Showing posts with label Kobe Bryant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kobe Bryant. Show all posts
Sunday, February 9, 2020
Bieb’s so in love
Justin Bieber does not tire of proclaiming his love for wife Hailey Baldwin. “I don’t post anything, or to try and make people believe I love my wife. I simply think it’s an honoring thing to do, publicly acknowledging your significant other! It’s like we’re all okay with acknowledging an achievement or award, but think there has to be something shady about saying something publicly about the one you love. I have nothing to prove by saying I love my wife. I just think there is power in putting your wife on a pedestal! I like to make my wife feel special and valued. I’ve done a lot of cool things but I don’t think anything comes close to as cool as that,” he said on Instagram.
The Canadian pop and R&B (rhythm and blues) superstar was among those devastated by the sudden death of basketball superstar Kobe Bryant in a helicopter crash. “It can’t be. You always encouraged me, Mamba (Bryant’s nickname). Gave me some of the best quotes that we smile about to this day! Love you man!”
The Instagram post was accompanied by a photo of a very young Bieber with Bryant’s arm around him.
Birthday girl
Singer/songwriter and pianist Alicia Keys, who turned 39 on Jan. 25, used Instagram to thank everyone who remembered her special day. “Birth vibes! Thank you for the birthday love today! Feeling amazing!”
Keys will have a series of concerts between June and September starting in Dublin, Ireland and ending in Florida, United States. In-between, she will be in the United Kingdom, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, Norway, France, Czech Republic, Spain, France, Poland, Switzerland and Luxembourg.
source: entertainment.inquirer.net
Monday, January 27, 2020
In appreciation: Kobe Bryant, a life defined by hard work
It was April 14, 2016. It was the first full day of Kobe Bryant’s new chapter as a retired NBA player. All he had done the night before was score a mind-boggling 60 points in his farewell game, not getting out of Staples Center until around midnight.
His staff at Kobe, Inc. were certain they would beat their boss to the office that morning.
They were wrong. He beat everyone there by two hours. “We have a lot of work to do,” Bryant told them.
Even in retirement, Bryant found no substitute for hard work.
Kobe Bean Bryant was many things: one of the greatest players in basketball history, a five-time NBA champion, Olympic gold medalist, a fluent speaker of multiple languages, a resident of the world, an Oscar winner, the self-described Black Mamba that started as a nickname and became his brand, someone so good he had two numbers retired by the Los Angeles Lakers.
And he never stopped. Basketball was his obsession for 20 years in the NBA. Storytelling was the obsession for the rest of his life.
Tears, as would be expected once the news broke of Bryant’s death in a helicopter crash in Southern California on Sunday, flowed freely in the NBA world. LeBron James was inconsolable when he got the news, a day after passing Bryant for No. 3 on the all-time scoring list. Doc Rivers struggled when he tried to put feelings into words. Even from the normally beyond-stoic Kawhi Leonard had his eyes well up when he was talking about Bryant.
But the pain was obvious elsewhere: Oregon women’s basketball star Sabrina Ionescu didn’t hide her anguish when she said she was dedicating the rest of her season to Bryant’s memory, soccer’s Neymar held up a “24” with his fingers after scoring a goal for Paris Saint-Germain, and marquees at the Super Bowl in Miami were lit up in the Lakers’ colors of purple and gold as a tribute.
The elite ones, the ones like James and Leonard and Ionescu and Neymar, were all like Bryant. Driven. Obsessed with their craft. Those are the sort of people Bryant enjoyed most. He didn’t have much patience for anything else.
Teammates were never immune from his criticism; not even Shaquille O’Neal, a fellow all-time NBA great, could avoid clashes with Bryant. O’Neal was half-a-foot taller and probably an easy 100 pounds heavier than Bryant. Didn’t matter. Bryant wanted to fight one day in practice, so they fought.
His toughness was legendary; Bryant blew out his Achilles on a play in 2013 where he’d been fouled and made the two free throws knowing that his season would be over a few seconds later. It was against Golden State; the Lakers trailed at the time, and Bryant — who hyperextended a knee in that same game and played through it because the game was so important in the playoff race — swished both shots.
“We were down two. Had to tie the game first,” Bryant said years later, when asked why he stayed in the game.
His commitment was legendary; there was a game in 2011 in Miami where the Lakers lost by six, and Bryant was so displeased with how he played that he went back onto the court for 90 minutes of uninterrupted shooting that went on until after midnight. His teammates were on Miami Beach for dinner. Bryant was working instead. “It’s my job,” Bryant said.
His swagger was legendary; during the FIBA Americas tournament in 2007, Bryant was less-than-impressed with how Brazil thought it had a chance to beat Team USA.
So, he tasked himself with guarding Leandro Barbosa, who until that point had been the leading scorer in the tournament. With Bryant blanketing him — making it difficult for him to even dribble at times — Barbosa made one shot all night. The Americans won by 37.
“Looking at a great white shark is one thing,” Bryant told teammates, “but jumping into the pool with one is another thing.”
He played in Los Angeles, but he was a star everywhere. Everywhere. At the Basketball World Cup in China this past summer, Bryant was on the court for a game during the medal round. He said a few words in Mandarin and the fans in Beijing screamed in more delight than they had for the guy who had taken the floor just before Bryant, a fellow by name of Yao Ming.
He was as driven in his storytelling life as he was in his playing days. Kobe, Inc. wasn’t just a cool name. It was his world. He wanted to inspire kids through books that combined the worlds of sports and fantasy. He was toying with the idea of taking his stories to Broadway.
He won an Oscar for “Dear Basketball,” a short animated film in 2018 that had been converted from a poem that he penned when he decided it was time to retire from playing the game. He had a podcast for kids and families, not with him blathering on about whatever he wanted to talk about but with characters talking about how to be a good teammate. He had a franchise of shows called Detail, where he broke down the nuances of basketball and had other huge names from other sports do the same thing.
He wasn’t kidding around when talking to his staff on April 14, 2016. Kobe Bryant still had a lot of work to do.
He was just getting started. And now he’s gone.
The tributes will continue, though eventually fade away. The legacy will be forever.
source: sports.inquirer.net
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Wednesday, August 22, 2018
Kobe Bryant not planning to play in BIG3 league next year
NEW YORK — Kobe Bryant won’t be coming out of retirement to play in the BIG3 next year.
A spokesperson for the longtime Los Angeles Lakers star said Tuesday that Bryant isn’t playing next season in the 3-on-3 league of former NBA players.
Speculation that Bryant would play had heated up earlier in the day when league co-founder and entertainment executive Jeff Kwatinetz said during the league’s weekly conference call that he “did hear from a credible source yesterday that Kobe says he’s playing next year.”
But Molly Carter, chief marketing officer of Kobe Inc., says the NBA’s No. 3 career scorer has no plans to do so.
The BIG3 wraps up its second season with the championship game on Friday in Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
NBA: Shaq refuses Kobe’s offer to mentor son
Shaquille O’Neal’s eldest old son, Shareef, looks to be destined to play in the NBA and is already considered as one of the top-tier prospects to join the 2018 draft.
To to be able to maximize his potential and reach the pros, the 16-year-old high school prodigy must be guided accordingly and learn invaluable lessons from the best.
The teenager proved quite lucky, as one of the greatest players to ever play, Kobe Bryant, generously offered to help Shareef out and show him the ropes.
However, his towering father does not seem too thrilled with the idea of his former team mate possibly training his son.
“(Shareef) don’t need to (train with Bryant),” the 44-year-old Hall of Famer told CBS Sports. “He’s really good. Way better than I was at his age. (Shareef) has a lot of colleges looking at him and I am very, very proud of him.”
The recently retired Bryant worked out with notable NBA All-stars this off season, including Kyrie Irving, Kawhi Leonard and Russell Westbrook—all of whom are enjoying monstrous starts this year.
The Black Mamba is the reason for all these first game performances. pic.twitter.com/ydXnte7lX4
— NBA Memes (@NBAMemes) October 28, 2016
Still, Shaq said it’s nothing personal and that he “doesn’t hate” Kobe, but it seems that their long-standing feud may have factored into his decision.
ESPN, meanwhile, ranked Shareef as the the No. 18 player in the draft class of 2018 and has already expressed interest attending Louisiana State University (LSU), Arizona, UCLA and Georgetown.
But if Shaq had his way, he would prefer his son to join Kentucky, Michigan State or his alma mater LSU, as he believes all three programs have coaches capable of taking him to the next level. Khristian Ibarrola
source: sports.inquirer.net
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Kobe scores 60 points in unbelievable farewell victory
LOS ANGELES — Kobe Bryant went out with a Hollywood ending to his remarkable career.
He scored 60 points in his final NBA game Wednesday night, wrapping up 20 years in the NBA with an unbelievable offensive showcase in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 101-96 victory over the Utah Jazz.
Bryant scored 23 points in the fourth quarter, posting his first 50-point game since February 2009 and rallying the Lakers from a 15-point deficit to win the final game of the worst season in franchise history.
With the entire Staples Center crowd standing, Bryant drained a 3-pointer with 59 seconds left. He hit another with 31 seconds to play, putting the Lakers ahead 97-96. He finished with an assist before checking out for good with 4.1 seconds left in just the Lakers’ 17th win of the worst season in franchise history.
Bryant took a career-high 50 shots to get there. He posted his highest-scoring performance since getting 61 against New York in 2009. It was the fifth highest-scoring game of his career, and he became the oldest player to score 50 points in an NBA game.
The entire night was a tribute to Bryant, who is retiring after 20 seasons, five championship rings and 18 All-Star selections with the Lakers, who honored him before and after the game. Bryant is just the fifth player in NBA history to play 20 seasons, and the first with just one team.
Between the whistles, Bryant and his teammates conspired for one last omnivorous scoring performance by the third-leading scorer in NBA history.
Bryant surpassed his previous career high of 47 shots, taken in a loss to Boston on Nov. 7, 2002.
It was daylong tribute with thousands of fans thronging the downtown streets around Staples Center and chanting his name from early afternoon. Fans lucky enough to get inside Staples Center greeted him with ovations at every opportunity. Magic Johnson anchored a brief pregame tribute by calling Bryant “the biggest and greatest celebrity we’ve had in this town for 20 years” and “the greatest to wear the purple and gold.”
After blowing kisses and pounding his heart before the game, Bryant got right to work on what the fans wanted to see. But he missed his first five shots before finally pump-faking and finally connecting on a jumper.
Bryant found a rhythm then, finishing the first quarter with 15 points on 13 shots. He kept it up after sitting out the first six minutes of the second, finishing with 22 points despite missing a last-minute shot, his 20th of the first half.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Tickets to Kobe’s last game won’t come cheap
HOLLYWOOD — Seeing Kobe Bryant wear the purple and gold for one last time won’t come cheap.
Resale tickets for Bryant’s final NBA game at Staples Center here Wednesday night come at a hefty price with seats at the uppermost level of the Arena going for over $700, and it doesn’t get cheaper from there.
Lower level tickets, where you have a better view of the playing court, are being sold up to $10,000 at TicketExchange.com.
Since the five-time champion announced he will retire at the end of the current season, Bryant has been given a fitting farewell at every arena during the Lakers’ road games.
It’s no surprise than in this sprawling city of Los Angeles, the anticipation to see its longtime basketball hero don the iconic Lakers’ jersey for the final time is much more intense.
According to a report from ESPN.com, LA will rename one of its train stations down to the “Kobe Station” and will start changing the signages to bear the Bryant’s name early Wednesday.
Wednesday’s game against the visiting Utah Jazz will also be the Lakers’ last this 2015-2016 season after failing to make the playoffs with a 16-65 record, the second worst in the league and good for dead last in the Western Conference.
The Lakers’ record will hardly matter, though, with all eyes on Bryant, who is one of the greatest and most thrilling players to ever set foot in the NBA.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Monday, November 30, 2015
The NBA starts paying Kobe Bryant his farewell compliments
MIAMI — The first time Shane Battier was involved in a win over the Los Angeles Lakers, he intercepted one of Kobe Bryant’s passes in the final moments to help seal the victory.
When they met a few weeks later, Bryant sure seemed like he remembered.
Bryant needed only 34 minutes to score 56 points on the then-rookie, something Battier never forgot.
“Pushed me to be better more than any player I’ve faced,” Battier wrote on Twitter not long after Bryant revealed that this season, as many expected, will be his finale with the Los Angeles Lakers. “He has my ultimate hoops respect.”
Sentiments like those weren’t hard to find Sunday night as many in the sports world reacted to the looming end of Bryant’s 20-year career with the Lakers.
The season goes until at least April, and Bryant remains hopeful of being selected to play for the U.S. Olympic Team at the Rio Games next summer. But now it’s official: Bryant’s final days as a professional basketball player have arrived.
“Hope (Bryant) receives (a) standing ovation in every city!” NBA veteran Caron Butler of the Sacramento Kings posted on his social media accounts. “One of the best to ever do it.”
Will Barton of the Denver Nuggets said Bryant was the only NBA player he ever idolized. Stephon Marbury — who was taken No. 4 in the 1996 NBA draft, nine spots before Bryant — called Bryant “the best of the NBA Golden Class of ’96.”
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver lauded what he called Bryant’s “relentless work ethic,” adding that the five-time NBA champion “is one of the greatest players in the history of our game.”
Bryant will leave the game as its No. 3 career scorer, with at least 17 All-Star appearances — it’s hard to imagine fans not wanting him in Toronto next February for a swan song — and with at least two Olympic gold medals.
“I was honored to have you as a teammate,” said Olympic hurdler and bobsledder Lolo Jones, who posted a photo of her and Bryant posing together in their opening ceremony attire from the 2012 London Games.
Starting Tuesday in Philadelphia, Bryant’s hometown, the Lakers will play eight straight games away from Los Angeles.
He’ll make his final appearances as an opponent in Philadelphia, Washington, Atlanta and Detroit — that is, provided he plays in them all — in the coming week alone.
His last game in Boston, where the basketball-savvy fans have long loathed the Lakers but will almost surely salute Bryant in his finale there, is Dec. 30.
Bryant hasn’t wanted opposing teams to make any special fuss about what just about everyone suspected was his final lap around the league. He might not be able to stop it any longer.
“I never thought that he’d ever retire. He seemed like he would play forever,” Memphis guard Mike Conley said Sunday. “Obviously, he’s one of the greatest to ever do it. It’s hard to see him go, of all people, because he’s been etched in the NBA for so long, since I was little. A guy you really look up to, and you just wish him the best going forward in the future.”
Battier played at Duke as a collegian, won two championships with the Miami Heat as a pro, and seemed to continually draw the toughest defensive matchups throughout his career.
So when he paid Bryant the ultimate compliment, it was significant.
“Kobe is the greatest competitor I have ever faced,” Battier said. “I am glad he’s found peace. I don’t know if we’ll see another one like him.”
source: sports.inquirer.net
Friday, November 6, 2015
NBA: Kobe Bryant says he is ‘Laker for life’
NEW YORK, United States—Kobe Bryant, a five-time NBA champion with the Los Angeles Lakers, says he’ll never play for another team.
“I’ve said it so many times—I’m a Laker for life,” Bryant said Friday after the Lakers beat the Brooklyn Nets 104-98 for their first win of the fledgling season. “I bleed purple and gold.”
Bryant, 37, received a rapturous welcome from fans in what might have been his last appearance in the Nets’ Barclays Center arena.
But he couldn’t hide his impatience when asked after the contest about former coach Phil Jackson’s pre-season suggestion that Bryant might continue his career with another club after his Lakers contract—which pays him $25 million a year—expires at the end of this campaign.
“That’s Phil baiting you guys like he always does,” said Bryant, who has said he’ll make up his mind about retirement when the season ends.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Friday, January 23, 2015
Injured Kobe Bryant still voted as NBA All-Stars starter
NEW YORK, United States–Lakers superstar Kobe Bryant was named to his 17th NBA All-Star Game on Thursday, same day his club announced he had a torn rotator cuff.
Bryant garnered one of the Western Conference starting guard spots over league-leading scorer James Harden.
But before the voting results were announced the Lakers had revealed the veteran had suffered a torn rotator cuff in Wednesday night’s game, making it unlikely he will be able to play in the February 15 mid-season showcase at Madison Square Garden.
Bryant received 1,152,402 votes — 83,034 more than Harden.
Bryant was also a surprise pick for the Western Conference team last year because of injuries and was eventually replaced by Harden.
The other starting guard for the West is Golden State’s Stephen Curry, who overcame LeBron James over the past week to earn the most overall votes with 1.51 million to James’ 1.47 million in global fan voting.
Besides having a new top overall vote getter, this season’s event will feature a number of first-time starters, including New Orleans Pelicans power forward Anthony Davis.
Clippers forward Blake Griffin and Grizzlies center Marc Gasol make up the West’s frontcourt.
New York forward Carmelo Anthony and Chicago big man Pau Gasol will join James in the frontcourt for the Eastern Conference, while Washington point guard John Wall and Toronto’s Kyle Lowry comprise the backcourt.
Lowry vaulted past Miami’s Dwyane Wade for the final guard spot.
The selection of Marc and Pau Gasol mark the first time that two brothers will start and NBA All-Star Game. Brothers Tom and Dick Van Arsdale both played in the 1970 and 1971 games, but they weren’t both starters.
Atlanta’s Mike Budenholzer and Golden State’s Steve Kerr will be the head coaches for the game. The head coaches will select their reserves, to be announced on January 29.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Saturday, January 17, 2015
LeBron shoots past Kobe as youngest to reach 24,000 points
MANILA, Philippines–Cleveland Cavaliers superstar LeBron James reached another milestone on Saturday (Manila time).
James became the youngest player to hit 24,000 points when he scored 32 points to help the Cavaliers beat the Los Angeles Clippers–passing Lakers great Kobe Bryant, who did it a year and 58 days older than James. The four-time MVP James just turned 30 on December 30.
Future Hall of Famers James and Bryant recently went head-to-head at Staples Center last Friday in a victory by the Cavaliers. James had 36 points, five rebounds and five assists against Bryant’s 19 points, six rebounds and career-high 17 assists.
But while James has overtaken Bryant in the list, the two-time NBA champion still has a lot of catching up to do when it comes to overall career points.
Bryant, who also has three more titles than James, just climbed to third in the all-time scoring list last month with over 32,400 points. Legends Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (38,387) and Karl Malone (36, 928) are in the top two with Michael Jordan, considered the greatest of all time, dropping to fourth with 32,292 points, according to basketball-reference.com.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Saturday, February 8, 2014
Anthony Davis picked to replace Kobe Bryant in All-Star game
NEW YORK – New Orleans forward Anthony Davis was chosen Friday to replace the injured Kobe Bryant in the NBA All-Star game that will be played in his home city.
Davis was nearly chosen as a reserve, but missed by one spot in voting by Western Conference head coaches, a person with knowledge of the details told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because vote totals were not released.
The 2012 U.S. Olympian ended up getting into the Feb. 16 game at Smoothie King Center when NBA Commissioner Adam Silver chose him to replace Bryant, who was voted by fans to start but is still recovering from a broken knee.
Davis is averaging 20.5 points, 10.5 rebounds and a league-leading 3.3 blocks for the Pelicans. Davis, the No. 1 pick in the 2012 draft, is also scheduled to play in the Rising Stars Challenge for rookies and second-year players next Friday.
Western Conference coach Scott Brooks of Oklahoma City will decide who replaces Bryant in the starting lineup.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Lakers’ Kobe Bryant expected to miss NBA All-Star game
LOS ANGELES - Kobe Bryant is expected to miss the NBA All-Star game due to continued pain and swelling in his injured left knee.
The Los Angeles Lakers provided an injury update Tuesday, saying the superstar guard will be out for at least three more weeks before he is re-examined. Bryant was voted a starter in the All-Star game in New Orleans on Feb. 16 – less than three weeks away.
Lakers team physician Steve Lombardo examined Bryant after the team returned from a two-week road trip for Tuesday’s home game against Indiana.
Bryant broke a bone in his knee Dec. 17, just six games into his comeback from a torn left Achilles tendon.
Bryant will continue with a program of light exercise, including time on a stationary bike.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Kobe Bryant progressing steadily in recovery for Lakers
LOS ANGELES — Kobe Bryant says he’s making steady progress in his injury recovery, although the Los Angeles Lakers star is likely still weeks away from a return to the court.
Bryant said before Friday’s game with the San Antonio Spurs that he’s running on flat ground and improving the flexibility in his ankle.
Bryant isn’t predicting a return date, but has said he would need about three weeks of conditioning work before returning to practice. He thinks this week counts toward that total.
The fourth-leading scorer in NBA history tore his Achilles tendon in April.
Bryant says he’s spending his time on the shelf mentoring his young teammates, specifically Nick Young, Wes Johnson and Xavier Henry.
source: sports.inquirer.net
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