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For
the Lakers' Gasol, the weight is gone
The Lakers center's 36-point, 16-rebound, eight-assist
performance against the Nuggets lifts the burden
of never having won a playoff game.
He
is standing in the Staples Center tunnel, waiting
to step inside the interview room, a giant wet
mop with this dorky, delightful smile, and you
just have to ask him.
"It's
the monkey, isn't it?" you say.
What?"
says Pau Gasol.
"You
got the monkey off your back, didn't you?"
you say.
"Oh
man, it was more than a monkey," Gasol says.
"It was huge. It was a burden. It followed
me everywhere."
He
pauses.
"It
was more like an orangutan," he says. "I
got the orangutan off my back."
One
of the NBA's best players to never win a playoff
game indeed looked about 200 pounds lighter Sunday,
the longest Laker flitting through the Denver
Nuggets' defense on the wings of taps and tips
and tosses.
With
his frumpy hair and delicate gait, sometimes he
looked like a bird. With his long thin arms spread
wide, other times he looked like a plane.
In
the end, though, he looked like Super You-Know-Who,
scoring 36 points with 16 rebounds to lead the
Lakers to a 128-114 victory over the Nuggets in
their first-round playoff opener.
"I
had a blast out there," said Gasol after
leaving a building full of roaring fans who agreed
with him.
It
was a day of class, with Rick Fox bringing out
the ball to start the game.
It
was a day of crass, with some Lakers fans chanting,
"D-U-I" when Carmelo Anthony shot his
first free throws.
It
was a day of sass, with Coach Phil Jackson, during
pregame interviews, impulsively calling out Shaquille
O'Neal for never getting his proper sleep during
the playoffs.
But
mostly, it was a day of Gas.
"As
hard as it was for me to have that burden of never
winning a playoff game, I think it made me who
I am," Gasol says.
Oh
yeah, the burden. Before Sunday, in his six previous
professional seasons, all with the Memphis Grizzlies,
Gasol's teams have gone 0 for 12 in playoff games.
He
was their leader, so it was on him. He was labeled
soft, he was described as indifferent, his career
was going nowhere when he was sent here in the
already-legendary deal on Feb. 1.
"He
was languishing," said Coach Phil Jackson.
As
of Sunday, officially, he's flourishing.
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