Larry's top 3 ('85, '87, '88): 28.7/.585 TS%, 28.1/.612 TS%, 29.9/.608 TS%
Kobe's top 3 ('03, '06, '07): 30.0/.550 TS%, 35.4/.559 TS%, 31.6/.580 TS%
Basically, Larry had his best efficiency seasons in his highest scoring years. The same isn't true of Kobe with the exception of 07. Larry was also a better passer than Kobe, and took home MVPs in the years that corresponded to his offensive dominance. Again, Kobe didn't (tough many, including myself, feel he was robbed in '06 and/or '07). That's why his peak gets the nod. Defensively, Kobe's obviously got a significant advantage, but he was really only at/close to his defensive peak in one of those seasons (03). His best defense was played as a youth (00-03) by far, and has kicked it up recently when he's had teammates to lift some offensive burden (08-present). 05-07 was some of Kobe's worst defense overall.
You can't really discredit Larry due to any defensive era differences because the league efg% in Kobe's seasons were, on the whole, higher than Larry's. Even if you credit that to an athletic/talent uptrend since then, it's really hard (impossible?) to prove statistically.
Doctor MJ wrote:Overplayed? Hmm. Well, it's pretty dang uncommon for anyone to compare Kobe unfavorably to the 'visibly inferior' guys. The inefficiency card gets played because Kobe's typically being compared with LeBron, who as you noted, is vastly more efficiency.
With that said, Kobe is more likely to be called inefficient than Wade is despite the fact they tend to be pretty comparable. I'd say the reasons for that, 1) Kobe's more high profile and so gets mentioned more period, 2) there isn't nearly as much a Wade/LeBron debate as a Kobe/LeBron debate, and 3) Wade cemented himself as a superstar with a dominant playoff run during which he was very efficient, and probably more importantly, sealed his default criticism to be "he's only good because of the refs".
This is very agreeable, but you are wrong on a couple points here.
Lebron has been a clear notch above Kobe's efficiency the last 2 seasons, when he has shot it into another gear (during the season). But the talk of his "far superior efficiency" was pouring in way before then. When he had actually gotten to that level, people acted like he had been that good the entire time, and the myth began.
You're wrong about Wade too. In both the General board and PC board ANY time Kobe and Wade come up in a thread you have a host of uninformed fans running in declaring Wade to have a clear efficiency advantage, has had it forever, etc, etc. Some of them are just very loud heat fans, of course, but some are not.
EDIT: And of course, Kobe has only really been a part of this no-touch era during his athletic post-prime, and he's been able to hike his efficiency DESPITE this. Can you imagine a prime (2001-2003) Kobe Bryant, with his own team, in today's league? He would literally destroy it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cyb1MNb2GrQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7Lp5aQq4zIThe 2 biggest factors in the rise in Kobe's efficiency have been getting away from Shaq (primary) the rule changes (secondary). As a first option, it is MUCH easier to dictate personal rhythm and stabilize efficiency when you are a volume scorer who doesn't get a lot of assisted baskets like Kobe. The rule changes helped to a point, but by then Kobe had lost a lot of the athleticism that would have allowed him to best exploit them. And of course there were all those notorious hack-fests in 06 and 07 where Kobe couldn't buy a whistle.
But I digress. Point is, that version of Kobe is better than any version of Wade, and at the very least comparabl to what we've seen from Lebron.