blingblingbosh said:
Without Kobe this year, Lakers would have learned to play as a team, not players filling in the slots for Kobe. You would have seen increased (not rapid) development of their young guns including Vujacic who stepped it up in the playoffs.
Instead, it was Kobe Time (to the enjoyment of Black Star). Kobe trying to be the hero and try to match up to his buddy Shaq, who does have a regular season MVP and 3 Finals MVPs. Kobe is jealous of Shaq's individual success as ''the guy'' during their 3 titles and has looked like a fool when Shaq demanded a trade,(not to mention the rape charges and contract negotiations) and recently on TNT while in studio commenting on Barkley's selfish remarks and the #24 jersey change.
As for Nash, he will probably have to win 3 more MVPs in a row to get half of the respect some lesser-talented players receive. Mr. MVP is a team player who respects the game for what it is, a team sport and can see the court as good as anyone in the league. He might not be the first pick in a fantasy draft or pick-up game, but he definitely makes players around him better (Boris Diaw to name one):bowdown:
Sure Bryant's stats were unbelieveable this year I'm not gonna knock him for that. But Game 7 showed Kobe's true colors, a POMPOUS, ARROGANT INDIVIDUAL.:ban: throw up a few more times Black Star, it might help open your eyes
I disagree.
Without Kobe, the Lakers would have finished with one of the worst records in the NBA. And this whole theory that players would've developed better without him is bullshit. That's because the other Lakers are simply a collection of players that are meant to surround one main focal point!
Besides Lamar Odom(on occasion), no other Laker can create their own shot. They depended this year on the wide-open looks they got from Kobe collapsing and sucking in the D. Without him, the Lakers would've had to shot contested shots all year, unless Lamar somehow became the "next Magic" that people were predicting when he was drafted...or if Kwame suddenly channelled Shaq. Both are HIGHLY unlikely. Vujacic may have developed more, but it wouldn't have meant squat for the season.
And honestly, trading Shaq wasn't a half bad idea. I mean, let's face it, Shaq is a great guy and top 10 player of all-time, but he's on a major downslide. So what did the Heat do? Sign him to a $100 million contract, and essentially paralyze themselves in the cap department for the next 5 years. The Heat will only get worse, and are basically the Mavs from a few years ago, who ironically also had Antoine Walker. The problem with trading Shaq is that they didn't really get much in terms of the draft, which is where the Lakers will get the most help.
Hate him or love him, Kobe is a player willing to be the hero or the goat, which is something I can respect. As for the rape thing, the fact that he's still getting flack about that is ridiculous, IMO.
And by no means does Steve Nash suck, he is clearly the best PG in the L. He just doesn't measure up to either Kobe or LeBron in terms of MVPness. He gets entirely too much credit for players recording career highs in points.
The reason players score so much in Phoenix is partly Nash, but also partly D'Antoni's run-n-gun free flowing system. It encourages lots of fast breaks and jumpshots, because they essentially have no post players with the absence of Amare and Kurt Thomas. The bottom line is, if you can't get an assist on the Suns, you can't get one anywhere.
Boris Diaw is one player that I think benefited as much from simple playing time as from the abilities of Nash. He was the definition of under-utilized in Atlanta, and Phoenix was the fresh start he needed. Just getting confidence in himself helped a lot in his growth.
Not to forget Nash also has the help of perennial DPOY candidate Shawn Marion. He's a pretty good target to have running the fast break with you. Essentially, the Suns are a team of talented players who just all needed to find each other to make it work.
And what Game 7 showed was the paradox Kobe is permanently stuck in. If he scores too much, he's a ballhog. If he passes too much, then he's a pussy. So what did he do? He scored the 1st half, and tryed to get his teammates involved when it mattered most. The other Lakers simply just didn't make baskets.
You know what else will make me throw up? If one more person jumps off the Nash for MVP bandwagon and onto LeBron's because he's helped push the "unstoppable" Pistons to a Game 7.
:2 cents: