The point I was making is you are trying to tuck in assumptions made on your part into rumors and other information you've read in various places.
Sometimes a message is just as much about the messenger as it is the message. I'll leave it at that.
I use these materials to reach
CONCLUSIONS regarding what problems the Lakers experience having Kobe Bryant on their roster. There is enough information from ALL source material to conclude the Lakers would probably be better off in the long run by trading Bryant somewhere else.
I admit to having an opinion on the prolonged quandary the Laker management must deal with on staffing a team with Kobe Bryant constantly undermining them, just as I have opinions on any other topic of conversation discussed here. Assumptions that Kobe is manipulating the Laker management to do his bidding are no longer needed, since he clearly has that in mind by his continued media blitz on the issue, so on that I can see no point in requiring validation.
I feel that Kobe's "assumption" is to blame the Laker management for failing to sign viable players to the team and not the presence of himself on the roster, which logically should be factored into the discussion. Or his own trade demands.
Based on these facts, and they ARE facts, I propose the team just trade him and be done with it so they can concentrate on creating a better team for the future, because I DO believe it will not happen until they do.
So, the only things I am stating as FACTS here, are what you already know ARE the facts: Laker management can't seem to pull the trigger on any worthwhile trades; Kobe continues to badmouth them and occasionally demands the team trade him (which he probably believes they cannot do - PR disaster); oh, and the Lakers have little to offer in the trade scenario, and not enough to offer any worthwhile free agents under the salary cap.
I deduce they are having difficultly attracting good players because they would have to defer to Kobe once they did - a big deal for most ego-driven players and it has to be considered in this arguement - so many opt not to sign with Los Angeles.
I further conjecture that Kobe is keeping them away, based on these "media" stories and my own interpretations of them, and that it should not be this hard for the Lakers to get decent players at least in free agency.
So I finally conclude that the Lakers should just surprise the hell out of Kobe by trading him away. They could at least get some quality in return, if not high draft picks. A better all-round 'conclusion' to the melodrama.