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Spursfanfromafar
12-29-2010, 04:24 AM
Johnny Ludden at his best again. An article that is more Laker-focussed than it is Spur-centric, but not so hidden in the Laker-centric analysis is a faint twinkling praise of the Spurs' virtues. Good Read and every Spurs fan will love this, IMO.

Kobe joins Lakers’ latest blame game (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=At2XT31gWaxvLt0MLgwl0U68vLYF?slug=jy-lakersspurs122910)

SAN ANTONIO, Texas – Kobe Bryant(notes) pouted and cursed. He picked up a string of technicals, even wasting an ejection in one of these embarrassments just to make his bleeping point. He froze out reporters for a few days, then celebrated Christmas by calling out his teammates after LeBron James(notes) had run over them. These Los Angeles Lakers were too complacent, he said. They didn’t work hard enough. He vowed to kick them in practice. Toughen them until they’d awoken from their winter slumber.

After the Lakers’ malaise had stretched some 1,200 miles to the southeast and into a third game, Bryant found a new target for his ire. The San Antonio Spurs had flattened the champs, just like the Milwaukee Bucks and Miami Heat had before them, and on this night Bryant pointed blame where blame was most deserved.

At himself.

“I couldn’t put the ball in the basket and it snowballed from there,” Bryant said in front of his locker late Tuesday. “It’s my responsibility to make them.”

Some of Bryant’s teammates will laugh at that, as will more than a few of his former ones. Kobe had missed 13 consecutive shots in the Lakers’ 97-82 loss to the Spurs, misfiring on 19 of his 27 total attempts for the evening, and he was clear on this point: He wasn’t taking blame for taking too many shots. He was mad only because he missed them.

This is the tightrope the Lakers forever walk with Kobe, and the fall becomes more dangerous with each year he ages. He’d come into this game seething, determined to let his fire spread throughout the Lakers, and yet as he missed one numbing shot after another, he instead snuffed out what little life they had. In losing, Kobe had proven the one point he may never be ready to accept.

More than ever, he needs his teammates.

Bryant remains a transcendent talent, the game’s greatest competitor, and he can still carry these Lakers through games, even weeks. But he can’t lift them to a championship alone, and the most satisfying night of his career should have taught him that. In Game 7 of last season’s NBA Finals against the Boston Celtics, he nearly shot the Lakers out of a 16th title. So determined to win the game on his own, he nearly lost it. Not until Derek Fisher(notes) barked at him, did he finally take his finger off the trigger.

In the rush to push Bryant onto Michael Jordan’s pedestal, it was overlooked how close Bryant had come to staining his legacy with the selfish superstar stigma he’s worked so hard to erase. In truth, Kobe is more stubborn than selfish. It’s served him well for much of his career, but it will also work against him as he gets older, and it worked against him in the Lakers’ latest loss.

Bryant came out firing to set the tone, but even his coach and occasional enabler, Phil Jackson, admitted it eventually became “time to slow down a little bit and get everybody involved.” With Pau Gasol(notes), Andrew Bynum(notes) and Lamar Odom(notes), the Lakers owned a significant size advantage over these Spurs, only they never worked hard to establish it. Afterward, the Lakers offered their usual veiled criticism whenever Bryant goes off the deep end.

“We need to really stay inside the system, attack teams and use the mismatches to our advantage,” Bynum said.

“We didn’t play a smart game, put it that way,” Gasol said. “ …We have to recognize what’s going on and understand what our strengths are against certain opponents, and try to exploit them.”

“It can’t be an individual effort from nobody,” Gasol added. “It has to be altogether on a string, like a family.”

It doesn’t help Bryant that a few of his family members – Odom, Gasol and Bynum – can float for stretches while their crazy uncle, Ron Artest(notes), has been known to completely disappear into abyss. All of them can use a good thump upside their head from time to time. Among these Lakers, only Fisher has the combination of backbone and cache to stand up to Bryant.

Still, in today’s NBA, the elite teams are too stacked and too strong defensively for Kobe to ignore the talent surrounding him. The Celtics are considerably deeper than a year ago and LeBron took less money to form his own super team in Miami with Dwyane Wade(notes) and Chris Bosh(notes). Out West, the Dallas Mavericks are bigger and stronger, and the Spurs have run out to the league’s best record with their deepest roster in years.

The Lakers can still beat them all, and that’s why they aren’t panicking. They played harder than in their previous two losses, but scouts will tell you they still look disinterested. That won’t last all season. Fans can light up the phone lines for L.A.’s talk shows, but deep down even they know each year in Lakerland there’s four seasons: Kobe’s Mad at His Teammates; Kobe’s Shooting Too Much; Kobe Leads the Victory Parade; Kobe Receives his Championship Ring.

This season can still follow that form, but only if the Lakers come together as a unit. There’s strength in numbers, and all Kobe had to do to see that is look on the other side of the court. The Spurs beat him after two of their three stars holstered their own errant shots. Manu Ginobili(notes) and Tim Duncan(notes) combined for just 11 points as the Spurs were carried by Tony Parker(notes) and role players like DeJuan Blair(notes), a 6-foot-5 center no one thought could match up with the Lakers giants, and Gary Neal(notes), a rookie who found his way onto the roster only after he convinced his wife to postpone their honeymoon to allow him to play on San Antonio’s summer league team.

If anything, Duncan will have a chance to contend for his fifth title at age 35 because he learned long ago to trust his teammates. That’s made the Spurs’ decision to transition their offense into the hands of Ginobili and Parker all the more easy.

Kobe will never share Duncan’s unselfishness, and that’s fine. It’s far easier for a big man to conform than a cold-blooded scorer. Duncan and Bryant also were raised in the league. When Duncan arrived, the Spurs’ All-Star center, David Robinson, made room for him, showed him how to defer. Kobe and Shaq came to the Lakers at the same time, and Shaq made Kobe fight for everything he got until the Lakers finally exiled their center.

But Bryant, too, will eventually have to show more faith in Gasol and the rest of his teammates if he wants to keep winning for the duration of his contract. Not that anyone expects him to change anytime soon.

For much of the night, the Spurs had pushed Bryant where they wanted, sending him into the arms and chests of second and third defenders. Bryant wouldn’t give the Spurs’ defense credit. No, he sniffed. He had simply missed shots he usually makes.

“I just have to put the ball in the damn hole,” Bryant said. “It’s my responsibility, it’s my job.”

For better or worse, Kobe will continue to fire away. His responsibility, his job. Sooner or later, it will again become the Lakers’ problem.

UnWantedTheory
12-29-2010, 04:33 AM
Not all that insightful.

TE
12-29-2010, 04:47 AM
Kobe is a stubborn person, can't give credit to the defense from Hill and Ginobili.

UnWantedTheory
12-29-2010, 04:53 AM
Yeah, Hill did play pretty good D tonight. I especially like how he didn't back down from Kobe tonight when the finger pointing started.

polandprzem
12-29-2010, 05:02 AM
Boring art this time.

Didn't really answer the question or gave an interesting one.

Kobe needs to trust gasol? I mean really?

polandprzem
12-29-2010, 05:02 AM
Boring art this time.

Didn't really answer the question or gave an interesting one.

Kobe needs to trust gasol? I mean really?

Spurs Brazil
12-29-2010, 09:38 AM
Kobe will never share Duncan’s unselfishness, and that’s fine. It’s far easier for a big man to conform than a cold-blooded scorer. Duncan and Bryant also were raised in the league. When Duncan arrived, the Spurs’ All-Star center, David Robinson, made room for him, showed him how to defer. Kobe and Shaq came to the Lakers at the same time, and Shaq made Kobe fight for everything he got until the Lakers finally exiled their center.

:tu

spurspokesman
12-29-2010, 10:00 AM
Its only a matter of time until he pisses off Artest and they self destruct. Book it.

ata
12-29-2010, 10:05 AM
No Sasha, no ring

Rummpd
12-29-2010, 10:12 AM
I am tired of Bryant being falsely called "the greatest competitor" in the NBA. There are many great competitors but players like Garnett and Bryant use facial expressions to demonstrate supposed "extra" competitiveness.

IMO Manu for one is every bit as competitive as Bryant throwing his body into the lane and was the most clutch in the NBA in metrics in the 4th. http://www.nba.com/2009/news/features/john_schuhmann/11/05/clutch.numbersgame/index.html

Not only is Ginobili the new Batman, he's also Mr. Clutch. His shooting percentage isn't that great, but he's at the top of the list because he gets to the line often and makes his free throws when he does.

Cry Havoc
12-29-2010, 10:15 AM
Not all that insightful.

http://roflrazzi.files.wordpress.com/2010/08/18cb5506-b41d-4a1a-b4af-5bca80676cb1.jpg

SenorSpur
12-29-2010, 10:21 AM
Bryant remains a transcendent talent, the game’s greatest competitor, and he can still carry these Lakers through games, even weeks. But he can’t lift them to a championship alone, and the most satisfying night of his career should have taught him that. In Game 7 of last season’s NBA Finals against the Boston Celtics, he nearly shot the Lakers out of a 16th title. So determined to win the game on his own, he nearly lost it. Not until Derek Fisher(notes) barked at him, did he finally take his finger off the trigger.

Since Kobe has been in the NBA, has anyone EVER heard him declare that he "shot the ball too much" or that the team "needs to move the ball around?"

Ludden is on point in that the Fakers DID actually win that 7th game of the NBA Finals in spite of Kobe - not because of him. Bryant was absolutely dreadful for 3 & 1/2 quarters - until his teammaters bailed him out.

Supergirl
12-29-2010, 10:34 AM
Kobe and Manu are actually very similar players, but the difference is Kobe's ego. Both are ferocious competitors, great defenders, and two of the most clutch 4th quarter scorers ever to play the game. Both are also terrific distributors of the the ball, and play best when they are looking as much to assist as they are to score. The difference is Manu is more comfortable with this role, and Kobe constantly struggles with wanting to score too much and knowing when to back off. The Lakers are best when Kobe doesn't take that many shots. It's been proven over and over again.

Spursfanfromafar
12-29-2010, 10:47 AM
The difference between Kobe and Manu is that.. Kobe is far stronger, more explosive, slightly more versatile than Manu.. But Manu is more of a winner than Kobe is... For Manu buys into the team concept completely and has won everything everywhere - with lesser teams in Europe and the Olympic Gold with a far inferior team than the Redeems or the Dream Teams. Kobe, on the other hand needs a superstar team-mate not just to win a championship but to be in a position to contend for playoffs. Manu has never been in that situation, so it is difficult to tell, but he makes his team far better through several intangibles. Manu will go down in basketball history (and not just NBA history) as among the best winners ever, even if he is a slightly lesser talent than Kobe.

As regards ego, Manu has only that much ego as that helps his team while Kobe's outweighs everyone else on his team put together.

will_spurs
12-29-2010, 11:12 AM
Isn't Ludden confusing Neal and Splitter on the honeymoon story?!?

hater
12-29-2010, 11:29 AM
well written but nothing insightful

sahoopster
12-29-2010, 11:31 AM
Isn't Ludden confusing Neal and Splitter on the honeymoon story?!?

I'm not sure, but if that's true about Neal that just adds more to his already amazing story. Love this kid, and he's from Aberdeen only 10 minutes from where I grew up :toast.

DrSteffo
12-29-2010, 11:41 AM
Kobe is a primadonna who rather sees his team lose than lose his status as the number one douche bag pimp on the Fakers team.

4down
12-29-2010, 12:09 PM
Not all that insightful.

Excellent criticism of the article. :rolleyes

Care to provide some real insight, then?

Considering Luddens' audience, it actually is pretty insightful. For the cadre of passionate fans, for the Spurs and otherwise who visit these forums though, it might not be all that eye opening, though - I'll give you that.

Mr. Body
12-29-2010, 12:28 PM
Gary Neal(notes), a rookie who found his way onto the roster only after he convinced his wife to postpone their honeymoon to allow him to play on San Antonio’s summer league team.



Wow. Didn't realize that.

said7
12-29-2010, 12:28 PM
most overrated defender in nba history. All he does is cheat for steals.

Spurs Brazil
12-29-2010, 03:01 PM
Isn't Ludden confusing Neal and Splitter on the honeymoon story?!?

No it's really Neal.

But Tiago also got married in the summer

jjktkk
12-29-2010, 03:14 PM
Kobe is a stubborn person, can't give credit to the defense from Hill and Ginobili.

I can. Both Ginoboli and Hill made Bryant work for everything he got, which is part of the reason why Bryant got frustrated and kept firing up bricks.

jjktkk
12-29-2010, 03:21 PM
Kobe and Manu are actually very similar players, but the difference is Kobe's ego. Both are ferocious competitors, great defenders, and two of the most clutch 4th quarter scorers ever to play the game. Both are also terrific distributors of the the ball, and play best when they are looking as much to assist as they are to score. The difference is Manu is more comfortable with this role, and Kobe constantly struggles with wanting to score too much and knowing when to back off. The Lakers are best when Kobe doesn't take that many shots. It's been proven over and over again.

With the biggest difference, IMO, in that Kobe has it in his head that he must prove to everyone, including himself, that he is Michael Jordan's equal. Bryant doesn't realize that trying to win a game by going 1 on 5 is just playing into the hands of the defense and good teams will make the Lakers pay for Bryant's ignorance and delusional thinking.