Ok I applaud that you are one of the few Kobe fans who actually admits that Kobe's shot selection is sometimes ill-advised.
That said,
To determine who the best players are, you "don't give a about stats" and you place greater emphasis on "winning les."
To determine who deserves to be even considered to be ranked among the greatest players using les, you rely on some hodgepodge "eye test."
The only reason I brought up Horry was to demonstrate that even you don't really believe what you're saying. Even you must give strong merit to stats at some point when considering the best players.
Horry isn't an all time great because you just "feel" he isn't or because it's somehow "obvious" to people who watch the game. He isn't an all time great because he didn't truly excel in any one given statistical category. He was never a prolific scorer, prolific rebounder, stealer, blocker, etc. He made clutch shots throughout his career to gain much notiriety, but nobody considers him to be an all time great because he didn't put up stats. That was my point.
You can't have your cake and eat it too. You deny the usefullness of stats when it's convenient to bolstering Kobe's status, and then to protect yourself you refuse to admit when you are subconsciously using stats primarily to determine that Horry isn't even close to being an all time great. No argument there, I wasn't seriously trying to say Horry is better than Kobe. I was trying to demonstrate that you're choosing to use/ignore stats when it's convenient.