One thing I give you, Scott, you never take things personally, and I know I am more passionate that way ... so I have to give you props there ... :clap:
espn magazine had an article on Lakers and/or Shaq and Kobe a few years ago, you should try to find it ... talked all about Kobe not being part of team, i.e. coming out for own cheers, etc. ...
One more thing I have pointed out to you numerous times, Lakers record with and w/o Shaq (when he was injured and a Laker) as opposed to Kobe's ... its not even close ... Now, I know your argument is that Laker's didn't have backup center and could more easily replace Kobe than Shaq; BUT when Larry, Magic or MJ missed games, their teams dramatically titled to the minus %, not so with Kobe missing games ...
You can't win in hoops w/o being team oriented, and until Kipling's leopards like Kobe and AI, understand that, they will never go down by true basketball cognoscenti as highly respected practitioners as they could be...
I'd be curious to hear why you think Kobe averaged a career high 4.1 turnovers a game this year, almost 1 more per game than any other year?
Also, I found this stat interesting: Kobe is a lifetime 33% three point shooter and over the last 5 NBA seasons only the bottom five TEAMS in NBA shoot a lower three point % (than Kobe's 33%), that kind've surprised me...
More puzzling figures would be Kobe's dwindling shooting pct.
In 2003/04 he shot .438 yet his team shot .454; in 2004/05 he shot even worse, his all time low: .433, yet his team shot higher again: .437 ...
Seems logical a productive superstar should have a higher shooting pct. than his team's total? .... For the fun of it, I went back and tossed out Kobe's last 2 years and his first two years (when he was too young to be held accountable), and his 5 'tweener years came to an exceptional FG% of .462 ... I am quite certain he'll never recapture those numbers ...
Intrigued to match Kobe up with the player many try to compare him to, I went back and checked MJ, thinking his later years he turned into a lesser shooter. However, even tho he dissipated somewhat, he still led his teams' fg% every year they won the Crown.
98 MJ .465 team .451
97 MJ .486 team .473
96 MJ .495 team .478
93 MJ .495 team .482
92 MJ .519 team .508
91 MJ .539 team .510
Bird shot a lifetime .496 and ran pretty close to teams' FG % each year, outdistancing as often as not.
Jerry West regularly led his team with .20 to .50 higher fg shooting %s ... Oscar was even more incredible, leading by more, including by .69 one year.
I'm pretty sure you will find this true for any real superstar that wins. People like TMac, and AI don't fit this mold.
[Tmac
2005: .431/team .444;
2004: .417/team .429]
[AI
2005 .424/team .437
2004 .387/team .428
2003 .414/team .448
2002 .398/team .436
2001 .420/team .447]
Be interesting to see if Kobe picks his game up in the future, b/c his last 2 seasons have noticeably dipped, although the public hasn't yet realized it.
Could it be a harbinger of Ricky Williams and Eddie George at the end? (being slightly facetious) ... I posted a number of times two years ago that they had turned to jokes while many in the press still thought they were of Mt. Olympus ilk, when the truth was they were the 2 least productive RBs in entire league their last couple of years.
have a nice weekend
gregg
