I did forget the Olympic team. I would not, however, characterize it as "Kobe's team" any more than I'd characterize 1992 as Jordan's. In fact, without the play of Wade (or in 1992, Barkley), the team would look like a mere shell of what it was. And there were certainly other step-forward leaders who prevented all the focus from being on one player (Magic for '92, James for '08).
I didn't say it was his team but he was deemed the leader and many players on the team (Wade, Melo, James) all talked about how he influenced their games and work ethic.
Comparing the 92 team with this team is off base on your side Joe. You are comparing a team who had leaders like Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, John Stockton, and Michael Jordan (to name a few). It was more than just 'one other step forward leader'. You had guys who not only were the top star on their team but also led their teams to multiple championships (Stockton obviously not doing that but still a much better leader than most on this squad). Out of everyone who was on this Dream Team the only two players with the same level of championship experience was Wade and Bryant. No surprise they were also two of the best players out on the floor. You can't even compare Kobe, Bron, Dwayne to Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, and Larry Bird in terms of ' leadership ' Obviously Michael wasn't the clear leader because well, a number of the guys he played with were later in their career and did not need the same type of leadership Kobe provided when it came to work ethic and studying the game. Melo, Bron, Bosh, Howard, etc are all younger players. So its comparing apples and oranges. One thing is a fact, the influence on the other players was there and that has to account for something. The old Kobe wouldn't have done what he did for that team. He wouldn't have led guys, he would have sat by himself listening to his ipod all day. He wouldn't have made friends with Melo, he wouldn't have had guys praising him. In fact I would go as far to say that he would have returned getting flack for it. That did not happen because he learned from his mistakes and was humbled by criticism (which he deserved to a point).....
As for the statements, "The guy also showed that people can be humbled and learn from their mistakes. I think he has and that's a big reason why the Lakers are a better team and have a title again," I think you're completely off-base. I don't think Bryant has shown that people can be humbled and learn from their mistakes. I think that he's shown that if you whine for something and you have talent, you'll get what you want. Take away Gasol and Odom - a verifiable All-Star and a near All-Star - who *DON'T* have to be "the man" - and the Lakers are an ordinary team. Replace Gasol with Amare Stoudemire, who wants to be "the man," and does this Laker team win it all? Replace Gasol with an in-his-prime Hakeem Olajuwown - who was the centerpiece of his teams - and does Kobe defer to him? Kobe benefitted by getting stars who weren't "needy," which does not prove that he is or isn't "needy." In truth, Shaq and Kobe *BOTH* could be called "The Big Needy." Ask yourself this: if Gasol had been the focus, had won the playoff MVP, had been mentioned in the MVP voting as a top contender to James, WOULD KOBE HAVE BEEN HAPPY WITH THE CHAMPIONSHIP? Granted, it's just my opinion, but I say, "He never was before, so I still say 'NO.'"
You are playing a what if game so there's really no point to address that. My comment about 'being humbled and learning from his mistakes' is more about him trying to do it all, not trusting teammates, and not embracing his teammates like a brother/friend as oppose to just another co-worker. He has shown he has been humbled and he has shown to bounce back. The Lakers have a title in a large part because he was humbled as a player and teammate. He bounced back by changing his game and attitude to lead this team to two finals apperances and one title.
Wanting help to win a title is part of the game. You call it whining. I call it getting things done. We all knew he didn't have the talent around him and he was a good player who could lead a team to a title, so why not force a franchise to make a move? If he just shut up do you think the Lakers would have really went after Gasol the same way? Probably not. Why do I say that? I guess for the same reason your saying Kobe wouldn't be happy if Gasol won the Finals MVP....because the Lakers were not before so I will say 'NO'
As for "Kobe may be the face because hes the best player in the league but that shift to players being more self centered, run isolation, do it all, all the attention on me is a Michael Jordan byproduct. Not something created by Kobe," I can't deny the Jordan influence here, and it rings really loud when you hear someone say "he's the best player in the league," because there's no way in the world I buy that while Duncan is still in the mix. And while I cannot deny it was not created *BY* Kobe, I think it's rather obvious that being considered for that particular role is what drives Bryant's actions. Jordan may have ascended to the role, but no one has SO PASSIONATELY SOUGHT OUT the role with the doggedness that Bryant has. So perhaps the wording should be "created by Jordan, *FOR* a player like Kobe."
I didn't realize people got negative points for wanting to be the best player on the planet. People want to be Michael Jordan because he's the best basketball player on the planet. Only Kobe Bryant can take flack for wanting to be the best basketball player on the planet. I find this statement crazy and well, down right twisting to fit a specific view. Disagree with me all you want but everything the guy does is set to be the best basketball player in the world. Since Jordan holds that title I don't see the problem with emulating him.
Again, doing everything in your power to be the best player in the world is somehow a bad thing in your eyes. That I don't understand. Quite frankly you can't say you know for sure he is only doing it for the fame and not because the guy loves to play and compete in the game of basketball.
In my view of Bryant, he represents everything that is wrong with the Jordanesque image and mentality - as opposed to the deep humility of the individual man for whom the playoff MVP trophy is named. In 40 years, when Bryant is asked how a team of his generation would stack up against the 2049 champion, Bryant will say, "We'd have won. I would have..." whereas Russell says, "We would have won. We would have..."
I guess you missed the press conference on TV Joe. When talking about the title and his finals MVP trophy he said 'WE' many many times if not asked about a question specific to himself. Even when they asked about winning with out Shaq he fell back to talking about enjoying the TEAMS they were apart of. Or last year when he thanked his teammates for his MVP first.
The main problem with Kobe (and I do think he did some of this to himself) is he never gets the benefit of the doubt on anything. First thought in a lot of non-Laker fans head is a complete negative view on whatever is being debated. For example the guy strives to be the best basketball player on the planet and somehow you view that as him only wanting to do that to feed his ego/to get attention. Instead of giving him the benefit of the doubt that he loves the game. The guy spends countless hours in the gym, watching tape, and studying the game. If he was in it just for the fame I think you would see a different player. One of the reasons he didn't get along well with a number of people when he came into the league is the only thing he cared about was basketball. He didn't care about going to the strip clubs or going to the dance club, he focused in on basketball. To certain people it looked as if he was an a-hole because basketball was his entire life (and sad if you think about it)
Maybe someday Non-Laker fans will give Kobe the chance to change in their own minds. Certainly he has changed to a lot of other people but for some (and this isn't even directed specifically or just at you) reason people still act like 2001 Kobe is the same as 2009 Kobe. While he has more to work on the fact of the matter is he has matured. Everyone else is allowed to grow and mature...except Kobe. When people in their 20s make mistakes and show they learned from them they are not thrown back in their face over and over...except Kobe. Let's take into mind that he was 23-24 years old when the Shaq/Kobe thing was going on. Still a very young man with a lot to learn. He has got older, he has got mature, and he has changed. The only place he hasn't changed is in people's heads who dislike him for any number of reasons. One of which seems to be because he is the new age face for something Michael Jordan and the league created. Let's not leave the league out of this when it comes to pushing for more super star personas then team play because well, teams dont sell products quite as well as individuals. If they 'created' this how exactly does he get blamed for it if he was groomed by the league, at age 18 as a child, to fall into that ? You have no problem holding it against Kobe but deflect blame from Jordan and the league? To me it seems that it would be easier to deflect blame from someone who was groomed as a child to fill a super star slot for the new era of NBA than it would be from the league that did it and the guy who gave the league the idea in the first place.
And as for talking about Jordan and these other players....let's just say the media attention wasn't quite there like it is now. Not as rabid, not as negative. I would love to see a Charles Barkley or Michael Jordan handle todays rabid media. Could you imagine what would happen to Dwight Howard if he was caught with 2 white hookers in a hotel like James Worthy? What if Carmelo Anthony got HIV and gave it to his wife? Think about what happened to Ron Artest when he went into the stands and then think back to Barkley throwing the guy through the glass window. Ron Artest will never in his life live down going into the stands. People forgot about the Barkley story because it wasn't constantly being brought up.