supaflash wrote:A first round elimination isn't nearly the pressure or quality of ball as the finals.
A great performance in a loss isn't always as good as a good performance in a win.
Extending a series when down 0-3 or 1-3 with a great performance is nice, but not that meaningful, and often it means your team is much worse and leans on the star much more.
You can talk about circumstances all you want. Kobe has been through pretty much any situation possible. Down in the series from the get go, up 3-1 and let the other team come back 3-3, playing elimination game at home or away, in the first-second-third-fourth round. He has been through every circumstances possible you can think of for elimination games, and the one and only constant is that Kobe is terrible when he's facing elimination over his 16 year playoff career.
supaflash wrote:blowouts change things
It would help if Kobe was capable of stopping the bleeding.
2003: Lost by 28 to the Spurs
2004: Lost by 20 heading into the 4th against the Pistons
2006: Lost by 31 to the Suns
2008: Lost by 39 to the Celtics
2011: Lost by 36 to the Mavs
2012: Lost by 16 to the Thunder
Kobe's team getting eliminated in a humiliating manner is as common of a theme as Shaq's team getting swept. If Kobe is this warrior who can will his team then why does his team always lose in such a fashion? Let's talk context since that's what certain people like to do.
2003: The Spurs played as a better team than the Lakers, so by technical means the Spurs does have the upper hand. What some people may not want to hear is that the Spurs were contemplating on rebuilding. They had no reliable player after Duncan and D-Rob was going to retire after that year. On a talent standpoint, there was nothing impressive about the 03 Spurs. Neither Parker and Manu were star players back then, Bowen has not established himself as a premier defender and the rest of the team were made of spare parts. Even when you take Shaq's laziness kicking in and Kobe's injury into account it is still a disappointment for the Lakers to get blown out by a supposed rebuilding team.
2004: Talk about how great Detroit was since the Sheed trade, excruciating circumstances for Kobe, etc, but that still won't nearly be enough to wipe the sour taste of perhaps the biggest upset of the last decade after the 2007 Mavs-Warriors series. If 2004 hadn't concluded in such an ugly way then Shaq and Malone would have most likely stayed for another year, Phil wouldn't have left, and the Lakers wouldn't need to tear everything down followed by 3 years of mediocrity. Kobe's terrible play in 2004 was the biggest reason the Lakers became a bad team, so I always get a chuckle whenever people talk about Kobe as if he was a victim when he was the catalyst that destroyed the franchise.
2006; On the year where Kobe is supposed to be the best player in the league(according to some people anyways), he put up a 19 PER performance against the Suns who was ranked 16th on defense, and PER is supposed to favor scorers. The rationale for the blowout was:
-Kobe >>>>> Nash
-Mike D was a good coach for Nash(oh, the irony)
-Nash's team >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kobe's team
So it's the same old drivel, Kobe is the best, his team is the worst so that is why he lost. Not losing the 3-1 lead and not letting his team get blown out in game 7 is simply too much to ask from the best player in the league against the guy who undeservedly stole the MVP award from Kobe.
2008: It's not the fact that the Lakers lost that is disappointing, but how they lost. The Celtics were the favorites but the Lakers were expected to put up a fight. By putting up a fight I mean not losing a 24 point lead in game 4 and losing by 39 in game 6, which I believe are still the NBA Finals records.
2011: If this was any other player they would be completely killed, but because Kobe already has winning creds no one blamed him for getting swept by the Mavs. The Lakers were 10-3 against Dallas since acquiring Gasol and won the season matchup 2-1. Dallas barely got rid of Portland in 6 games and Dirk didn't look all that great against a weak Blazer team. Just about everyone predicted the Lakers to win. Instead Dirk stepped up the pedal and the Lakers crumbled in the worst way possible. Some blamed it on Kobe's knees and they said Kobe will come back better than ever after his trip to Germany, and he ended up posting the lowest TS% in his career the following year.
2012: Unlike the other knockouts this one was easier to swallow. The Thunder did not stretch to a decisive lead until the middle of the 4th and Kobe had a monster game himself. What was often left unsaid however is that Kobe shot 38% in the first four games and he choked in game 2 and 4.
supaflash wrote:In extreme circumstances teams employ extreme tactics, ie doubling the star on every touch, packing the paint all game daring to shoot, fouling constantly, etc.
The way to defend Kobe is to lure him into trying difficult shots, and Kobe is more than happy to play into the defense's hands. The defense on Kobe isn't all that stingent. It only looks that way because Kobe only shoots when the shot is difficult to connect.
supaflash wrote:types of games played also makes a big deal. For example: 2010
Game 7 of a finals, unbelieveable pressure
Final score was 79-83 - a defensive slugfest
Team FG% was 40% and 32%
Kobe was the best player in that series by far according to Kobe backers, so shouldn't the best player in a series have influence on the flow of the game? If Kobe can't dictate the flow in his team's favor on a game 7 in the Finals then one has to wonder just how much influence Kobe has on the outcome of a game.
The train of excuses just never seems to stop with Kobe. I also like how Laker fans like to crap on Malone for choking. I guess it's understandable because after all, Malone is probably the closest to Kobe as far as their career goes, but since Karl was always labeled a choker for not winning they can't dirty Kobe's name by associating Kobe with him. Ironically Malone was the only star who actually played for the team in 2004 while the other three guys were too busy stroking their own ego.





















