Kobe Bryant

During today’s game between the Lakers and Raptors, Jose Calderon and Kobe Bryant just kept going back and forth with each other. Calderon finished with 30 points while Bryant had 27. However, Calderon couldn’t top what Kobe did at the end, as Bryant hit a game-winner for the Lakers to slip by Toronto, 94-92.

Down 92-91, Bryant hit a fadeway from the corner to give Los Angeles a 93-92 lead with four seconds left. From there, it was game over.

Take a look at the Black Mamba striking once again:

Bryant is just too good, I swear.
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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After struggling in Turkey, Allen Iverson has said he wanted to make a comeback to the NBA during when the lockout was going on. With the Los Angeles Lakers reportedly having interest in Gilbert Arenas, it appears they could also have interest in A.I.’s services as well.

Iverson is still unsigned and it doesn’t seem much teams want the 36-year-old point guard. Recently, Sportando.net reported that several teams from overseas were having interest in him, but could the Lakers also have interest in Iverson?

Let’s face it: the current core of their point guards don’t look so good. Derek Fisher is old and basically gets his ankles broken every game. And Steve Blake — well, that isn’t much help either. Both were tortured when they met Jeremy Lin at Madison Square Garden, as he put up 38 points! Iverson is still fast, even for his age, and I can see him being an upgrade for the Lakers already over their original point guards.

Stephen A. Smith reported that the Lakers actually may be sign him:

“…the Lakers had some interest in (Iverson) as long as he was willing to go to the NBA Developmental League for a few weeks first.”

Obviously, Iverson would take this chance. He probably wouldn’t mind now going to the D-League and then head on to play for LA. However, Smith says that Iverson is not the answer for the club and it looks like it could be unlikely.

As I see it, I think the Lakers will try lobbying for Gilbert Arenas first, as he is younger and probably more mobile than Iverson currently is in his state. Kobe Bryant said he even wanted him. Arenas is 30 years old and it looks like he’d fit much better in Mike Brown’s system than A.I.

However, don’t rule out Iverson. If the Lakers can’t get Arenas, or just don’t want him, expect them to go after A.I.

Would be interesting if that happened. What do you think? Would you take Gil or A.I., if you were the Lakers?

UPDATE: With Rafer Alston making his comeback to the NBA by joining the D-League D-Fenders, the Lakers could also have interest in him as well. Says Stephen A. Smith: “The Lakers are also said to be interested in Alston, who helped the Orlando Magic reach the NBA Finals in 2009. But who knows if that will materialize into anything?”
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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Rumor has it that the Los Angeles Lakers are interested in signing free-agent point guard, Gilbert Arenas. The Lakers could definitely use an upgrade at point guard over Steve Blake and Derek Fisher, especially after the two got burned by Jeremy Lin last night.

Actually, the whole season, they have been getting pummeled by opposing teams’ point guards. They are younger, more mobile, more athletic, and just flat-out better than the Lakers’ core of floor generals. Why else is Kobe continuing to do so much night-in and night-out?

After last night’s 92-85 loss, Bryant was reportedly trying to bring the former Magic guard. According to CBS’s Ken Berger, Bryant recently contacted Arenas to bring him. And I don’t blame him.

Most likely, Arenas will be signed to a pro veteran minimum contract. It’s good to see “Agent Zero” coming back. I haven’t seen him play in a long time and getting a new fresh start in Los Angeles is the perfect way to bounce back. What’s there to lose? You the got Black Mamba with you in the backcourt and two big guys to lob it to in Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol.

The 30-year-old has averaged 21 points and five assists for his career. He is coming off eleven points and four assists per game last season in Orlando. I think Los Angeles really needs to make this move. Fisher and Blake are not the answer. It’s time for a change and Arenas would be a huge benefit for this.

Make it happen, guys.
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the website, Hardcourt Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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The Jeremy Lin shows goes on as he leads the New York Knicks with 38 points in a victory over the Los Angeles Lakers! How long does this go on?!

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JRSportBrief (Archive/Feed)
JRSportBrief covers the latest sports news, game highlights, and athletes of professional sports. JR gives his opinions on all sports: Basketball, Baseball, Football, Hockey, Boxing, MMA and all the major leagues. Whether it’s the NBA Finals, the MLB World Series, or the NFL Superbowl, JRʼs got his own opinions and he wants to hear yours! New Episodes all week long.. Follow @JrSportBrief

JRSportBrief covers the latest sports news, game highlights, and athletes of professional sports. JR gives his opinions on all sports: Basketball, Baseball, Football, Hockey, Boxing, MMA and all the major leagues. Whether it’s the NBA Finals, the MLB World Series, or the NFL Superbowl, JRʼs got his own opinions and he wants to hear yours! New Episodes all week long.

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Kobe Bryant has passed Shaquille O’Neal for the fifth spot on the NBA All Time scoring list! Where do you think Kobe currently stands as one of the greatest players ever?

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JRSportBrief (Archive/Feed)
JRSportBrief covers the latest sports news, game highlights, and athletes of professional sports. JR gives his opinions on all sports: Basketball, Baseball, Football, Hockey, Boxing, MMA and all the major leagues. Whether it’s the NBA Finals, the MLB World Series, or the NFL Superbowl, JRʼs got his own opinions and he wants to hear yours! New Episodes all week long.. Follow @JrSportBrief

JRSportBrief covers the latest sports news, game highlights, and athletes of professional sports. JR gives his opinions on all sports: Basketball, Baseball, Football, Hockey, Boxing, MMA and all the major leagues. Whether it’s the NBA Finals, the MLB World Series, or the NFL Superbowl, JRʼs got his own opinions and he wants to hear yours! New Episodes all week long.

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Some say Kobe Bryant is headed toward the twilight of a brilliant NBA career. I can’t tell by the way he’s playing and putting the Los Angeles Lakers on his back this season. Bryant is showing those that are ready to hand the torch to LeBron, Wade, or Derrick Rose that he’s still capable of performing at a high level. Whether the Lakers will remain a high level team is a different story.

The Lakers have declined a bit this season. The bench is weak, Pau Gasol plays like he saw the ghost of Maurice Lucas, they’re looking for an upper echelon point guard, and are still looking to make a blockbuster trade. So if the Lakers happen to go down the tubes, there will be Kobe trade rumors. But Bryant vows to remain a Laker for life, no matter how bad things get. Bryant told ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith that he wouldn’t  leave L.A. to chase another title or chase additional rings.  

“Why would I want to go somewhere else, that ship sailed in (2007),” Bryant said. “If there was ever a time I was going to move to go play someplace else, that was it. I’m not going to jump ship to chase a sixth ring, it’s just not going to happen.


“It’s going to happen here or it’s not going to happen.”


“You think I’d hang around and average 18 points, 19 points… hell no.”


Translation: I’ll be the alpha dog in L.A. until i decide I want to retire and I’ll never go anywhere to be a role player.

I’ll give Bryant credit. He plans on being there for better or worse when most will leave a team to go chase titles.

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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
Follow on Twitter @justsports72

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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For playing for the Boston Celtics, it should be a habit that Larry Bird dislikes the Los Angeles Lakers. However, the now Indiana Pacers’ president of basketball operations says that if he had to play with one player today, it would be Kobe Bryant.

Bird was on Bill Simmons’ podcast today and had a few things to say on the topics of LeBron James and Kobe. Bird says that James is one of the greatest players to ever play the game and we should just enjoy watching him. He also said that James is the best player in the league right now, but he would not be the player to go in battle with for him.

That person would be the Black Mamba.

“Well, probably Kobe, because of the fact that … well, of course he wouldn’t have been shooting as much as he does now … but his desire to win, his dedication, to always get better, uh, and he’s just, he’s just tough,” Bird told Simmons. “He’s just a tough cat.

“But, if you want to have fun, like I did with Bill Walton, play with LeBron. It would have probably been more fun to play with LeBron, but if you want to win and win and win, it’s Kobe. Not that LeBron’s not a winner, just that [Kobe's] mindset is to go into every practice, every game, to get better.”

There’s no question Bird, a three-time champion, would pick Kobe. He’s arguably the greatest Laker to ever play with his five rings, and recently passing Shaq for fifth all-time on the NBA’s scoring list. I mean, I would too. Bryant has more of that winning mentality in him.

Who would you pick? Kobe or LBJ?
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the website, Hardcourt Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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LeBron 1, Kobe 0.

This is the score so far of the series this season between LeBron James and Kobe Bryant, as the King won round one of the most anticipating match-ups of the NBA season. For every NBA fan, watching the Heat and Lakers is a must.

Just like last night.

It was a thrilling game, but the Miami Heat were able to come out on top led by James’ 31 points, eight rebounds, and eight assists as they cruised towards a 98-87 victory to drop the Lakers to 10-6. Miami improves to 10-4.

For Kobe Bryant, things weren’t looking too good for him. After his 40-point streak came to an end, the Black Mamba has still been shooting. Only this time, he has been missing. After a 14-point showing against the Mavericks, Kobe still shot and was able to get 24 points; however, though, he was eight-of-21 overall.

Tonight clearly showed James was the better player. LeBron hit a pair of three’s and was just unstoppable. Oh, and not to mention, he did in fact had a flu as well. At one stretch, James and the Heat were just rolling. Kobe tried responding with a long jumper, only to result in a miss. It was competitive, but James really got to Kobe.

LeBron put the icing on the cake in the second quarter. With Kobe all on him, James made a sick pass to Shane Battier on the corner, who was able to make the three-pointer. Before Shane even shot, LeBron ran back to the other side of the court, putting up the three-point symbol with his hand. He knew he was going to make it, and he got to Kobe.

Chris Bosh did have 15 points, along with eight rebounds, but it was mostly James who did everything.

“A chest cold can get to you at times,” James said. “But I felt like I could help the team.”

And he did, almost earning himself a triple-double. Shane Battier and Mario Chalmers helped out a lot, scoring eleven points and ten points respectively.

One of my favorite moments of the game was when Eddy Curry checked in, his first time appearing in an NBA game since December 17th, 2009! In his first minute, Curry scored and also got a rebound. He ended up with six points and three rebounds. Honestly, people can make fun of him all they want, but to quote Brian Windhorst, him pushing 400 pounds and losing a bunch of weight and finally scoring in an NBA game after two years is truly remarkable. It’s amazing how far he has come.

Speaking of jokes, LeBron added to his 75 cents, finally coming up in the fourth quarter this season. It’s about time he finally earned his dollar. And did I mention that the Heat have been doing all of this WITHOUT Dwyane Wade?

“We don’t take his talent for granted, nor do we take Dwyane’s talent or Chris’ talent,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “They’re special players and they can rise to the occasion.”

The Lakers looked as if they would come back. Kobe would hit a jumper to put the deficit down to twelve. After that, he stole the ball and took it back for a fastbreak point to cut it to ten. But after that, it was over as the Lakers couldn’t come back, despite Bryant’s strong fourth-quarter performance with 14 points.

“We tried to adjust to some things,” said Bryant. “We might want to go back to some of the things that we were doing a few weeks ago in terms of me being on some spots on the floor and things where I’m most comfortable.”

After the fastbreak point by Kobe, Derek Fisher would miss the three, recovered by Udonis Haslem for the rebound. After that, LeBron James sealed the game with a 15-footer.

“They were the aggressors on both ends of the floor until the last few minutes of the game,” Lakers coach Mike Brown said of the Heat. “We were aggressive the last six, seven minutes. You can’t go over a 48-minute game against a team like this and allow them to be the aggressor for most of the night.”

James was finally able to see his former coach, Mike Brown, after a couple of years when he and LeBron shared good times for six years when both were with the Cleveland Cavaliers. Before the game, LeBron and Brown had an embracing moment.

“I had a great time coaching LeBron,” Brown said. “I wouldn’t be in this suit if it wasn’t for him.”

Like their black-on-black uniforms, the Miami Heat were simply solid tonight.

Round one of Kobe vs. LeBron is now over. Round two is coming up.

Can Kobe get revenge?
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Written by Josh Dhani, Founder (Archive/RSS)

Josh has been writing since 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also writes at Hardcourt Mayhem and contributes to TrueHoop’s Eight Points Nine Seconds. Check him out on JoshDhani.com and follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

Josh has been writing since January 2009 and founded FootBasket in April 2009. He also owns the websites, Hardcourt Mayhem and Gridiron Mayhem. For a full bio, check out JoshDhani.com. Follow him on Twitter @JoshDhani

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The audience erupted in roars, primal screams that rattled the arena in South Beach and, when all the folks were seen in seas of black cheering on LeBron James, it was obvious he suddenly was the rising star on this night. It’s a glaring notion that we are witnesses of two megastars that occupy our own consciousness as we are brainwashed by those Nike advertisements.

If he wants to settle an overexposed debate, in the meantime, Kobe Bryant must outscore James in a star-studded duel, but he’s not focused on outshining his nemesis and too busy promoting the Kobesystem, another illuminati commercial to endorse his product. Unfortunately, nothing ever comes easy for Bryant, who finds himself in a debate even though he owns five rings – more than the average player in this generation. He’s not, however, the most likable player as some disbelievers prefer to applaud James when he give up his claim to all-time greatness, crowning him prematurely as if he wears a ring.

So now what? It was a hideous shooting night for Bryant, and then the Kobe Lakeshow wasn’t on its regularly scheduled program or never aired in Miami, where James grabbed all the attention and showboated as usual, settling for 31 points, eight rebounds, eight assists, four steals and three blocks to dominate the Lakers single-handedly. Maybe he doesn’t show it by his facial expressions – but he still, in his heart, hates losing to James.

The Lakers and Heat meeting in the NBA Finals?

It’s a possibility, a large possibility.

As much as the Lakers often lose to the Heat, Bryant normally becomes frustrated or petulant following a disappointing letdown on the national stage that centers two megastars, maybe even the greatest NBA entertainers in such a captivating show business – and cannot ever beat James to mute an endless Kobe vs. LeBron discussion. This 98-87 anticlimax on Thursday was a sign that the Lakers are still a work in progress, not equipped to strive for another title, seeking for an identity with new head coach Mike Brown and younger role players.

The evolution of this team couldn’t have been more than dire straits when the Lakers had no ferocity, no mental toughness, no heart or fight to slow down James. The night revolved around James, and there he was, flying past everyone in gold uniforms, while fighting flu-like symptoms. It means we’re seeing a sudden rise in James’ performance, putting on a show for fans in Miami and outplaying his childhood idol in every meeting to cap an NBA masterpiece almost like no other. It also means, on the flip side of things, that the Lakers are NOT competent or moxie to battle for the gleaming hardware, with many flaws to still fix within a fluctuant offense.

This promises to be an excruciating marathon of the Lakers’ erratic season, when the front office can relieve a tremendous amount of pressure off Bryant by trading Pau Gasol and Metta World Peace in exchange for Dwight Howard as the team can use another star player hungry enough and willing to team up with the Black Mamba and meet the challenge for the run at a title. It took an embarrassing loss to the Heat for the Lakers to determine certainly that their offense is inconsistent, weakened and soft.

It’s one thing to assume the Lakers are vehement, potent and built with the most talent in the NBA, which we began to discover weak spots as now would be a good time for resurrecting the frailty within a languid offense. But it’s another to witness them relapse already in such a young season because of injuries or either softness, to see a noteworthy pro basketball team in shambles that has become the hottest storyline.

The ending to this horror night in South Beach, where life for the Lakers turned pitch black as the weather forecast near the shores of Biscayne Bay called for strong winds from a wicked tropical storm, was frightful and painful as Kobe and his ineffective troops descended. That dreaded storm was James and the Heat. It’s usually a tough pill to swallow for Bryant, even more so when he loses to James over and over, unable to survive in a one-on-one duel as both players clash at center court, only to present an entertaining display on the NBA floor.

It hasn’t taken much to understand that Kobe and LeBron are the social fabric of basketball, an integral part of the economic and popularity in a growing enterprise, given that the NBA market is selling jerseys and tickets at most venues. It’s now easy to take in that James, in retrospect, doesn’t want to just fit in as an NBA star but also has the ambition to be a world-class athlete globally and market himself as an entrepreneur. Everyone knows when James and Bryant squares off — two of the NBA’s greatest — James always has the edge as his nemesis rashly backs down from the challenge, and so he continuously beats Bryant.

The Heat, for example, intimidated and terrified the Lakers to give us a clue on what they’ll be like the next few months, plainly not built for a championship run, suffering to make baskets and tighten up on defense, a number of troubles that has defaced L.A. for a long time. It’s almost foreshadowing to think that the Lakers are in a heap of trouble with this current roster, and refuse to entertain trade offers for Howard or another star player.

This was the moment for the Lakers to walk away with a victory against a championship-built team that was missing top guard Dwyane Wade because of an ankle injury. This was the moment for the Lakers to win without a healthy Miami Thrice unit on the floor that would have definitely presented more problems. It’s never good to see Chris Bosh, the tall, lanky inconsistent forward, cobbler the softest giant Andrew Bynum, who was blocked by James late in the game.

It’s never good to see James stealing a pass from Fisher, and running off in transition for a slam dunk that capped a 31-point performance. At the end of the game, Gasol rendered his emotions, covering his eyes and leaving the floor speechless. It’s apparent that a disconcerted Derek Fisher, sitting with two bags of ice on each knee while soaking his feet in a bucket after the game, is aging and closing in on his retirement to call it an accomplished career.

It’s apparent that Bryant is alone in acting as the aggressor and facilitator that provides not even enough energy or firmness to dominate at a high. The temptation to increasingly step up the intensity hasn’t been seen from the Lakers, a disengaged team with apathy and lethargy, struggling to find ways to win on the road where they are 1-5. If they have every desire to play for a championship, the Lakers must win in other territories and defeat decisive contenders, without losing to teams such as Chicago, Miami or the L.A. Clippers.

And so, as of now, the struggles continue.
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Written by Jonathan Mathis, Columnist (Archive/RSS)

An aspiring sports journalist, a sports columnist for three sports sites. Sports Judge is all sports. Follow @Jon9685

An aspiring sports journalist, a sports columnist for FootBasket, Gridiron Grit, Hardcourt Mayhem, and more. Sports Judge is all sports.

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The Los Angeles Clippers may have upstaged the Lakers last night, but as far as this season and beyond remains to be seen. Chris Paul had a good game against their co-tenants, scoring the 33 on 12-for-22 shooting from the field and six assists. Not bad in his first game against his L.A. counterparts.

You can count Kobe Bryant impressed with his performance.

“He’s a dog,” Kobe told reporters. “He’s going to fight to win, and not too many teams can deal with him.



“Chris Paul is really the only other guy in the league, other than Derrick Rose, who has also that competitive edge,” he continued.

A high compliment from someone who has that competitive fire in him at all times. The only player that had that edge like Kobe was Michael Jordan. There are others that like to win (Dwayne Wade, Kevin Garnett, LeBron James, Kevin Durant). But Kobe loathes losing.

I really haven’t paid attention to Paul in that vain, but you see it in Rose, albeit in a quiet way.
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Written by Chris Edwards, Reporter (Archive/RSS)

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.
Follow on Twitter @justsports72

I love to talk sports.Just a fan that blogs about what goes on in the world of sports. Everyone feel free to discuss their take on what’s going on.

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