Another "I Hate Kobe" article...this one from Yahoo

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[h1]Bryant savoring second act of his career[/h1]
By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports Nov 12, 4:53 pm EST





Around the U.S. Olympic basketball team, the players had come to understand the odd machinations of life with Kobe Bryant, learning to laugh away the self-love and peculiarities of the planet's best player.

His teammates called him out when he speed-walked into the opening ceremony, leaving them several yards behind to treat his own entrance with the lavish ovation that it deserved. Together, they understood the reality that it was all about Kobe on the way into those Games. And, alone, Chris Paul discovered how it would be all about Kobe on the way out of the gold-medal game against Spain.

As Paul worked his way to the free-throw line to shoot two technical fouls with 26 seconds left, Bryant could be seen intruding on the space, nudging Paul out of the way to take those shots for himself. Paul flashed a perplexed look, but resistance was futile.

"Come on, Kobe had to pad his stats," another Team USA teammate would laugh later.

It didn't go unnoticed, but no one cared much in the celebration of the gold-medal victory. They met again in the Lakers' 93-86 vanquishing on Wednesday night, the 2008 MVP, Bryant, and his runner-up, Paul. The Hornets and Houston Rockets are the rising threats in the Western Conference, and the Lakers slapped the two of them silly. Bryant brought the unbeaten Lakers into New Orleans to deliver two messages. The West will be ours again, the MVP mine.

So far, the Lakers are on a search and destroy. Bryant has been his brilliant self, and with the possibility of a 70-victory season in Los Angeles, how could he be denied an MVP? Yes, LeBron James is making his bid, but Paul has broken Oscar Robertson's record with six straight 20-point and 10-assist games to start the season. Privately, Bryant never believed that Paul had paid his playoff dues to be in the MVP conversation a year ago, but the game's best point guard is back again.

For Bryant, this season is no longer about resurrecting his reputation. The NBA Finals run, the MVP, the gold medal, were his redemptive route. As Paul and James and Dwyane Wade jockey, the 30-year-old Bryant has completed a transformation from petulant superstar to enlightened elder. After an Olympics in which his performance, sunny disposition and, yes, private manipulations, regenerated his global image, Bryant has found a true second act in his career.

Across the summer, Bryant's desire to use the Games for their transformative powers wasn't lost on his USA Basketball teammates. Most days, it was pure entertainment for them. For instance, they found it curious that he would go his own way most mornings on the pre-Olympic tour of Macau and Shanghai, even when a teammate would arrange for a team breakfast before practice. They would ask him where he had been, and he'd tell them, well, I was working out, lifting, running, whatever. And a lot of times, it was true.

Once the flight touched down in Beijing, they found interesting the way that he started to throw his arms around his teammates like he was just one of the guys on the trip. And with the way that Bryant's popularity inspired pure chaos in public appearances in Beijing, they never noted much reluctance to create those images of hysteria for the television cameras and photo lenses.

Bryant once arrived late for a women's basketball game where several of his teammates were sitting near the floor with security surrounding them. A private athletes-only entrance had been arranged for them to enter, so they wouldn't have to march through the stands and create a scene. Well, Kobe wanted no part of it. He marched through the stands, which made security have to create a wall to surround him.

Nothing nasty, just deliberate. Just Kobe. And why did he fly home commercial on the same day that there was a team charter taking most of the players back to the States? Who knows. That's just Kobe. Ultimately, they all knew his importance to the team, and they all knew what he gave them on the floor. He could be the most competitive athlete on the planet, and, well, no one dared suggest that they would've won this gold medal without him.

Now, Bryant is chasing a championship with the specter of a contract opt-out this summer. Already, a source close to his camp says that European powers have reached out quietly to his representation and set baselines for a possible free-agent contract. Offers of $30 million a year in Greece and Italy promise to be on the table, and, says one associate, "I guarantee whatever happens that Kobe will take that whole European thing down to the wire before he re-signs with the Lakers."

That's how it goes with Kobe Bryant. The basketball world belongs to him again and he's going to take a nice, slow walk through and let the love wash over him. Resistance is forever futile.

That bastard...OJ Mayo would never do *!@# like that.
 
Originally Posted by dreClark

Kobe is just a %*#*#+% weirdo.
It amazes me how some people actually just like the guys persona and have him as their favorite player (not based on his game)
 
Interesting article.

To be honest, I've been somewhat fascinated by the off-court Kobe for quite a few years now. To call him a weirdo as dreClark said is oversimplifying it,but I'm consistently intrigued by not so much what makes him tick, but just how he ticks. For an athlete of such a high caliber, it's sometimespainful how acutely aware he is of how he is perceived, and the things he does to try and shape his image and (ultimtely) legacy.
 
Of course he is aware of how he is perceived. People write dumb #%% articles like this and dumb #%% fans eat it up.
 
Why is everybody mad he is not "team" type dude?
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Kobe is aloner, that article shows you what loners do in public.
 
Originally Posted by KB8sandiego

What is this #16? or did we just freaking lose count now?


i know right where sohi at?...this adrian is a kobe hater, so who cares what he says...but you guys dont know kobe needed that security man, i mean the minutehe stepped in china, the guy was surrounded by crazy kobe fans and i mean crazy kobe fans his popuLarity is crazy over there dont you think one of them can beover obsessed fan who can be a staLker of some sort...i mean if the captain of your pLane stops you from getting off the pLane so he can get an autograph thatscrazy man
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id trip out if i was kobe and get heated after a 14 hr fLight
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...who cares what he does off the court its about what he does on thecourt
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...and about that getting cp3 to move over so he can shoot thetechs, hey maybe thats what coach k wanted i mean he Leads by exampLe he Led them to the goLd but kobe has his reasons who cares get over it
 
Originally Posted by hugebird

Of course he is aware of how he is perceived. People write dumb #%% articles like this and dumb #%% fans eat it up.

yep...that's why more than half of these espn/yahoo articles are trash....this guy adrian wonjinowksi is the WORST writer, i've seen him write abouthow a player has fallen off, and then a week later say he's the best player in the league and should be in the hall of fame...he's a gossip columnistthat doesn't give any insight
 
They would ask him where he had been, and he'd tell them, well, I was working out, lifting, running, whatever. And a lot of times, it was true.


Since when is training a bad thing?


 
Thats Kobe. Of course he's weird. IMO, ever since the Denver situation, dude has tried to be so cautious about everything he does or says.

I think the fact that hes different than his teammates or colleagues contributes a great amount to how much hate he gets from the media.
 
I think he tries to 'normal-fy' himself too much. Its clear he's not just "one of the guys", he's in his own little world. Which isgood, we need diversity. But why try to hide it. I hope he goes out on some Dennis Rodman or Mike Tyson %*% and just lets the world know he is who he is andthats just the way its going to be...
 
This is OLD news. Kobe has been this way since he first stepped into the league. It's just the kind of person he is. He likes to be alone.

I respect his game, but I don't respect him as a teammate/person.
 
Originally Posted by nycknicks105

This is OLD news. Kobe has been this way since he first stepped into the league. It's just the kind of person he is. He likes to be alone.

I respect his game, but I don't respect him as a teammate/person.


It's always lonely at the top...
 
Originally Posted by Fede DPT

They would ask him where he had been, and he'd tell them, well, I was working out, lifting, running, whatever. And a lot of times, it was true.


Since when is training a bad thing?





co-sign...who cares what he does in his own time he has his reasons prob something for nike or something maybe an appearance at a chinese station i dontknow and no one knows so who cares, he can work out anytime who cares...its his business he doesnt have to be with the team everytime just as Long he shows upon the court and does what hes supposed to do...its not an issue
 
I respect his game, but I don't respect him as a teammate/person.


As a spectator the only thing someone can do is respect his game. Unless they are his teammate or friend/acquaintance, I don't see how anyone can make theassessment that he is or isn't a respectable person on just articles and hearsay. But that's just how I see things.
 
Originally Posted by Fede DPT

They would ask him where he had been, and he'd tell them, well, I was working out, lifting, running, whatever. And a lot of times, it was true.


Since when is training a bad thing?





you know what i'm saying? thank god he's out there trying to get better, or else that gold medal game would have been even closer.

and kobe is a man of the people. he was taking the tours, walks through the crowds, and he flew commercial. most people ovoid the public all together.
 
While I agree with what most of everyone is saying...I think a good point behind the obvious hate in the article is that he only wanted to be "one of theguys" and show commraderie when the cameras were rolling. Nothing wrong with being a "loner". In that regard he reminds me of myself. I'drather be alone most of the time and I keep a really tight circle of people around me on most occasions...but you won't catch me in the club poppin bottleswith my arms around people like they're that close when they really aren't. I don't play both sides of the fence. I would say because of howhe's been perceived since his earlier days with Shaq and the Colorado incident...he seems to be trying to "pretend" to be this guy that everyonewants him to be instead of just being himself.
 
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