I watched the Lakers vs. Suns first round playoff series
faithfully and thought it was one of the best first round matchups in
recent history. I was extra interested given that I used to play
for the Lakers and since two of my high school teammates played college
basketball with Steve Nash at Santa Clara University. Kevin Dunne
and Randy Winn were seniors when I was a sophomore at San Ramon Valley
High School. The next year I watched them a lot at Santa Clara
where along with Steve Nash they all helped Santa Clara's team to
several years of greatness and some amazing upsets. I would have
never thought at that time that I was watching one of the greatest
point guards who would ever play in the NBA. It is amazing what
hard work and perserverance can do and how Steve Nash's passing and
shooting ability has changed the fortunes of an entire NBA
franchise.
It was also great to see a couple of old friends play for the
Lakers. Notably, it was a lot of fun to watch Kobe Bryant, Devean
George, and Luke Walton make big plays for the Lakers and almost pull
off a huge first round upset. Kobe Bryant never ceases to amaze
me. Amost everywhere I go, people ask me what it was like to play
with Kobe Bryant. Random people I have never met ask me the
question. I thought that now would be a good time to talk about
my interactions with Kobe on and off the court. When I first got
to LA, I
remember meeting Kobe in the training room. Kobe was there with
his personal trainer and the first thing I thought in my mind is "Wow,
Kobe must really be 6'7"!" You never really know how tall
people are until you're next to them. Shaq is definitely 7'1" and
Kevin Garnett is definitely taller than 6'11". Kobe is easily
6'7" and it's crazy because I play center in the NBA sometimes and I'm
about 6'8" and Kobe can play point guard and he's basically the same
height. The first year I was there, I can't tell you how many
times I came into the game and Kobe tried to get me a dunk or a wide
open layup to help me build some confidence. One time after a
tough game at Memphis he invited me to meet up with him and his high
school buddy for a steak dinner. Another time he stayed
around after a game to meet up with the ten year old daughter of a
buddy of
mine for an autograph and a photo. Still another time when I was
upset about a certain on-court team issue, Kobe took the time to listen
to everything I was going through and tried to help the
situation. Kobe Bryant went out of his way a lot when I was just
figuring out what it was like to play in the NBA.
I felt badly after the game 7
loss that some members of the media tried to criticize Kobe for not
shooting enough in the loss to the Suns.
It's extra interesting to me, because I watched that game very closely
and analyzed the Suns' defensive schemes against Kobe. In the
first half it seemed like Suns threw a "soft double team" at Kobe
whereas in the second half they trapped Kobe aggresively with two men
and forced him to throw the ball out of the double team. I
actually thought that Kobe was doing a good job of trying to hit his
open teammates but their shots weren't falling. I guess if you
are Kobe Bryant
and you get 81 points you get criticized for shooting too much and if
you only score 20-25 points then people say you are not shooting
enough. I
thoroughly enjoyed the series and watching my old teammate Kobe play so
well. I think that the Lakers are back on the map. I hope I
get to see Deaven George this summer in Minnesota and maybe I'll see
Luke Walton at some Pac-10 reunion. (We never really had the
Answer for Arizona basketball when I was at Stanford). At any
rate, I still hope we go 4-0 against the Lakers next season and 4-0
against the Suns.