Sedale Threatt wrote:Isn't he strung out on heroin?
Yeah he is on some kind of drugs
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milesfides wrote:No, I don't think Kobe was putting his head down and deciding to shoot his way to victory. He took the first couple of shots, but he wasn't jacking up threes. He got into the high post. No cutters. No movement.
He tried to force the action, he wasn't successful, but what else could he do? He was trying to be aggressive and get things going with a passive group of teammates.
I mean, ok, if somebody can give me a reasonable alternative, then fine. Kobe should have passed to Odom...then what? Offensive foul? Go into the post and get owned by Duncan? Take a perimeter shot?
Or should we try to establish Kwame against Duncan?
Or, gasp, Walton, who's clearly a liability right now.
Fish took 12 shots in 28 minutes, 3 above his average, and he was 4-12. Ice cold.
That was the lineup that Kobe was playing with. So please, considering that we're Laker fans and know our players, let's go ahead and bury kobe as a selfish idiot and propose an effective alternative strategy.
Oh I know, let's go back to what was working for us in the first half, like, putting in Turiaf, Farmar, and Sasha around Kobe.
I don't know, I guess Kobe is a schizo or a complete idiot. He's just selfish. He must have had the sudden desire to score 100 points after halftime.
zen_4_10 wrote:
As for Fish and the rest of the team...
You're on the road. Your momentum has been snatched away and you are playing the champs. Playing desperation mode after abanoning what was successful for you earlier is a recipe for failure. Eveyone began forcing shots and running around like chickens with heads cut off.
The flow was wiped awy within that first 3 - 4 minutes and that was a big part of our downfall.
milesfides wrote:
Well I disagree about Fish. He just missed shots tonight. It's not like he took a page out of Kobe's book and tried to shoot his way into the game. Shooting is Fish's game. Most of the time this season, he's on. Sometimes, like tonight, he was off.
Nothing that Kobe Bryant does (aside from creating open looks for Fish) affects Fish's mentality. He does what he does. Shoot the ball.
And I don't agree about our teammates panicking after Kobe took and missed a few shots. Because these are the usual suspects. Walton has been a liability for most of the year. He's just not right with that ankle. Odom has been a disappointment offensively, and he's had trouble playing off the ball for 3.5 years as a Laker. Kwame, do I have to say more?
This isn't about panicking, this is about a group of teammates who have demonstrated so far this season that they're not reliable offensive players. Whether Kobe is aggressive, passive, or whatever, these guys just have been disappointing (with the exception of Fisher, he was just off).
In vivid contrast, guys like Farmar, Sasha, Turiaf have been productive. These guys actually have offensive talent.
To me, it's just absolutely no surprise how the third quarter went. I guess if Kobe got hot, he would have made it a moot point, but I was wondering why Phil didn't bring back what gave us success when the Spurs cut into our lead. He let them take away their lead, and build their own.
Again, it takes two for an assist. One guy to create a shot, the other to finish.
That starting lineup just didn't have enough of the latter.
Again, I didn't see Kobe just gunning. He was getting into the high post. In the second half, guys like Farmar, Vujacic spot open, guys like Turiaf dove into the post.
Odom, Walton, Kwame, they just watch.
HarlemHeat37 wrote:GG guys..
a few comments from me as a Spurs fan..
-I didn't think the refs were as bad as a few people in this thread were saying..Kobe did get hacked a few times, but it wasn't anything that would have changed the game..calls that refs miss every game..BUT I do find it strange that KOBE doesn't get some of those calls..simply because I watched my Spurs play Lebron last week, and while they missed a few hacks against him too, he seems to get away with A LOT of **** that Kobe doesn't get away with..not to mention the 2 horrible calls for Lebron at the end that was partly the reason the Spurs lost(I don't blame the refs, we should have easily beat Cleveland)..
-I don't really know what to say about how Kobe played..I'm usually a Kobe hater as many of you know, but I've enjoyed his game a lot more this year with the emergence of Bynum and his supporting cast..he's playing some great team ball, while his team has been one of the best..
I don't know what to think about him being "selfish" in the 2nd half though..the shots he was taking weren't bad..the 1st two were very well played by Bowen and Duncan, so you can't blame Kobe for that..a lot of the credit should go to San Antonio's D in the 2nd half for making adjustments to Kobe..and none of the other players stepped up exactly..so not really Kobe's fault..
-I like Turiaf's game..I think he could be a starter in the NBA for a long time as his maturity keeps involving and his game evolves..nice energy..played good D..good finisher..
-Lamar Odom is an embarrassment though..I remember him in his Heat days, and while he wasn't great, he wasn't as bad as he is now..he isn't a bad player of course, but he is always ranked by his "potential"..I don't think that can be applied anymore..at first I didn't like how Finley was guarding him, and other smaller players..but as the quarter progressed, I was actually cheering for Odom to get the ball so he can turn it over![]()
-Luke Walton isn't bad, but I didn't even notice that he was on the floor at any time during this game..
zen_4_10 wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
We actually agree on on a lot of these points in general but the fact remains to call out and hold Kobe accountable as being a primary reason for a loss sometimes. Like you said - Kobe makes the shots, it's all good but I'll still say personally that while I'm watching, I'm still shaking my head saying "omg wtf was that" before I say "wow...nice shot" in those moments.
Sometimes Kobe saves you...sometimes he drags you down.
SashAlex wrote:Kobe 9 turnovers ?! Lamar 5 ?! Kobe with more tunrovers than the Spurs ! At least he was active, but Lamar is so passive almost all the time ? If I were Mitch, I'd do a trade straight away ! Now I really do understand that he's a "bit" overrated by the media. But Mitch has to use that in our favour and send Kwame + Lamar somewhere else getting some young talent and a huuge cap space !
milesfides wrote:zen_4_10 wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
We actually agree on on a lot of these points in general but the fact remains to call out and hold Kobe accountable as being a primary reason for a loss sometimes. Like you said - Kobe makes the shots, it's all good but I'll still say personally that while I'm watching, I'm still shaking my head saying "omg wtf was that" before I say "wow...nice shot" in those moments.
Sometimes Kobe saves you...sometimes he drags you down.
Haha, I see what you're saying, but I don't think I'm saying what you think I'm saying.
Those were tough shots by Kobe. But in my opinion, based on that lineup, those were the BEST shots. I just didn't see Odom or Kwame doing anything against Duncan. Fish was cold and Luke was forgettable.
Given the situation (Our coach has just keeled over and died and we can't make substitutions), what's the choice going to be?
Have those inept guys try to get more touches against one of the best defenses in the league, or should Kobe aggressively look for his own shot?
At that point, I roll the dice with Mamba. It's the same thing with a last second shot. Let's say Lamar was open for the three. Wide open. Let's say Kobe was contested. I want Kobe to take that three. True, it's a tough shot, but he can make it, and I'd rather have him take that tough shot than have Odom and Kwame and Luke keep challenging the Spurs' defense.
Because with Kobe, you always have that chance that he'll make any shot.
However, with Odom, Kwame, and Walton, it's pretty much guaranteed that they won't be able to overcome the Spurs defense.
I don't blame Kobe. I think it was the right decision to look more aggressively for his own shot, and if some feel that violates a basic basketball principle, I'd show you Lamar, Kwame, and Walton. Those three guys are walking violations of basic basketball principles right now.
milesfides wrote:A bit harsh. I just think guys like Fisher and Farmar have supplanted Odom as the 2nd scorer whenever they're on the floor.
milesfides wrote:Kwame: The guy is out of shape. Maybe it's because he shaved his head, but he looks overweight. He's just not as quick and agile as he was last year. It makes sense though, the guy is coming back from an injury. It's an excuse, but a valid one. He just doesn't look right. Even when he dunks, he can't get up off the floor.
milesfides wrote:I hate hypotheticals, but hopefully I'll be able to communicate what I'm trying to say.
The lineup of Fish, Kobe, Walton, Odom, and Kwame will lose against Parker, Manu, Finley, Bowen, and Duncan 9 out of 10 times. That's the hypothetical - I have no idea what the exact win/loss is with that lineup. But it's not very good. The plus/minuses must HEAVILY favor the Spurs lineup.
I say that because Fish is either hot/cold, Walton seems he's playing hurt, Odom is not playing well offensively, and Kwame is ineffective in the post - and out of shape to boot. In short, this lineup is primed for failure against one of the best teams in the league.
On the other hand, guys like Parker, Manu, and Duncan are among the best at their position. They're rock solid. Bowen is one of the best individual defenders in the league, and Finley is an established shooter.
Should Kobe have passed more? The easy answer is yes, because that's a basketball principle. Pass the ball around more, get everybody involved, make everybody a threat. However, in this case, the answer should be no.
Because the Spurs are that good of a team, and Kobe's teammates are that outmatched.
I am down with Kobe being aggressive, looking for his own shot, because with this lineup, if he tries to get this particular group of teammates involved, we'll lose.
Because I can't recall the last time Kwame Brown outplayed Duncan, or Odom, Ginobili, or Fisher, Parker. These guys have been OWNED by their Spurs counterparts.
On the other hand, there have been enough instances when Kobe took it upon himself and carried our team to victory - even against the Spurs.
With this lineup, the odds aren't good any way you cut it, but the best odds lie with an aggressive Kobe.
milesfides wrote:The lineup of Fish, Kobe, Walton, Odom, and Kwame will lose against Parker, Manu, Finley, Bowen, and Duncan 9 out of 10 times. That's the hypothetical - I have no idea what the exact win/loss is with that lineup. But it's not very good. The plus/minuses must HEAVILY favor the Spurs lineup.