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Monday, January 23, 2006

Superman is for real... He wears #8 for the Lakers




















81 points.


I am not knew to the Kobe scene... I bought this shirt back on December of 2003 to show support to who will be known as the greatest basketball player that ever lived. Don't get me wrong, Michael Jordan is the best player to ever play basketball.. but Kobe is only 27 years old. 27. He still has 8 - 10 years of playing left. A few more seasons like this where he might average 40pts a game... and yes, he will go down as the best player ever. He already has 3 NBA titles, and there will be more.


Read this article by Marc Stein at ESPN.com

Is 81 enough?

Eighty-One, people.

I'd say so. I'd say all those pre-Christmas wails about Kobe Bryant ripping us off by hanging 62 points on the Dallas Mavericks in three quarters and then sitting out the fourth can suddenly be recalled with a chuckle.



Turns out Kobe's Dec. 20 detonation was not a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for No. 8 to make a run at 80-something points. No one was cheated after all.

Maybe Kobe and his pal Phil Jackson, when they reached that joint decision to stop abusing the Mavs because the Lakers were up by 34, knew they wouldn't have to wait long for another chance at it during an up-for-grabs game.

Why not? You can believe anything on a night like this.

Kobe's chance dutifully materialized almost exactly a month later, on a Sunday that was supposed to belong to gridiron football. You know. The table-setter for Super Bowl Extra Large and all that.

Sorry, NFL.

Sunday will be remembered as the best NBA day in a long, long time. There was a nationally televised buzzer beater in Minnesota from Philadelphia's Andre Iguodala to cap a 19-point comeback in the afternoon ... and then Seattle's Ray Allen beat Phoenix with a way-out buzzer bomb at the horn of overtime No. 2 in a 152-149 throwback thriller ... and then simply the greatest individual performance ever recorded: Bryant's 81 points in a 122-104 come-from-behind victory over the Toronto Raptors.

You'll recall that, sadly, there's no footage of Wilt Chamberlain rumbling for 100 points in Hershey, Pa., on March 2, 1962. Which makes it tough to commission an in-depth analysis comparing Wilt's feat (scoring 100 of his team's 169 points that day) to Kobe's (81 of 122). But I'll gladly settle for the forthcoming flood of Kobe replays, in which you'll see him haul the Lakers back from a 71-53 deficit against a Raps team that kept the game sufficiently close in the final quarter to keep Kobe out there shooting.

Against a Toronto team that somehow held him to 11 points when the teams met in early December -- historic footage now -- Bryant wound up with 55 points after halftime. Fifty-five. For a little perspective, please note that matches the best scoring game in Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's career. That's the same Abdul-Jabbar who, before becoming a Lakers assistant coach, was merely the NBA's all-time scoring leader.

Don't forget, furthermore, that no less an authority than Michael Jordan has been known to say that a perimeter player has it way tougher when it comes to making a legitimate run at Wilt's record. Factor in the ball-handling responsibilities and the energy required to play defense all over the floor and you can understand MJ's theory. This might also help back it up: Jordan himself topped out at 69 points as his one-night best and needed overtime to get there.

No offense to the late, great Chamberlain, but he was in a better position to dominate a box score with the size and strength advantage he possessed, especially in Wilt's era. Some of you will inevitably counter with the claim that Kobe had the benefit of a 3-point line, but don't exaggerate. Having the long-ball option added only seven points to Bryant's total.

With a mere 74, he'd still have registered the richest single-game scoring output in NBA history by anyone not named Wilt.

With 81, so soon after so many opined that he had blown his chance to ever scrape that stratosphere, Bryant has reminded us what we all should know by now about him.

Whatever you think about the game's foremost love-him-or-loathe-him face, and the ongoing debate about how much he shoots, you always have to be ready for What's Next with No. 8.

Chances are it'll be something to dissect for days and days.

Chances are, on the thinnest and neediest team in Jackson's ring-filled history, it won't be the last time Kobe has the forum to fling 40-something shots at history.


Comments on "Superman is for real... He wears #8 for the Lakers"

 

Blogger David Stehle said ... (11:19 PM, January 23, 2006) : 

Over 80 points! Damn, I'm speechless.

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (8:09 AM, January 24, 2006) : 

Kobe's gay!

 

Blogger Unknown said ... (8:38 AM, January 24, 2006) : 

OK, so I'm with ya in the whole Kobe will ge the greatest player that ever played the game.Although, Michael Jordon is and will remain the best of his time!

I think it's hard to really appreciate the whole incident because of all the "wife cheatin dog" publicity Kobe has recieved. Props to him, but still love Jordan!

 

Blogger Blonde said ... (11:23 AM, January 24, 2006) : 

I still think Kobe is a dickhead.

BTW, he would have never had a game like that if Shaq was still a Laker.

 

Blogger Anita Baker said ... (11:50 AM, January 24, 2006) : 

What are your thoughts on Shaq Wez?

 

Blogger Wez said ... (12:16 PM, January 24, 2006) : 

I have always liked Shaq... although recently I think he's been acting like a big baby. Plus in the last Lakers vs Heat game, after that 17yr old kid for the Lakers dunked on him.. then Shaq basically punched the kid in the head - that was pretty cheap and childish on his part.

 

Blogger Lara said ... (2:46 PM, January 24, 2006) : 

That was the most incredible thing ever. That's just impossible. I still can't believe he did it.

 

Blogger Dorf said ... (8:40 PM, January 24, 2006) : 

Dude, he's no Jordan...

 

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