Kobe Bryant
 
Main Menu
> Kobe Bryant Online Home
> Kobe Bryant Biography
> Kobe Bryant Jersey
> Kobe Bryant Card
> Kobe Bryant Video
> Kobe Bryant Picture
> Kobe Bryant Stats
> Kobe Bryant Quotes
> View Our Legal Disclaimer
> Kobe Bryant Links
> Kobe Bryant News
> Kobe Bryant Sitemap
> Contact Us
 
Kobe News
NBA Day 3: Clippers shelve Gordon for Summer League

Krzyzewski Sets the Tone Early

Dick Bavetta officiates Game 5 of NBA finals

Lakers plan a viewing party

Jazz ties series with Lakers

Fisher: Trust will lead Kobe to MVP award

Bryant shines as Lakers beat Nuggets

Lassen: Nuggets learn this team more than just Kobe

Lakers wrap up top seed in West

Suns playoff tickets go on sale Thursday

Kobe will take race for MVP to the wire

Lakers knock off Wizards in OT

Spurs playoff tickets go on sale April 10

Bryant helps Lakers rally past Warriors

Two three-pointers in last minute carry Warriors by Lakers

Rockets 104 Lakers 92

Sunday's NBA Capsules

Recap: Seattle vs. LA Lakers

Kobe's playing time to be short tonight

Lakers coach Jackson wary of next three opponents

Pistons rip Mavs; Kobe leads L.A.

Focus is back on Bryant

Bryant has often played well when ill

Bryant, Bynum lead Lakers past Pacers

Former Lakers boss loves Garnett's game, but he'd take his guy

Bryant beats Wilt to 20,000 career points

Bryant scores 32 points, Vujacic adds 14 in Lakers' 113-92 win over Clippers

Bryant's 28 points lead Lakers past Warriors 123-113

Recap: LA Lakers vs. Orlando

Lakers winning despite Bryant trade talks

Bryant effectively shows what could have been to the Bulls

Bulls’ poor play sparks fans’ chants for Bryant

Kobe Bryant's play does talking

Jackson gets a dig in on Bryant

Clippers down Bryant, Lakers

Is Bryant long for L.A.?

Bulls would add risk in Bryant deal

Does Kobe Owe Fans an Explanation?

Here We Go Again: Kobe Saga Will Go On With The Lakers

Ingram: Shaq To LA? Not Likely . . .

Monday Listed, Five NBA Stars On Trading Block: Ron Artest, Mike Bibby, Kobe Bryant, Shawn Marion, Jermaine O’Neal

Jackson Agrees With Kobe on Lakers

Kobe's pass first, shoot second attitude highlights U.S. play

Kobe, LeBron and Carmelo Carry U.S.

Kobe visits Manila Sept. 5

Tony Soprano goes to Basketball Camp

Monday Listed-NBA Players On The Trading Block: Ron Artest, Mike Bibby, Kobe Bryant, Jermaine O’Neal, Mickael Pietrus, & Anderson Varejao

Bryant caps Team USA camp in style

Kobe Bryant to be Traded to Memphis, Says Guy Who Might be Fired if He's Right

Kobe Bryant Apologizes to Lakers GM

NBA INSIDER: Kobe will be a highlight

What Kobe Bryant Has Coming to Him

Are Bulls on Kobe Bryant's wish list?

What Kobe Bryant and Paris Hilton Have in Common

Kobe Bryant's remarks show a lack of loyalty

Kobe Bryant: I Want To Be Traded, Unless...

The selfless superstar

NBA Insider: To satisfy Kobe, Lakers face daunting offseason task

Lakers need to get some help for Bryant, now

Just Saying, Is All...Learning to Lose with Kobe Bryant

Jackson: Kobe looked tired down the stretch

Sonics can't stop Kobe

Bell Helps Carry Suns Past Kobe, Lakers

COL BKB: Florida 76, UCLA 66

Final Four Fits All Ages ; Champs of Many Eras Clash in Atlanta

NCAA Final Four Player Preview

Florida, Georgetown Advance to NCAA's Final Four

NCAA Tournament's upset-free first round has led to Sweet 16 humdingers. Plus: Why is time so time-consuming? And: Replays.

NCAA TOURNAMENT REPORT: Higher seeds take care of business

Jayhawks: We play defense, too

Sweet 16 preview

Florida, Kansas Join Top Seeds in NCAA's Round of 16

Coach's son Kruger makes dad proud, leads UNLV to Sweet 16

Taylor's scoring touch drives Badgers to second round

Boston College 84, Texas Tech 75

Early games the most intriguing in March Madness

An Annual Rite Brace Yourself for the Tourney

Final Four

Ducks rule over Trojans

Beavers exit on cue

Instate rivals

Pac 10 Teams

Stanford Men Prepare For Pac-10 Tournament

Stanford wins Pac-10 title game

Nash downs Kobe and the Lakers 99-94

Sloan on Bryant's big game

Bryant hits 21-of-24 free throws in win

Kobe Bryant-G- Lakers

Lakers sink as Kobe sits

Jackson advises, Bryant consents

MVP Bryant leads West over East

Team-oriented style has Lakers' Bryant playing his best

Kobe helps Lakers take lead

LeBron James and Cleveland Cavaliers send Kobe Bryant and the Lakers home losers

Mature Bryant puts team first

Bryant, Arenas Renew Budding Rivalry

Kobe outscores Arenas for Lakers win

Celtics fans cheer Kobe Bryant heroics

Lakers' Bryant suspended for hitting Ginobili

Kobe hears the Bynum comparisons

Great Scott: LA’s Bryant whines his way to a loss

Upgraded Warriors no match for Kobe

Bryant makes a passing impression

Kobe changes game, goes from selfish to team player

Kobe Bryant Injured vs. Rockets

Lakers Look to 'New' Kobe Bryant

Jackson says Bryant Isn't Back to Form

Bryant Scores 23 In Season Debut

Suddenly, No Rush for Bryant

Kobe Bryant MVP?

The Lakers Game Review...

Kobe Bryant’s Asian Tour

Kobe Named To All-NBA First Team

Nike Using Kobe Bryant Again

Kobe Watching His Team Grow Up

Pac 10 Tournament

Kobe News Online
 
Syndicated content not available
 
KOBE BRYANT NEWS

Kobe Bryant News L.A. Lakers

Jackson advises, Bryant consents

It started with an e-mail.

Then another. And another.

Back and forth they went, coach and player, over the summer.

Phil Jackson's were written mainly from his Montana lakeside home, site of his annual retreat from basketball and the big city.

Kobe Bryant's were written from his Newport Beach home or during his venture through the Far East while traveling with the U.S. national team.

The message from Jackson, one e-mail at a time: Become a leader by not always showing teammates the way. Back off at times. Comfort them sometimes, cajole them at others.

Somewhere in cyberspace, there was a connection.

"Phil helped me out a great deal over the summer in terms of being a mentor and how to become a better leader," Kobe Bryant said. "It kind of goes back to being a parent. There's certain things that make you want to jump on top of your kids and try to tell them how to do everything. … Sometimes it's best if you just step back and kind of guide them a little bit and allow them to learn on their own. Very subtle. That's kind of one of the things he taught me this summer, is how to do that."

Because of Kobe Bryant, the Los Angeles Lakers (30-24) have been an on-court case study this season. The final results won't be known until spring, but it has been an intriguing ride so far.

The Los Angeles Lakers have struggled recently without Luke Walton and Kwame Brown, and also while trying to assimilate Lamar Odom back into the lineup, yet Kobe Bryant doesn't stray far from the new pattern in his play.

Rarely does he launch shot after shot as he did last season on the way to his first scoring title. His scoring average and shots per game have dropped considerably. His assists have risen, as has his field-goal percentage.

None of his Los Angeles Lakers teammates have ever been All-Stars, but he tries to involve them in the share-the-wealth concept of Jackson's triangle offense. Sometimes he wanders from the script, returning to last season's shoot-at-will ways, but Kobe Bryant usually heads into the second quarter, if not the fourth, with surprisingly pedestrian stats.

He doesn't even always take the final shot. That honor went to Odom last week against New York. It was an airball. The Los Angeles Lakers lost by a point.

"I think the biggest step he's taken in becoming a leader is sacrificing some of his own personal abilities in games to help better the team," Walton said. "He's realizing that for us to be at a championship level, he needs all of us involved…. It's got to be hard to be as good as he is and to be willing to take a step back to let the rest of the team grow. He's doing a great job of adjusting." Buoyed by his summer correspondence with Jackson, Kobe Bryant has been more open to coaching than ever. There are no more blowups with teammates, such as the ugly on-court tiff with Odom last season or, further back, a stinging critique from Chucky Atkins in which he derisively referred to Kobe Bryant as the team's "general manager."

Perhaps Kobe Bryant's only conflict since the Los Angeles Lakers' playoff elimination last season was a text-message feud with TNT analyst Charles Barkley, who accused him of quitting in the second half of the Los Angeles Lakers' final game against Phoenix.

Not long after that, Kobe Bryant, 28, began corresponding with Jackson.

"He's actually sought out guys and sought out how to motivate people, and [thought], 'How can I help this team in the long run?' " Jackson said. "One of the encouragements that I've used with Kobe over the last year is that we're not going to beat a team like Phoenix or a team like Dallas or San Antonio or any of these good teams in the playoffs if you try to score 40 points. As good a player as he is, it's the same old thing we faced in Chicago with Michael Jordan. It's got to be a team effort. Kobe's really bought into that. That's where his growth has been very important."

Although the Los Angeles Lakers have yet to make a run that firmly entrenches them among the top four teams in the Western Conference, Kobe Bryant has taken some off-court victories.

His new No. 24 jersey was the top seller among all NBA players in figures released last month. He won his second All-Star most-valuable-player award Sunday in Las Vegas after a 31-point, six-assist, six-steal effort.

Overall, he has been booed less on the road this season, with the exception of Sacramento, where the Los Angeles Lakers-Kings rivalry never seems to die; in Washington, where the Wizards' All-Star guard Gilbert Arenas is their choice; and in Toronto, which was apparently still miffed at Kobe Bryant's 81-point outburst against the Raptors last season.

His approval ratings are on a slight uptick, according to a survey that measures a celebrity's ability to influence brand affinity and consumer purchases. Last August, he was ranked No. 571 in the Davie Brown Index of 1,500 celebrities and athletes. His ranking rose to 553 last month, according to DBI results that showed an increase in his appeal, influence and trust among consumers compared with last summer.

"It takes time to rebuild a reputation, whether that's an actor like Mel Gibson, a company like JetBlue or an athlete like Kobe or Barry Bonds," DBI spokesman Chris Anderson said. "U.S. consumers are generally forgiving and, after time, they're willing to move on. He has stayed out of trouble and is putting change in that trust bank every day." More anecdotally, the unthinkable happened in a road game three weeks ago in Boston: Pockets of fans in the normally pro-Celtics crowd chanted Kobe Bryant's name toward the end of a victory by the Los Angeles Lakers. A few games later, scores of fans in Cleveland, typically known as LeBron James territory, were wearing Kobe Bryant jerseys.

Even before fans in hostile arenas turned a little more welcoming, Kobe Bryant's celebrity status had forced him to travel with bodyguards since 2001. The bodyguards are typically two or three off-duty police officers with martial-arts skills, and they are paid by the team. On the road, they often accompany Kobe Bryant from the team bus and stand outside the locker room. They watch games from the Los Angeles Lakers' bench or from a nearby post in the arena.

"You come out to a city, whether it's Detroit, Chicago, whatever it is, you don't want to have a mob scene or anything like that, so I take my security just to discourage that from happening," Kobe Bryant said. "I only do that on the road. At home, I don't do that. Home is home. I'm around there so many times, everybody's used to me. Whether it's Coffee Bean, whether it's Quiznos, wherever I go, to the shopping mall, I just go by myself."

It is all part of an interesting shift from the previous few years, all of which were difficult for Kobe Bryant.

The trade of Shaquille O'Neal in July 2004 was overshadowed by the announcement two months later that sexual-assault charges against Kobe Bryant were dropped. From there, Kobe Bryant took the court with a team that underperformed from the start, struggling to live up to the mantle of four NBA Finals appearances in five seasons.

Kobe Bryant and Karl Malone fought, Atkins chafed under Kobe Bryant's heavy-handed ways, the Los Angeles Lakers missed the playoffs in 2005 for the first time in 11 seasons, and Kobe Bryant disappeared for the summer, even failing to show when Jackson was rehired in June 2005. (Kobe Bryant responded to the news with a brief statement released by his agent.)

Last season was somewhat better for Kobe Bryant, punctuated by his historic 81-point night against Toronto, but the Los Angeles Lakers faltered in the playoffs and became the seventh team in NBA history to lose a best-of-seven series after holding a 3-1 lead.

The reputation for selfishness continued to stick to Kobe Bryant. It tugged at him, irritated him. Perhaps the only person who could change Kobe Bryant was Kobe Bryant himself.

He took some advice from another player who had worked his way through a score-first reputation. Jordan and Kobe Bryant spoke often last summer and have continued to stay in contact throughout the season.

"MJ's been through a lot of things that I've gone through in terms of being labeled a selfish player just wanting to score and [who] can't lead a team to winning a championship," Kobe Bryant said. "He's expressed how he's dealt with it and then trying to help his team win a championship and elevating his teammates around him while dealing with the criticism of just being a scorer and being a selfish player."

After 10 seasons with jersey No. 8, Kobe Bryant switched to No. 24 this season, as a symbol of the importance of every hour in every day, he has said.

As such, he often charters a helicopter to get to the team's practice facility in El Segundo, a practical but pricey solution to avoid the 405 Freeway from his home 45 miles away. The helicopter lands close to the Los Angeles Lakers' facility, saving Kobe Bryant about an hour each way.

Home or away, in the air or on the court, Kobe Bryant acknowledges continually working on his leadership abilities.

"If you want to improve your ballhandling skills, if you want to improve your jump shot or whatever it is, you have to work on it," he said. "It's something that I've consciously worked on, along with the fact that I've been in the league for 11 years now and seen a lot. You just naturally grow, come to understand things a little bit better, have a little bit more patience."

 

[More at www.latimes.com]


Kobe Bryant

 

Other Kobe News
Kobe Related News
Syndicated content not available
Reading this website constitutes agreement with this Legal Disclaimer.
Please note we are not affiliated with Kobe Bryant or the official site of Kobe Bryant and we are only a fan site.
Kobe Bryant | Lakers | Clippers | Lebron James | picture | news | sitemap