LakerHoops
Lakers Troubles are Nothing New PDF Print E-mail
Written by Gino   
Friday, 12 March 2010 14:55

When you love a sport, a team or a player and you follow accordingly, it’s easy to

over-dramatize the commonplace trials and tribulations of a marathon-long season.

The media will cover every minor tremor in the “expert analyst-ordained” path of a

Championship contender, and when you really stop to think about it, the more “minor”

the problem, the more coverage it will get.


Take for example Boston’s regular season fall from grace, which hardly draws the same

attention these days as the Lakers recent 3-game loosing streak. Boston’s season-long lackluster

play has become standard at this point in the mind of the NBA nation, while the Lakers poor

play, associated only with a recent 3 game stretch, is a shock of cold water people can’t dodge.

Is this the reality of things?


I’m thinking…NOT.

 

In fact, I think it may just be the exact opposite. The Lakers “troubles” aren’t any more news

than their troubles the entire season, and Boston’s continued poor play should be a shocker

considering their talent and the expectations on their team. The fact Boston has yet to right the

ship is a NEWS story.

 

The thing is, we all focus daily on the numbers: loosing streaks, winning streaks, “last 10”,

Conference ranking, games behind, etc. This gives us something tangible to associate “news”

with and I’m saying it’s probably all wrong.

 

Sometimes you just have to distance yourself. Sure yet another “number” to throw out there is

“3” for the Lakers longest loosing streak since 2006, but it could’ve easily been 4 and many of the

2 game loosing streaks over the past 3 years could have easily been 3 games. When it comes to

analyzing purely numbers, there is often a lack of depth.

 

How’s the team really been playing? Well they’ve been playing poor, uneven, uninspired basketball,

but outside of a handful of stretches this year, could anyone with two senses about them argue

otherwise?


And in Boston’s case, have they really reached a point where no one expects anything else? Or is it

just the lack of media attention that allows us to conclude such? A lack of media attention that seems

to correspond positively with a holding pattern of wins verses loses in their season. Once they break

the cycle of 4 seed-worthy Eastern Conference play, for better or worse, there will be a story. This is

wrong!

 

Every year, a team is going to endue much. Some teams are going to endure more than others due

to injuries and other factors, but the season is going to have a certain ebb and flow and the ultimate

determination of a teams success lies not in how well they dodge regular season struggles and they

overall record, but where they are when it’s all said and done.

 

There’s a bit of road to travel yet and none of us know the stories that have yet to unfold…Okalahoma

City realizing their age and falling from playoff contention? Boston putting together that rock solid

defense that defines them and becoming, once again virtually unbeatable, Sasha Vujacic going on a

historic 3-point binge and leading the lakers to a 17-0 record down the stretch?

 

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 07 April 2010 21:28
 
Kobe Doin' "TOO MUCH" Work PDF Print E-mail
Written by Gino   
Wednesday, 10 February 2010 23:28

Every team needs a leader. The best leaders rise to the top because of a subtle combination of the most impressive overall abilities. MJ and Bird and Magic and Tim Duncan were able to win multiple championships and sustain greatness over time because they tirelessly mulled over perfection in every central aspect of the game. They diversified their game as their careers progressed, they became mentally 'tougher, and perhaps most importantly, they found a way to remain on the floor when it mattered most. They did this by accepting less than perfection during the season, by being humbled in the face of injury and embracing the ebb and flow of their team’s growth, sacrificing personal achievements like stats and streaks and records to prime themselves to win and NBA Championship.

 

Like the past greats, Kobe Bryant has an iron will. At times it can be his biggest flaw. As he obsesses over personal perfection and accepts nothing less day in and day out, he sometimes loses sight of what he set out to do in greatness.

 

The reality is that like the aforementioned players, Kobe’s massive ego is matched by his competitive will, and the two forces working in unison result in the best player the game has to offer. Once again this is true because Kobe always seems to be around when it counts. If he were not, the outcomes would be different and history would not be etched and he would fade from our memories in the discussion of “The Best.”

 

At this stage of his career, even with arguably the most talented team in the NBA, Kobe knows the importance of staying on the floor. He’s the leader of his team…he’s the best player on his team…and he needs to help them in any way he can. But he needs to embrace this fuller and deeper.

 

Until the Portland game the other night, he played in 235 consecutive games. I don’t know the real truth of “who” or “what” eventually got through to Kobe (maybe, hopefully it was Kobe himself), but I only have to say one thing: IT’S ABOUT FREAKING TIME!

 

 

Kobe’s Achilles heal is his tendency to take challenges, struggles, tasks – standards he sets for himself – too personally. He seems to focus down too hard on the personal challenge and forget just what he initially set out to do, which invariably is to win... to be the last man standing. He needs to pace himself. Sure he needs to be on the floor often for the Lakers to win a high enough percentage of games to solidify a number 1 seed in the West, but you can only obsess about this to a certain degree. At some point you have to cut your losses and rest your injuries. Thank God he did. I was beginning to get really annoyed. For years now, it’s this attitude that at times has hurt the Lakers more than helped them.

 

Sometimes, Kobe, you gotta just give it up.

 

The Lakers have responded…winning their last 2 games against quality teams in convincing fashion.

 

I’m not saying he should continue to sit out and rest. I’m not saying he needs to miss games. I’m simply saying that when he is obviously the central focus of all the Lakers do on the court, there needs to be some predictability to what he can offer. His laundry list of nagging injuries, paired with the inconsistency of how he deals with them day in and day out, has created an uneven overall team performance for the Lakers.

 

Case-in-point: he needs a better game plan. Kobe could benefit from this so-called “cutting of his losses” from time to time, and truthfully he struggles with it. Reassuring is the fact that we see him struggling with it. Other “Great” players in the game today aren’t at the same level in my opinion.

 

Lebron James is a fierce man child…and will be the most gifted and impressive player the game has ever seen if he is not unanimously so already, but he has yet to show the world the same sick obsession with accepting the challenge of doing whatever it takes to win. He may be fooling some people by walking off the court noticeably distressed after loosing to Boston and Orlando in the playoffs in consecutive years, but it’s his childish petulance of not hi-fiving the opposing team that excludes him from the elite of the elite. He continues to back this up as he eats French fries from the hands of the opposing teams fans during games, hi-fives the Madison Square Garden front-row patrons as a possible preamble to what might be a regular (acceptable) occurrence next season and performs victory dances with his bench-mates with 8 minutes left and 25-point lead. How does any of this translate to someone who has his mind focused on greatness in a team sport?

 

Kevin Garnet is intense. He’s the most intense. It’s something to marvel at, but his intensity does no good if he’s not on the court, and the Boston Celtics winning percentage reflects this. Last season, including the post-season, the Celtics went 25-14 without Garnet (64%), as opposed to a 44-13 record (77%) with Garnet. This season is no different; when Garnet went down they dropped 6 of 10 games. He is the reason they kicked some Laker butt in 2008!

 

The Lakers will need Kobe to accept the things he cannot change for the duration of this season if they are going to have him be around and affective come May and June. The last two games for me were a huge and crucial step. Let’s hope for more humble offerings in the constant pursuit of basketball perfection from number 24.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 07 April 2010 21:32