Skip to main content
One of the things I like about sports is the way you can delude yourself into believing that somehow your life is connected to what is going on in a game. There's direct ways like fantasy sports and gambling and more subtle ways like refering to your team as "we", but there is also the glory of the sports opinion. Everyone has an opinion about sports and why not, it is just a bunch of games played by grown men. It's not life and death (unless you're talking about the crazy fans of World Cup soccer) and there are rarely important moral principles involved, so why not spout off about it.Even better, by making bold and brash predictions you can actually begin to believe the lie that the outcome of a game or success of a player is somehow connected to you. If you said this team will win and they do, you get to strut around as if their victory was somehow influenced by your prediction. And no matter how much you know deep down that this is all silliness, there's nothing quite like the feeling of being right and everyone knowing.

Then again, I also yell at my TV during games, so take all this with a large grain of salt.

Perhaps a whole bag of salt.

Anyway, all of that is just preamble to say how nice it was that Kobe Bryant did me the service of proving me right during tonight's game 6 against Phoenix. I've said for years that Kobe is not a great player (even though he could be), but rather a great scorer because great players make their teamates better and therefore more readily accomplish the primary goal...to win. Kobe scores a lot which means he wins sometimes, but that doesn't make him great. Then something strange happened when the playoffs started. Kobe turned himself into the Jordan clone everyone so ludicrously lables him. He actually started making those around him better. He shot (gasp) less!!! Guys like Walton and Odom started actually being allowed to play to their potential. And surprise, surprise, the Lakers actually got better. Shocking.

But I knew Kobe couldn't keep it going. It is just too contrary to his nature. When things got tight he would panic, forget his coach's 500 rings and try to take over the game himself. And that's exactly what he did tonight. And, of course, the Lakers lost. People who don't know basketball will look at his 50 points and call him spectacular and lament his bad supporting cast. But the ones who know will see that this was nothing more than a selfish player playing the wrong way and making his team pay the price.Now maybe Kobe will go back to playing team ball on Saturday and lead the Lakers to victory.

I am certain the Suns are hoping he comes out to prove once and for all that he should have been MVP this season and tries to score 85. If he does, he might get his 85 and the Suns will win by 20. And that's why when you talk about MVP candidates, Kobe didn't even belong in the discussion. Certainly not with the likes of Nash, Lebron, Wade, Dirk, Billups and the other stars who realize the game is 5 on 5.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

10 things that will happen, not "might", "will."

With the season kicking off tonight, every where you look in the paper, on TV or on line people are making their predictions. Well, I’ve read enough, so now I need to share with you what’s really going to happen. These aren’t predictions, this just simple fact. Here are some of the things that will happen in football before Tuesday morning: 1. Deuce McAllister will post better numbers than Reggie Bush this week, but Bush will do something that will remind us all of Sanders and Vick. I see one of those 6 yard runs that takes 2 minutes where about 8 guys miss tackles. 2. The Niners will not be as bad as everyone predicts and the game against the Cardinals will be close 3. TO will have a big game and everyone will act like nothing ever happened and the Cowboys (especially the Tuna) are geniuses for signing him. In 3 weeks when he really melts down, the media will forget everything they said and act like Dallas is the stupidest franch
SOME PLAYOFF OBSERVATIONS I just took a welcomed brake from preparing for trial to watch the Miami v. Detroit game 3. Obviously this was a huge game for Miami and the next one is just as big, but I’m not chiming in to break down the game, but rather to offer a few observations about both the series going on right now. 1. Why do Antoine Walker’s coaches allow him to shoot so many 3s? If I were coaching him, I would tell him that if he ever shot a 3 that wasn’t wide, wide open or if his 3 to drive ratio fell below 5-1, he would sit the bench. Walker is an incredibly talented player and when he attacks the rim both he and the Heat are a much, much, much better team. When you play defense like a matador, you better do more than just miss a bunch of 3s on the other end. He was great tonight just because he took the ball in. It’s not complicated, so why is it so inconsistent? 2. What happened to Gary Payton? He was one of my favorite players for years and years after leaving OSU and playing
Here are my sports thoughts for today. 1. The scene here in Portland related to the NBA draft is driving me crazy. Even if you don’t live in Portland, you may have heard about the “draft the stache” campaign aimed at convincing the Blazers that not a single person will attend their games or buy their merchandise unless they wager the entire future of the franchise on Adam Morrison. If the Blazers trade a valuable asset to trade up and get Morrison with the first pick, I’m going to launch an immediate investigation to determine whether Isaiah Thomas has secretly taken over the Blazers. The Blazers have, for a while now, been about the worst run franchise in sports with the exception of the Knicks and maybe the Hawks, but that would be a new low. If you’ve read this blog before you know I don’t hate Adam Morrison. In fact, he was by far my favorite player and I would not shut up about him at the beginning of the season to anyone who would listen. He was a sensationa