NBAGuru's Sanctuary: Filling the Gaps for the NBA
by: NBAGuru
More on Kobe
Jun 27, 2008 | 1:14PM | report this
All things considered, I humbly think I might be one of the more impartial observers of the Kobe Bryant phenomenon you'll find. In the pre-title days, I was a huge fan of the kid's enthusiasm for the game. Like KG, you could see he was one of the guys who was really happy to play pro basketball. I particularly loved his performance in the '98 all-star game, when he tried to take MJ on mano-a-mano. At a time when everyone else crapped the bed when facing No. 23, that was just really impressive. On the court, Kobe was a live wire, prone to bad decisions, but awesome to watch with his crazy creativity, hops, and agility.

When the Lakers started winning championships, however, Bryant's demeanor changed. He became noticeably more arrogant, and was always taking too much credit for the Lakes' success, even though he was clearly Shaq's sidekick. I could not stand dude in those days. The change in Kobe translated over to the court, where he was not nearly as enthusiastic as he was in his younger days. Instead, he tried to be like Mike, all business, and his selfishness stood out on an otherwise unselfish team. He always seemed to want to take over the game at the wrong times, and it was in this period that he started to become the jumper-happy bomber that he sometimes lapses into today.

Post-Shaq, however, the pendulum has started to swing the other way. The losing has humbled Kobe a bit, making his off-court persona a bit more bearable. As a fan of the game, I enjoy watching Kobe, as he is the most skilled and creative scorer in the game by a country mile. What cracks me up though is watching every year the media crowing about how Kobe has finally changed his ways and learned to trust his teammates, only to watch Kobe revert to selfishness when it really counts.

This merry-go-round has been spinning each of the past three seasons, and this year has been no different, this time resulting in his getting the MVP. Kobe changed? Take that garbage elsewhere. Ain't nothing changed about Kobe. The only thing that changed this year was that Kobe got better teammates. Kobe the pragmatist realized that he can win some regular season games by moving the ball and letting Pau Gasol make plays every once and a while. Kobe even stuck with this MO in the playoffs, which worked well against the defenseless Denver and Utah squads. It even took care of_a_game (thanks, Fox censors!), but worn out Spurs squad, where Kobe played more aggressively and took over in the big games. But when push came to shove this season in the finals, when plan A stopped working altogether, where was teammate Kobe? The guy who "put his DNA into the team?" (Note: for a guy accused of rape, could he have had a worse choice of words?) Screaming at teammates on national TV and trying to win the finals by himself. I didn't know it was possible for a star player to lose his team (isn't that the coach's job?), but the eye-rolling and body language of the Lakers in the Finals told me otherwise.

It's still hard for me to digest, strategically, Kobe's performance in the finals. Boston used the same strategy in six games, and LA/Kobe never made the adjustment. The plan was simple: swarm Kobe on the catch and take away his driving lanes, thereby forcing him to shoot with a hand in his face or making him pass the ball. Now, as I see it, LA could have dealt with this in two ways. Because all five defenders were reacting to Kobe, quick ball reversals would lead to open jumpers and layups. This required Kobe to make a quick decision and pass the ball quickly after the catch. Yet he refused to do it except on rare occasions. The few times he did move the ball quickly seemed to always result in a good shot for Odom or Gasol. Why Kobe did not make the obvious adjustment and move the damn ball blows my mind. The only explanation I can see: Kobe wanted to win the game and be the hero by himself. AKA same old Kobe.

The other option for LA to combat Boston's D, which I NEVER saw them utilize, was to take Kobe off the ball. To free him up, the Lakers could have run Kobe off of screens off the ball, or even better, post him up (which woulda worked especially well against Ray Allen). Using Kobe in this way would have given him a fighting chance to beat the Boston D and get good looks. If Boston countered by doubling Kobe off of the ball, LA had the playmakers, with Gasol, Odom, and Vujacic, to capitalize against a 4-on-3 defense. The failure to make this adjustment may fall more on Phil Jackson's shoulders than Kobe, but that its so obvious to an internet blogger like myself really makes me wonder why the experts out on the court didn't at least give it a try. Hell, it couldn't have been any worse than putting freaking Chris Mihm in the game, right? But again, I can definitely see Kobe refusing to play a style which puts him in a more passive position, and doesn't let him be the hero, decision-maker, MJ-alike he wants so desperately to be, even if he doesn't admit it in interviews.

As fun as skewering No. 24 has been, the last sentence gets into the real reason I'm writing this post. The universal message I've been hearing post-finals is that "see, Kobe really ain't no MJ." First of all, is this really a news flash? Did you actually believe the crazed proclamations of the pro-LA fanatics and press, who foam at the mouth uncontrollably when Kobe is brought up? Some writers also like to trot out the "if MJ played now, he'd average 70 billion points a game under these sissy rules." And this is where I have to really draw the line. That's right, it's time to defend the Black Mamba.

I'm not saying MJ wouldn't have handled Boston's D in a better, more unselfish way (gotta love the double negative, but it makes sense here). But what nobody seems to realize is that the rules of the 80's and 90's outlawed the type of defense Boston was playing in the finals this season! Boston was effectively playing a zone on Kobe Bryant, and zones were illegal in the NBA until earlier this decade. Nobody could force the ball out of MJ's hands like the Celtics did to Kobe, because it would have violated the arcane illegal defense rules of that time. And so instead you got MJ shredding single and occasional double coverage, because team D couldn't give any more help. Of course, MJ still could be deterred from going all the way to the basket for fear of getting gang-tackled, but he could still create space in the midrange without worry from being smothered by help defenders. Kobe didn't have that luxury. Not to mention that MJ never had to worry about anybody like KG roaming all over the court with those go-go-gadget arms.

Fact is, the MJ playbook doesn't have anything to deal with Boston's one man zone defense, so Kobe was left to his own devices, and we saw the result. Here's hoping that LA's main man learns from his mistakes of this season, and either changes his mindset or develops the off-the-ball skills necessary to overcome. Maybe then he'll become the team player that everyone is so anxious to anoint him every season.




8 Comments | Add a comment   categories: NBA, NBA Playoffs, Los Angeles Lakers, Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan, NBA Finals, Boston Celtics
 
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NiqueD
Jun 27, 2008
3:18 PM
Of all the immature, no knowledge blogs about the finals I have read this is the absolute most ridiclous. Did you even watch the finals? Did you not see the other Lakers standing around doing nothing while 4 and even 5 Celtics surrounded Bryant and not one laker would come to the ball for a pass. Did you not see other Lakers choke to a shooting % for the finals under 30%

Did you not see Turiaf commit more fouls than he scored points. Did you not see Turiaf commit more fouls than rebounds?

Did you not see the pathetic performances put up by Vlad, Farmar, Fisher, and the rest of the Laker team?

Of course you didn't. You're here to hate on Bryant and laud Mr. Jordan.

Why didn't you use your real name Shaq?

Last edited by NiqueD on June 27th at 3:19 PM.

alaskanballa
Jun 27, 2008
7:46 PM
I think there is a bit of truth in most everything said, but I would disagree that Bryant played selfishly. You win as a team and lose as a team, and the Lakers were just outplayed in all facets of the game by Boston...especially on defense.

I would have to say that Bryant played the most team oriented ball of his career this year, and really showed trust in his teammates.

Comparing Jordan and Bryant will never go away for obvious reasons, but it should be noted that Jordan played with 2 HOF/Top 50 Of All Time Players and I think you would be hard pressed to say that applies to Odom and Pau.

Pau is just not a physical player was pushed around by both KG and Perkins. The Lakers really missed Bynum's presence in the middle, but I don't think it would have changed the outcome. The problem with the Lakers is their defensive schemes and mentality. If they commit to making that their first and formost priority..they will be champions next year no matter what. If not they can expect another great season to end in 2nd place.

The series was pretty easy to identify with what went wrong. LA could not get high quality shots on a consistent basis......and the Celtics not only controlled the tempo about 90% of the time but were consistenly able to expose the Lakers weaknesses on defense and securing their own backboard.

Trade Vladimir,Luke,and even Odom if needed for a scoring forward that can create for himself. The only Laker that can do that now is Bryant and it is to easy to defend as the Celtics proved.

Tsunami
Jun 27, 2008
8:30 PM
This is a very well written blog.

It's nice to see someone pointing out that while "hand checking" was allowed in the Jordan Era - Zone defenses certainly weren't. I'm not convinced Jordan would have dropped a million against today's defenses the way some are. He would still be the best player today if he played, but many of the guards he played against were not as strong as the average guard today in the NBA.

The Celtics defense is good - very good. T-Mac said it was the best he had ever faced.

What I couldn't understand about Kobe is how he faded into the background in almost every game. He would hit a barrage of shots in the 1st quarter - and then just disappear. I mean COMPLETELY disappear. Non-factor. He hardly ever imposed his will on the game. The reason? He imposes his will with shooting iso jumpers over people. When those aren't falling - Kobe is very ordinary.

The series has definitely served as an opportunity to slam Kobe. Personally, I don't think a player's legacy should ever be defined by one game or one series - no matter how poorly he played. But this happens. Much of Hakeem the Dream's legacy is based on how WELL he played in 1 finals series.

At the end of the day, Kobe will never be nearly as explosive or efficient as Jordan - but as long as the hyperventilating Kobe worshippers have access to computers and the NBA media types feel the need to say the phrase 'best on the PLANET' at every turn - the MJ comparisons will probably go on.

I'm surprised you wrote this on FoxSports Blogs- where 98% of the people left on here are Kob

Tsunami
Jun 27, 2008
8:30 PM
Kobe jock-sniffers.

underage
Jun 27, 2008
8:49 PM
This is the MOST Kobe Bryant disliker blog We had ever read in foxsports this week. It is one sided.

PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!STOP COMPARING kOBE TO MICHAEL

lakersfan4life
Jun 28, 2008
3:05 AM
Yawn.....Boring

partofla
Jun 28, 2008
5:22 AM
Hey good observations. I tend to agree with you here. Kobe should have whipped out the ball as soon as he got swarmed. And yes, he is arrogant (but then which superstar in the NBA isnt...?)

I was dissapointed sorely in the Finals and I hope we can do better next year with our missing piece in Bynum.

LoneWolf99701
Jun 29, 2008
6:23 PM
I actually agree with parts of this, Kobe is still unchanged, although his selfish game was cut down from full games of selfishness to selfish second halves. But everyone is right, you have to play selfish when you team doesn't show up to play.

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