BRYANT NEEDS ACCOLADES.Byline: KEVIN MODESTI Kobe Bryant Kobe Bean Bryant (born July 23 1978) is an American All-Star shooting guard in the National Basketball Association (NBA) who plays for the Los Angeles Lakers. might be surprised to learn that as he begins his second decade in the NBA NBA abbr. 1. National Basketball Association 2. National Boxing Association NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (= next week, the one-time prodigy is a little behind the curve. Yes, we're grading on a very tough curve here, comparing the accomplishments of Kobe's 10 years in the league to those of pro basketball's all-time greats. But his talent and ambition demand nothing less than comparison to stars of the first magnitude, right? How does Bryant stack up? Can a player with three championship rings but no MVP (Multimedia Video Processor) A high-speed DSP chip from Texas Instruments, introduced in 1994. Officially introduced as the TMS320C80, it combines RISC technology with the functionality of four DSPs on one chip. trophies so far be remembered as one of the best ever if he just keeps doing what he's doing? Or will he make it to Mount Olympus Mount Olympus: see Cyprus; Olympic Mountains; Olympus. Arena only if he picks up the pace, leading the Lakers to more titles, winning more awards, topping more stat lists? To Kareem Abdul-Jabbar For the football player, see . Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor, Jr. on April 16, 1947) is a retired American professional basketball player and current assistant coach. , one of those greats, Kobe is right there already. ``Just because of what he's accomplished, individually and as a team player, he's in the equation (for greatness),'' said Abdul-Jabbar, now a Lakers assistant coach. ``It's up to him where exactly he ends up.'' What does Bryant have to do to guarantee himself a roster spot on anybody's all-time Dream Team? Let's cut out the bias, posturing and histrionics that blur the debate about L.A.'s most controversial athlete. To start with, let's pick the all-time greats to use as measuring sticks. Based mostly on career accomplishments, here's a 12-man roster of the best of the modern (say post-George Mikan) NBA: Centers (chronologically) -- Bill Russell Noun 1. Bill Russell - United States basketball center (born in 1934) William Felton Russell, Russell , Wilt Chamberlain Wilton Norman "Wilt" Chamberlain (August 21, 1936–October 12, 1999), nicknamed Wilt the Stilt and The Big Dipper, was an American professional National Basketball Association (NBA) basketball player for the Philadelphia / San Francisco Warriors, the , Abdul- Jabbar, Shaquille O'Neal Shaquille Rashaun O'Neal (pronounced "shak-KEEL") (born March 6, 1972 in Newark, New Jersey), frequently referred to simply as Shaq, is an American professional basketball player, generally regarded as one of the most dominant in the National Basketball Association (NBA). . Forwards -- Bob Pettit For the baseball player, see . Robert E. Lee "Bob" Pettit (born December 12, 1932, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.) is a retired American professional basketball player. He played 11 seasons in the NBA, all with the Milwaukee/St. Louis Hawks (1954-1965). , Elgin Baylor Elgin Gay Baylor (born September 16, 1934 in Washington, D.C.) is a retired American basketball player who played 13 seasons as a forward for the NBA's Minneapolis Lakers/Los Angeles Lakers. Baylor was a gifted shooter, a strong rebounder, and an accomplished passer. , Julius Erving Noun 1. Julius Erving - United States basketball forward (born in 1950) Dr. J, Erving, Julius Winfield Erving , Larry Bird Larry Joe Bird (born December 7,1956) is a retired American NBA basketball player, widely considered one of the greatest players of all time, and one of the best clutch performers in the history of sports. , Karl Malone Guards -- Jerry West
OK, that's 13. Somebody has to come down with a strained oblique by opening night. Now, let's compare Kobe Bryant with them in five areas: NBA championships, Most Valuable Player awards, NBA Finals and All-Star Game MVP awards, scoring, rebound and assist titles, and All-NBA first-team selections. Kobe is ahead of the curve on NBA championships. He has three (Lakers, 2000-01-02). Although Russell had 11 rings, Kareem and Jordan six, and Shaq four, the typical member of our All-Time Team (the median, if you want to talk math), had one in his first decade in the league and two by the end of his career. But Kobe is behind in all of our individual departments. MVPs? He has none (his highest finish in the voting was third in 2003), while the typical great had two after a decade and two when he retired. Finals and All-Star MVPs? He has one (All-Star Game, 2002), while our immortals usually had two by now and two at the end. Stat titles? He has one (35.4 points per game, 2006), while our average hero had two by now and two at the end. All-NBA selections? He has three, in 2002, '03 and '06, while the guys he'd like to emulate generally had seven by now and nine when they hung it up. Ironic, huh? The player who's slammed as not being a team player and too much of an individual is distinguished by team titles, and needs to pile up more individual ones. Kobe says it's all about the NBA championships. ``That's the challenge, to win more championships, not to win an MVP,'' he said after practice in El Segundo on Wednesday (he took part, but his recovering knee could keep him out of Tuesday's opener against Phoenix at Staples Center). ``Some of my peers think I'm the best in the game, some don't. That's a debate that goes on. ``When it's time to look back, I'd like to be able to say we got to the top, then we went through a period where we struggled, then we got back to the top. If we pull that off, that'll be something.'' Bryant is right in one way. History asks that he win another NBA championship, without Shaq. But history practically shouts at him to win over those MVP and All-NBA voters, too. To be considered an all-timer is hard if you weren't stamped the best at any one moment. Working against Kobe: the competition from LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and other younger players, and the difficulty of chasing an MVP without making it obvious. Working for Kobe: he's still in his prime, theoretically with half a career left to polish his credentials. For many of the all-timers, the 11th season was pivotal. Russell became the Celtics' player-coach. Robertson joined Kareem with the Bucks. Kareem was joined by Magic with the Lakers. Magic began life after Kareem. Chamberlain tore up a knee and began his decline. Baylor and Bird had their last really good seasons. Jordan played the first full season of his comeback from baseball and began the Bulls' second three-peat. All of them went into their second decades in pro basketball when they were in their 30s. Kobe Bryant is, hard to believe, beginning his second decade at 28. He can be remembered as one of the greatest ever. No doubt he wants to go out that way. Now he knows what he has to do to get there. heymodesti(AT_SIGN)aol.com (818) 713-3616 CAPTION(S): photo Photo: Kobe Bryant stacks up favorably to the NBA's all-time greats in championships, but not in individual accomplishments. Noah Graham/Getty Images |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion