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Pau & Jeremy
That's still great tho. Especially if he turns into a stud by year 3. So young, so cheap.
That's the motto this go round right...
But we would have his bird rights no??Ehh if he's a stud by year 3, he won't be cheap because teams will make their run at him.
But we would have his bird rights no??Ehh if he's a stud by year 3, he won't be cheap because teams will make their run at him.
And we can go over cap to sign him so wouldn't we have the upper hand in negotiations and what could be offered...
And I also feel like 27 mil of cap space isn't enough at all
I just don't personally think Clarkson will be a player we are going to have to worry about holding onto for the future ...that's something that could easily be handled.
I dunno the more I think about 3 years from now the more I worry about how this roster will have developed.
The road back to the top will be a steep one for this franchise
"So young, so cheap"?That's still great tho. Especially if he turns into a stud by year 3. So young, so cheap.
That's the motto this go round right...
Bryant has broken his nose and will be diagnosed with a concussion from a blow to the face delivered by Dwyane Wade in the 2012 All-Star Game. (Bryant makes both those free throws, too, by the way.)
He finishes the game, a three-point Western Conference victory, and breaks Michael Jordan's career All-Star scoring record. Bryant feels bad enough, though, that he skips the postgame media session.
Before leaving Orlando's Amway Center, getting more treatment and taking a long flight home, Bryant has one stop to make: seeing Wade, who had hit Bryant from behind upon being blown by on a third-quarter spin move. The moment is recounted in the book Relentless by Tim Grover, trainer to both Bryant and Wade:
"Kobe wanted to see him face-to-face before he'd go to the hospital. It wasn't about vengeance or retaliation or settling the score. It was about the law and order of the jungle, two animals instinctively facing off, the lion king getting up on that rock so the rest of the jungle could see who was in charge. One direct, silent look that says, 'I still own this, motherf----r.'"
It is the second round of the 2009 playoffs. The Lakers have just played a Sunday afternoon game in Houston.
John Ireland, now the team's radio voice but then a TV sideline reporter, does some live postgame shots at Toyota Center. By the time he returns to the team hotel across the street, a lot of the players are hanging out at the hotel lobby bar.
Bryant: "Hey, John. You want a beer?"
Ireland: "Thanks, but you don't have to buy me a beer."
Bryant smirks and points down at 17 beers—all open, all untouched.
People have been buying him beers for the past two hours.
Shaq and D-Wade are about to win the 2006 NBA title together for the Miami Heat. Kobe has some time on his hands.
He is told that there is a "wish kid" who wants to meet him but is too ill to fly from Las Vegas to L.A. Bryant tells the Make-a-Wish Foundation that he will just go to the kid.
Juan Carlos is not really a kid. He has a girlfriend there in his hospital room, along with his parents and siblings. He is 17, the very same age as that beaming, brash Bryant who wore his sunglasses propped up on his head inside the Lower Merion High School gym and announced he was skipping college to "take my talent to the NBA."
Juan Carlos hasn't gotten out of bed for a very long time, much less gone outside for any sun. But when he compliments Bryant on the cool shades he is wearing on this day, Bryant hands his sunglasses over as a gift.
Juan Carlos brightens. In return, and using the burst of energy Bryant has brought him, Juan Carlos surprises the hospital staff:
He shows Bryant he can walk.
Two weeks later, Juan Carlos passes away.
The 2005 season has not gone well. Shaquille O'Neal is gone, the Lakers are struggling, and the criticism of Bryant is mounting.
Bryant sits alone with John Black, who runs the Lakers' public relations department.
Bryant: "What are all these motherf-s going to say when I lead this team to a championship?"
Black: "They're going to say you're one of the greatest players of all time."
With a brutal seven-game victory over the Celtics in the bank for Bryant, the 2010 offseason is dominated by LeBron James' decision to leave Cleveland for Miami.
What matters to Bryant is Phil Jackson agreeing to return to coach the Lakers again in pursuit of a third consecutive NBA title. Bryant sends James a text message. It goes like this:
"Go ahead and get another MVP, if you want. And find the city you want to live in. But we're going to win the championship. Don't worry about it."