[外電] The Great Unknown-3
III. The Ghost
At times Bryant almost eerily channels Michael Jordan on the court--the same
fadeaway jumper, the same feral, crouched-panther stance on defense, the same
pigeon-toed walk downcourt. But the debate over whether Kobe is the next
Jordan is settled. As much as Madison Avenue might have wanted Bryant's
crossover appeal to be as impressive as his crossover dribble, it is not.
Jordan's defaut facial expression was a wide smile, Bryant's a cloudy frown.
Still, the specter of Jordan looms inescapably over Bryant.
Like Jordan, he is capable of reducing even All-Stars to little kids in his
presence. In a nearly deserted hallway long after a late-March game against
Sacramento, Bryant emerged from the locker room to find his wife, Vanessa,
and three-year-old daughter, Natalia, waiting for him. Kings foward Ron
Artest, whom Bryant had badly outplayed on this evening, came by, carrying
a throw-away camera and his five-year-old son, Ron Ron.(<--XD)
"Kobe, would you take a picture with my boy?" Artest asked, the way a timid
kid would ask a teacher for a favor. "Sure," said Kobe, stationing himself
between Natalia and Ron Ron as Artest snapped away.
While Jordan, too, could be forbidding to other players, he also projected
warmth--far more than Bryant does. "When players sit around, Kobe's not a guy
you might talk about and say, `He's such a good dude, like a Kevin Garnett,`"
says Los Angels Clippers guard Cuttino Mobley. "Nobody knows Kobe that well.
He's not a sociable guy. That's not a fault; it's just his preference. When
I was a rookie [in Houston], Scottie Pippen told me that Michael would go out
with his teammates sometimes. He included guys and balanced everything out.
I'm not sure Kobe does that."
"From a talent standpoint, he may be better than Jordan was at this stage of
his career," says Clippers coach Mike Donleavy. "The part of his game that he
has to get better as opposed to Jordan is the leadership department, how
players respond to him, how he gets along, creating a chemistry. Players loved
playing with Jordan. I don't know whether they do with Kobe."
It should be noted that Jordan's ubercompetitiveness(u上面有兩點), which
sometimes led him to humiliate his teammates, was generally seen as a
positive, perhaps because he did it (mostly) behind closed doors, partly
because he was, well, Michael. The same time trait in Bryant is often seen as
objectionable. "When he's being the nice Kobe, he's good with everybody," says
San Antonio Spurs foward Robert Horry, a teammate of Bryant's in L.A. for
seven seasons. "But when he's being the butthole Kobe, he's difficult. There
were days when the second team would beat the first team, and he wouldn't
speak to guys because he wanted to get back onto the court and beat them.
He's just very passionate about his basketball."
As dominate as Jordan was, he had a way of refraining from lording it over his
opponents. He disagreed, of course, with suggestions that there were actually
defenders who could stop him (such as Detroit's Joe Dumars or Cleveland's
Craig Ehlo), but he usually did it with grace and good humor.
Bryant does not. After he dropped 51 points on Raja Bell in a loss to the Suns
last Friday, he was asked about the physical battle Bell has given him. Bryant
shots the questioner a look that said Are you nuts? "Raja Bell?" he said,
enunciating the name as if it were a contagious disease. "I don't even think
about him. Man, I got bigger fish to fry than Raja Bell."
In The Last Season, Phil Jackson's tell-almost-all book about the 2003-04
season, the Lakers' coach labeled Bryant "uncoachable" and admitted that he
tried to persuade general manager Mitch Kupchack to unload him before the
February trading deadline. "[Kobe] could have been heir apparent to MJ and
maybe won as many championship," Jackson wrote. "He may still win a
championship or two, but the boyish hero image has been replaced by that of
a callous gun for hire."
Two years later, having returned to the Los Angels bench, Jackson is
predictably conciliatory, insisting that Bryant would, for example, no longer
defiantly remove himself from the offense, as he did during an infamous
one-shot first half against the Kings late in the 2003-04 season. "Kobe now
plays that role of involving guys in the offense without taking himself out,"
says Jackson. "It used to be an either-or situation, black or white."
"I wanted Kobe to move into the realm where he's not only the driving force
by his play but also has a nurturing element," the Lakers' coach adds.
"And that is what has come out this year. He's patient, accepting and
friendlier to his teammates."
Some of the Lakers agree. "Before, Kobe wouldn't really say much and would
just lead by playing hard, coming early and staying late," says foward Devean
George, who among his current teammates has been with Bryant the longest
(seven years). "Now he's more vocal. Some of the younger guys, it might bother
them. They're still trying to find their way. Kobe being the superstar player
and a big name, it holds weight when he yells. But he likes everybody on the
team. I don't think he's doing it to put anyone down."
Bryant's most important relationship among his teammates is with talented
6'10" foward Lamar Odom. Bryant and Odom have the potential to be a
21st-century version of Jordan and Pippen. But Odom sometimes defers to Bryant
too much; around the league it is generally thought that the Lakers' chance
of flourishing in the post-season depend on how much Odom asserts himself.
One of the most intriguring subplots of the Lakers' season involves whether
Bryant and Odom nearly came to blows after a 94-91 loss to the Wizards in
Washington on Dec. 26. With five seconds remaining, Bryant turned the ball
over but pinned the blame on Odom for a botched pick-and-roll. The principals
say there was no sunsequent altercation; other teammates confirm that harsh
words were exchanged. Nevertheless, Odom, who has heard throughout his career
how much better he would be if he had a warrior's mentality, sometimes seems
in awe of Bryant's single-minded dedication to winning. "Kobe goes after it
as hard as anybody in the league," says Odom. "He wants to win. That's what
you have to understand about him."
Still, it's hard to determine where the party line stops and reality begins.
His teammates know that they will face Bryant's wrath if they don't get him
the ball in clutch situations...and may face it anyway. After the Lakers lost
close games at New Jersey (92-89 on March 17) and Cleveland (96-95 two days
later), Bryant pointed fingers.
Against the Nets, Odom had trouble inbouding the ball and neglected to call
timeout with 13 seconds remaining. That, Bryant said afterward, led to a
broken play and an awkward Bryant miss as time expired. Bryant also brought
Luke Walton into that conversation, angrily pointing to a spot on the floor
where he presumably thought the Lakers' foward should've been.
In the loss to the Cavaliers, it was Walton who had a hard time getting the
ball inbounds to Bryant on a last-shot play. Eventually he did, but Bryant
recieved the pass 35 feet from the basket and missed a shot as time expired.
After the game Bryant said that Walton should've called a timeout. "I guess
I could have a called a timeout," responded an uncharacteristically piqued
Walton, "but it's a 48-minute game and we didn't lose because I didn't call
a timeout."
(第三段完...待續?)
=============================================
這一大段打完才發現作者似乎是kobe-hater...^^||
糟糕.後面還要繼續打嗎?XDrz
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