knew that Kobe was a well-liked guy on that team until this press conference," said Lloyd after watching him joke with the other Lakers.
"He's become a part of that team. I'm not sure he was before."
He's become a part of that team?
Who do people think the Lakers are, some crew out of a video game such as "Grand Theft Auto"?
Their soap opera notwithstanding, Bryant turned the corner playing alongside Shaquille O'Neal years ago, with his assist totals rising annually until he set his career-best of 481 in 2002-03.
Of course, being Kobe Bryant meant he could also go back and turn that corner heading the other way. Nevertheless, since Phil Jackson's return in 2005, Bryant's leadership of, and involvement with, his teammates has been unquestionable.
Actually, since Bryant tried to trade this set of teammates for another in Chicago last fall, I should say since Kobe's return in 2007, his leadership has been unquestionable.
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