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http://www.nba.com/2010/n...2/kobe.legacy/index.html
Did you know that Tim Duncan -- the man that many consider the bestplayer of the 2000s and the greatest power forward of all time --averaged just 15 points a game in Games 3 and 4 of the 2005 Finals on10-for-32 shooting? In the decisive Game 7, he went 10-for-27.
Doyou remember that or do you remember that he won Finals MVP and histhird ring? Do you remember that Duncan also went a combined 10-of-32in the last two games of the 2007 Finals or do you remember that it washis fourth ring?
What about the deity that is Michael Jordan? In 1998 we remember thethree-peat and the game-winner in Game 6. We have forgotten, however,that in Game 5, at home with a chance to close out the Jazz, MJ shot9-of-26, with four turnovers. We also don't remember that in theprevious series against the Pacers, Jordan was just 9-for-25 in Game 7.We remember only the Bulls won and advanced to the Finals.
Do we remember that Jordan was 5-of-19, with five turnovers, in thedecisive Game 6 of the 1996 Finals? Nope. We remember that the Bullswon the championship, despite MJ's performance.
Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain, JerryWest -- we can do this for just about every "greatest of the greats" inNBA history. Throughout their careers there will be pivotal games inwhich great players played, uncharacteristically, like hot garbage. Inthe end, we rightfully remember the ultimate triumph.
I bring this up because of the ridiculous reaction to Kobe Bryant'sGame 7 where he shot 25 percent and turned the ball over four times.For most of the game, scathing criticism was warranted. I even tweetedthat he was playing like Ruben Patterson.
But once the end-of-game buzzer sounded and Kobe had won his fifthring, the pile-on continued, with some going so far as to say his Game7 performance tainted his fifth ring and, thus, his legacy -- as ifwe'd look back on his career and put an asterisk by this one. That'soutrageous. It's primarily outrageous because the Lakers won thechampionship, primarily because of Kobe's 23-game performance that wasquintessentially MVP. It's also outrageous because history shows usthat, as humans and sports fans, time dulls the details. We rememberJerry West as "The Logo," not the loser of eight of nine Finals series.
Of course, we tend to play by different rules with Kobe.
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