Kobe Bryant is staring down the prospect of sharing the court with Superman again. Only this time, it’s Dwight Howard and not Shaquille O’Neal who’s wearing the cape that Bryant wants to tug on.
Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers will be trying to win their first NBA title without O’Neal when the finals open today against Howard and the Orlando Magic.
They failed to do so last year, losing to the Boston Celtics in a humiliating Game 6 defeat.
PHOTO: AP
O’Neal was traded after Los Angeles lost the 2004 finals to Detroit, leaving Bryant the undisputed leader of a team that won three straight championships at the start of the decade. Bryant still bristles at implications he had something to do with that.
“People that really know basketball know that that stuff means nothing,” Bryant said, deflecting questions on O’Neal. “It’s nonsensical actually. You want to win just to win it.”
Bryant, who turns 31 in August, is completing his 13th season. He kept to himself around his older teammates early in his career.
Although he teamed with O’Neal to lead the Lakers to three straight championships, the two frequently sniped each other publicly.
Adding a fourth NBA championship to the gold medal he helped the US win at last year’s Beijing Olympics would burnish Bryant’s still developing legacy.
Like O’Neal, Lakers coach Phil Jackson also departed after the 2003-2004 season, and later wrote a book in which he called Bryant “uncoachable.” Jackson then returned after taking a season off and has had a seamless relationship with Bryant ever since.
But there have been big bumps in the road. Bryant implored the Lakers to surround him with better players in the summer of 2007, then demanded a trade. The team responded by adding Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol, and Los Angeles reached the finals last year for the first time since 2004.
Bryant also won his first league MVP award a year ago.
Jackson initially noticed a change in Bryant’s outlook two years ago.
“He ended up just racing away with the scoring championship on an incredible run of about 15 games in a row,” the coach recalled. “When we came back the next year we just said we don’t want that type of ball to happen again. We want more inclusiveness. There was a whole issue about us getting better talent around him and that’s happened over the last two years and here we are.”
Bryant often talks about his love for his teammates and the ways in which he’s counseled them on improving their games. Derek Fisher’s return last season clearly benefited Bryant on and off the court. They were teammates on the Lakers from 1996 to 2004 before Fisher left for three years.
“He’s continued to recognize that in order for him to accomplish some of his individual goals, the team goals have to match or exceed his own goals,” Fisher said. “That means other guys around him have to perform at a high level.”
And when his teammates struggle, well, Bryant can always just take over games himself. He did so in the Western Conference finals opener against Denver, scoring 40 points and making six free throws in the final 30 seconds to cinch the victory after the Lakers trailed for most of the game.
“He’s just gotten more comfortable with where he is in terms of what he’s capable of doing on the floor and knows he can always come back to that,” Fisher said.
After losing the 2004 finals, the Lakers didn’t make the playoffs the following season. They failed to get out of the first round in 2006 and 2007, increasing Bryant’s feelings of frustration and impatience.
“It’s been a long haul to get back here for all of us,” he said. “I certainly appreciate it even more. Once you have that celebration and that feeling of winning, of accomplishment, you want to have it again.”
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