Kobe, der beste Baller des Planeten?!


MisterTwister

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Vince15 Carter schrieb:
Kobe ist derzeit der beste Basketballer der Welt.
Er hält die lakers ganz alleine auf einem Playoff kurs. Ohne irgend eine unterstützung. Er spielt zwar etwas selbstverliebt, aber was bleibt ihm anderes übrig.
:)

Hallo, Basketballkenner. Ich möchte dich hiermit im Namen all jener im Forum aktiven User, die hier niveauvolle Diskussionen führen und nicht geistigen Dünnpfiff ohne jegliche argumentative Grundlage lesen wollen, bitten, derartige Posts in Zukunft zu unterlassen.

Sorry, aber schön langsam gehen mir Beiträge wie dieser einfach gewaltig... :wall:
 

ManfredderTruck

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sei doch nicht so hart, seine kernaussage ist ja durchaus richtig.
@ vince willkommen im forum, leg dir deine argumente am besten besser zu recht, wenn du solche kommentare vermeiden willst, dann regt sich auch der mistertwister nicht so doll auf ;)
 

Danny81

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Vince15 Carter schrieb:
Kobe ist derzeit der beste Basketballer der Welt.
Er hält die lakers ganz alleine auf einem Playoff kurs. Ohne irgend eine unterstützung. Er spielt zwar etwas selbstverliebt, aber was bleibt ihm anderes übrig.
:)

Ich glaube mit diesem Post ist doch schon alles gesagt, oder? Jede weitere Diskussion ist denk ich überflüssig, :rolleyes:
Du sprichtst uns allen von der Seele, wenn wir dich nicht hätten! :saint:
 
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AK84

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sAmUrAiChAmPlOo schrieb:
Steve Nash lässt Raja Bell / Eddie House aussehen wie Reggie Miller.
Dann sollten die Suns doch einfach nen Trade Raja Bell+Eddie House gegen Smush Parker+Sasha Vujacic machen. Und das sind derzeit die zwei besten Leute, die die Lakers im Backcourt neben Kobe Bryant anbieten können. Als bitte diese Steve-Nash-lässt-Backups-aussehen-wie-Allstars-Nummer bleiben lassen.
 

Redemption

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Lassen wir mal den vielleicht größten Basketballer aller Zeiten, Michael Jordan, zu diesem Thema zu Wort kommen...

NEW YORK - When it comes to scoring points, Michael Jordan is an expert.

So he couldn't help but delight in Kobe Bryant putting up 81 and a New York high schooler going wild for 113.

Still, Jordan insisted things would have been a bit different if he'd been guarding Bryant.

"If I was on the other side, there's no way I would have been in at the end of that game without six fouls," Jordan said Tuesday. "I don't know if I could have given up 81 points and not fouled out of the game."

Bryant's total in a come-from-behind victory over Toronto last month was the second-highest in NBA history.

ryant has often said the he fashions his game after the 10-time NBA scoring leader. Jordan said he can see some similarities.

"You see him playing with any of the elite guys in the league ... he's going to guard them defensively and he will beg for them to guard him on the other end. That's my approach. I would do the same thing."

He stopped himself before declaring the Los Angeles Lakers star the top player in the league, but came close.

"If I had to pick the best player in the game, he certainly is up there right now," Jordan said. "It seems as though he's got the edge over anybody in that position, if not in the league right now."

Normalerweise hält sich MJ mit Komplimenten ja ziemlich zurück.
 

Cuttino

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Redemption schrieb:
Lassen wir mal den vielleicht größten Basketballer aller Zeiten, Michael Jordan, zu diesem Thema zu Wort kommen...



Normalerweise hält sich MJ mit Komplimenten ja ziemlich zurück.

aus dem zitat lese ich heraus, dass er einer der besten spieler und der beste sg der nba ist. was ist daran neu? lebron und t-mac sind ja auch small forwards. duncan und garnett power forwards. ;)
 

Redemption

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Cuttino schrieb:
aus dem zitat lese ich heraus, dass er einer der besten spieler und der beste sg der nba ist. was ist daran neu? lebron und t-mac sind ja auch small forwards. duncan und garnett power forwards. ;)

Naja, mit dem letzten Teil vom letzten Satz stimmt er eventuell mit dem Thread-Titel ein. ;)

Ich hab's ja auch mehr oder weniger aus Fun gepostet, damit die Meinung von "Großmeister" auch bekannt ist. Nichts spekatuläres...
 
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sAmUrAiChAmPlOo

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AK84 schrieb:
Dann sollten die Suns doch einfach nen Trade Raja Bell+Eddie House gegen Smush Parker+Sasha Vujacic machen. Und das sind derzeit die zwei besten Leute, die die Lakers im Backcourt neben Kobe Bryant anbieten können. Als bitte diese Steve-Nash-lässt-Backups-aussehen-wie-Allstars-Nummer bleiben lassen.

Warum sollten die Suns sowas machen? Guck wo Phoenix steht, guck wo L.a. steht. Wer garantiert, das Smush+Sasha die offenen Dinger genauso treffen würden wie Raja+House? Und wieso sollte man es sein lassen, das Nash seine Mitspieler besser macht? Es ist nun mal so. Daran gibt es nichts zu rütteln, und Du würdest dem sicher zustimmen, wenn Du das eine oder andere Spiel der Suns diese Saison gesehen hättest. Stehen ziemlich gut in der Tabelle da, und das ohne ihren dominantesten Spieler. Das ist kein Thread gegen Kobe. Hut ab vor seinen 81 Punkten, und ich bin auch der Meinung, das die Punkte von Kobe lebenswichtig für die Lakers sind. Nur manchmal neigt er dazu ein wenig zu übertreiben wie ich finde, forciert noch zu viele Dinge. Shit, muss zur Arbeit.......
 

Kobe 8

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Für die Leute, die in ihrem Kaff ebenfalls nirgendwo die DIME bekommen können; hier die komplette Cover-Story, die Kobe für die DIME verfasst hat:

Kobe Bryant, in his own words
Kobe Bryant / Dime Magazine

The following story appears in Issue #22 of Dime, on newsstands now.

Hunger defines me. I've always been hungry, but now my appetite has risen to a new level. My will is greater than ever. The motivation to succeed runs through me like blood. In this 10th year, my 10th season as an NBA player, the mountain I once climbed to reach the top looms in front of me again. I realize how hard it will be to climb it, how much I will have to sacrifice and overcome to get to the top again, how many people have told me I can't do it. But I savor that challenge. Feed off of it. That challenge helps give me purpose and inspiration. It helps me define life.

At the beginning of this season there was a question floating around in my mind. What is my purpose? On one level I understood the reasons for why I do what I do, but on another level I felt an even greater commitment tugging at my soul. I'm a ballplayer, a teammate. A leader. But is that it? When I look back at my rookie season, I realize that all of the faces that once surrounded me are gone. I was a kid back then, eager to please, eager to find my place in a world that seemed familiar but different. The game was my refuge. I'd been going to it ever since I was six years old, in Italy, playing alone on courts thousands of miles away from kids who shared my same love. In a way, my dedication to basketball defined me. But that definition has grown. The struggles I've encountered over the last few years have made me realize just how much more there is for me to accomplish. I've begun a new phase of my life; I've opened new doors. And with new doors comes a whole new world of challenges.

In my life I have won and accomplished much. I own three NBA championship rings. I've had plenty of endorsement deals and made a lot of money from them. But still, I feel as if I have yet to fulfill the blessing that God has given me in my ability to play this game. I feel as if there is so much more to do, on the court and off it.

I don't know if this is how I am supposed to feel. Did MJ, Magic and the others feel the same way? In our society it seems like athletes are expected to care about winning the game, pleasing the crowd, and signing deals. Period. But am I supposed to obsess myself with winning only to win, retire and wonder if all my sacrifices were worth it? Is it OK for me to sacrifice time away from my children, time watching them grow up, missing Easter, Christmas and other special moments, to win a ring?

What I have come to learn is that my desire to win, the will to pursue my goals with the highest level of intensity and passion, defines me. But I have been careful to keep my motivation pure. The distractions that come with winning, the idea of playing for the money or playing for the fame and prestige — I've watched all of these things consume other players. My thirst for domination is fed only by the game. I refuse to get distracted by outside forces.

This is a new book in my career. Volume 1 has already been written. Everything that I accomplished before is behind me: not forgotten, but placed on the shelf. My past success only serves as a measuring stick for my peers. A whole new crop of players has emerged since I came into the League. All of them want the honor of holding the title of "best all-around player". But I feel as if that quest is behind me now and a new one has taken its place. I am an underdog. A challenge was issued to me by everyone who said I would never succeed again, that I would never win another ring or enjoy another parade. I accepted their challenge. I accepted the doubt of every one who spoke of my downfall and used their words as fuel. I have a franchise to resurrect, a city of fans to uplift.

That mountain, the one that I climbed once and now face again, is huge. I'm looking up at it again. And because I know how hard it was to climb, I sometimes feel drained because I know how difficult it will be to conquer. It's much harder to go from top to bottom to the top again than it is to simply go from the bottom to the top. But desire is the ultimate fuel. Hunger changes any situation. My past experience gives me knowledge that backs up my will. I know what must be done. My team is sometimes unsure because my teammates have never climbed this mountain before.

At times it's frustrating and it tries my patience, but in the beginning years of my career my teammates were patient with me and trusted in the fact that I would figure everything out, so now I must return that favor to this generation of Lakers. This is our challenge, our mountain, and these are my brothers. I must guide them to the point we all want to get to. No matter what.



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I have been learning about the ambition inside me since I was a kid. It was there during the hours I would spend on a playground in Italy and a group of my friends would come to me and tell me I would never be an NBA player. It was there during all the time I would practice alone, imitating the moves I'd seen on television and creating new ones to go with them. It was there when nothing else was there, and I learned to incorporate it with the game, to wrap myself in the game and seek my future within it. Whenever someone would say what my Italian friends had said, whenever anyone told me what I couldn't do, I would grab hold of that feeling inside me and realize that it was there for a reason. I have always had a purpose, a need to succeed. People who try to discourage me only add fuel to a fire that has always burned. Every phase of my life has brought me new risks and new rewards; in many ways I have always been the underdog. And through it all, through every struggle, the game has always been there. It has never left me alone.

I love the game. I really do. As a kid, when things were bad for me at school or at home, I would go to the park and envision the dream. You've probably had that same one: I'd be playing for the Lakers, winning championships and hitting the game winning shots. I'd listen to the crowd roar when I put the dagger in the other team's heart, and on the road I'd hear the silence of other teams' arenas. I've actually done these things in my career. But I had done them before, because in my mind and in my heart it felt so real to me. So when I was there I had been there before.


"I take it to the other team on both ends of the floor. I take pride in being able to do that. I HATE being scored on, even by players who some say are 'un-guardable.'" (Dime Magazine / Special to FOXSports.com)

What thrills me most about the game is the purity of it and the chance to master it. The process, the work, the beauty of it has always inspired me. I remember when I was 15 years old and wanted to be famous and be on TV. That desire didn't motivate me to play or overshadow the essence of the game, but like any kid I thought being a celebrity would be cool.

As I've gotten older and actually become famous I realize that it's not what I thought it would be. But this is a good thing. Because it means that, in my heart, I never played the game for "spotlight" reasons. I played because I loved it. I played because it meant more to me than even I knew. When I needed someone to lean on, a place to vent, a place to celebrate or a place to cry, the game became all of these things for me. And because the game has given me so much I know that I must give it the respect it deserves. I must work hard to master it, to show it my appreciation for all it has done for me as a person, as a man. That's the reason I'm able to play under severe pressure or stress. The game has actually helped me cope with it. It has helped me win. Not in terms of the points scored, but in terms of the struggles that I have overcome. More and more I feel like this is the reason I train so hard, why I push myself past every limit. The more obstacles that are placed between me and my goals, the hungrier I become.



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Desire is a double-edged sword. It gives you strength; it gives you motivation and focus. But occasionally, because your ambition is so great, you wonder what will happen if your goals are not fulfilled. My biggest fear is not winning another title. But fear is a great motivator. I'm determined to lead this organization back to the top. The people who once celebrated me are the same people who doubt me now. They say that because I don't have Shaq that I can't win, that it's over. The only thing I truly worry about is that my drive and my will are sometimes too much for my teammates to handle. Do I expect too much from them? How can I elevate them to play with my same passion every night?

Photo Gallery...
Kobe's amazing 81-point night



What helps me understand and deal with this is the fact that I was once in their shoes. I once played a supporting role on this team. Back then I knew how much pressure Shaquille had on him to win a ring and I also knew I could help. So I studied the game offensively and especially defensively because I knew that if I could harass on the perimeter with him clogging the lane, it would demoralize our opponents more than anything we could do offensively. I also knew that the teams he played on in the past did not have a closer. No one could take the game over down the stretch or hit the game winner or make the key free throws. Those were Shaq's weaknesses, so I had to step up and make them my strengths. I knew how much more I could bring to the battle, but that wasn't my role. I was a scorer who became a facilitator in order to win. But now I worry because I know how hard that was for me to learn, how many sleepless nights I had and how much criticism and trade rumors I had to endure before I mastered my role. This is probably what my current teammates are going through. All I can do is pray that one day we will reach the same level of chemistry and understanding that existed between me, Shaq, Rick Fox, Derek Fisher, Robert Horry and all the other players I once went to war with.

The fears I have are soothed a little by the presence of Phil Jackson. Simply put, he is the best coach I have ever played for. Everything I have learned about the game can be traced to him and Tex Winter. They teach the game at such a deeper level than X's and O's. The game is a rhythm, a dance. Phil and Tex have taught me to feel the game. To think the game without thinking, to see without seeing. They taught me how to prepare. How to conceptualize the spirit of my opponents and attack them where they are weak. I've seen how prepared PJ gets before games, and as the on-court leader he is trusting me to do the same. So I do all the things he has taught me to do before tip-off and once the ball is in the air my mind is at ease and my body is ready to play. I take it to the other team on both ends of the floor. I take pride in being able to do that. I HATE being scored on, even by players who some say are "un-guardable". I don't believe it when they say "Oh, that player is just hot today." F--- that! Cool his ass off then.

When we play on the road and the entire crowd is booing me it doesn't bother me at all. What I think about is simple: "When these fans leave this game I want them to remember how hard I fought and the passion and drive with which I played." I have always played this game with passion. And I always worked hard. When I saw the movie Rudy I remember thinking, "What if I worked that hard?" God has blessed me both physically and intellectually to play this game, so what would happen if I push as hard as the character in this film? I would love for people to think of me as a talented overachiever. Even though those fans may chant "Kobe sucks", when they leave that arena I want them to walk out with a different feeling than they came in with. When they leave they'll leave with the understanding that they have just witnessed a player give himself completely to his passion; they have just watched an athlete pour every ounce of his heart and soul out on that floor. And hopefully, when the next volume of my life is all said and done, they will respect and appreciate the years that I spent giving all of me to the game that means everything to me.



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Recently I have come to visualize my place as a black athlete within our society. I've always been aware of our history, from Jackie Robinson to Sweetwater Clifton. But I never felt like I deserved to be a part of our tradition because I grew up overseas, in Italy. In that way I am very much different than many of my peers. I never truly believed that my own people wanted to identify with me. But that's the thing about adversity: while you're going through it, you look around yourself and see exactly who it is that's rallying behind you. During my time of struggle I saw the truth. My people held me down. Their love and support became an experience for me and that experience will be with me for the rest of my life. It gave me a completely different understanding of my role. I had been wrong about my impact. Now I see that I can be a force in the lives of our youth. They look up to me for guidance and support. They have shown me that even though I grew up in Italy, I am a part of black America. The color of my skin ain't paint! It is, in fact, more than a color: it's the signifier of my culture.

When I went to visit the victims of Hurricane Katrina and saw how their faces lit up when they saw me, how they embraced me, and how my presence lifted their spirits; I realized how wrong I'd been about everything. I've wasted all these years wanting to do things for our people but thinking I wasn't the one to do them, that I wouldn't be welcomed. But now I see that isn't true. The experience of Katrina and my own personal struggles brought me closer to our people. And through that closeness my motivation has become stronger and my purpose has become even clearer.

Being called a role model has become code for being "able to sell product." But the true essence of a role model lies in influencing our youth to be better, not perfect, not to buy sodas or fast food or whatever; but to be better, no matter the odds or the circumstances. As an athlete I am someone who is in a perfect position to inspire our youth. They look at us as heroes not just because we win, but also because we fail. They witness us overcome obstacles right in front of their eyes. There's no editing, no CGI; everything about it is real. They watch us fall, get back up, fall, get back up, and fall again. In the course of a 48-minute game or an 82-game season they see us climb an entire mountain. It's my duty to help them understand that falling is a part of life and getting up is a way of life. The will to overcome is crucial. And because basketball is a metaphor of life this is a lesson I can give them as I struggle to accomplish my goals. As I help to rebuild my team on the court, I can do the same off of it, helping to rebuild and restore the lives of the people I see in trouble by inspiring them to do what the "experts" say can't be done.



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I have been an outcast my entire life. From being the only black kid in my town in Italy all the way to when I was 17 and playing in the NBA. What separated me from others, even more consistently than skin color or age, was my hunger. My mission. I've always been made to feel like there was something wrong with wanting to win so badly and wanting to become the best at what you do. But I have found a place to fit in amongst people with a similar vision, specifically my family at Nike. My association with them means much more to me than just an endorsement deal. At Nike I am surrounded by people and athletes who share my will and my commitment to be number one at all costs.


Kobe Bryant and his family after his 81-point game. (Noah Graham / Getty Images)

Last summer I had the honor of being invited to the Nike campus in Beaverton, Oregon for a ceremony honoring the company's co-founder, Phil Knight. We athletes had to wait in the green room before the show began. I found myself sitting amongst athletes that I had never met before but whom I felt right at home with.

Let me explain:

There are certain kinds of people that are purely driven. I can tell who they are simply by looking at them. I have faced so much criticism for my drive that at times it has alienated me from the majority: the people who are comfortable with second place, the people who hate against me because I am not. You know these kinds of people; they are the ones who fear winning, the jealous ones who envy and try to sabotage. They are the people who have been telling me I couldn't win all my life. Many times my drive to succeed has put me on an island all by myself because no one understood me, or they chose to misunderstand me. They chose to portray me as being something that I was not.

So on that day, sitting in the Nike green room with those other athletes, I saw the purity of drive in their eyes and it reassured me that it was OK to be different than others. It's OK to want to be the best. It's OK to feel like a loser if you don't win it all, and it's OK to bounce back with a stronger will, a deeper sense of determination, and a desire to destroy your opposition.

I have learned that it is OK for me to be me, and what being me entails. It means that I will not rest; I will not sleep, relax, relent or be satisfied until my goals have been met, the challenge answered and all my doubters silenced. I will not give in to my foes; I won't let down my teammates. I won't stop inspiring those who look up to me or stop giving motivation to those who motivate me. I will not back off until I'm back on top, back in the place where they said I could never be again. Mountains don't scare me. The LACK of mountains scares me. The climb up, the struggle for every inch of ground and every level of ascension is what feeds me. I welcome that challenge. I welcome that chance to be fed because no matter what — no matter how hard, how far, or how many stand in my way, I remain determined.

Sehr interessant und großartig geschrieben, wie ich fand.

Für die anderen: Let the bashing begin ;)
 

Redemption

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Ron Artest schrieb:
"I wasn't really able to guard him the whole night because I wasn't in condition enough," he said. "I thought when I was on him, I did some good things. A couple times ... he made some tough shots.

"I think he's at his best right now, so it'll be good to see it when I'm at my best, too."

And while Artest admitted that Bryant had his way, he found humor in the one part of Bryant's repertoire that is nowhere near as sharp as his shot - his memory.

When asked after the game about the last time he faced Artest, Bryant said, "I haven't played against Ron in like four years. Seriously. I think I had 40(points)."

In actuality, it was just 27 months ago, and Bryant came nowhere near 40. He had 12 points in a 99-77 Lakers home win over Indiana, hitting 4 of 10 shots.

"He didn't have no 40," Artest said, laughing. "Kobe don't even guard me, though. He won't guard me because he can't guard me."

Adding to the banter, Bryant had taken exception at Artest saying before the game that he would keep Bryant below his scoring average. But given the history between them, it was a reasonable prediction.

Before the latest affair, the two had gone head to head only five times, and Bryant was held below his average for that season every time. The trend, Artest insisted, will return to normal when the Kings and Lakers meet again March 14 in Sacramento and March 22 in Los Angeles.

"He's going to get shut down," he said.

Well aware that he was feeding the hype machine for the next go-round, Artest found a common ground between he and Bryant.

"That's the difference with guys like me and Kobe," he said. "We're not afraid to step up to the challenge. I'm not afraid to talk mess to one of the best players in the NBA, and then see what happens later."

Ich glaube, Ron Artest sollte seine Klappe nicht zu weit aufreißen. Im letzten Spiel hat Bryant ihn wie einen Schulbuben aussehen lassen, das hatte nichts mit seiner Kondition zu tun.

Ich glaube, dass werden zwei sehr interessante Spiel, vor allem weil sie fast innerhalb einer Woche stattfinden, und die Wut einer Niederlage noch im Bauch des "Verlierers" sein wird.
 

hoop4life

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nun ja man mag halten was man will von artest aber er ist einer der besten perimeter verteidiger der liga!

klar hat bryant ihn in diesem spiel ziemlich alt aussehen lassen, aber ich denke artest hat die sache mit der kondition nicht nur so gesagt, er scheint nicht so fit zu sein wie in seinen besten tagen.

natürlich muss artest jetzt nach dieser aussage zeigen, dass er seinen worten gerecht wird und kobe kaltstellt in den nächsten duellen.

wie der artikel auch beschreibt war ja das erstemal, dass kobe das direkte duell gegen artest gewonnen hat, der ihn in den 5 direkten duellen zuvor immer ziemlich unter kontrolle hatte.

wie gesagt die beiden spiele werden zeigen was wirklich sache ist und bis dahin kann ron ron auch an seiner kondition arbeiten ;)
 

KillerHornet

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Bester Point Guard

Es passt natürlich nicht ganz hier rein und ich bin mir auch ziemlich sicher, dass es dazu schon einmal einen Fred gab, nur konnte ich ihn trotz Suchfunktion nicht ausfindig machen. War es etwa schon vor dem Serverumzug?!

Hoopshype hat mal wieder ein überaus lächerliches Ranking erstellt, dass von den beiden Shooting Guards Gilbert Arenas und Allen Iverson angeführt wird. Die Kuppe ist aber doch wohl, dass Tony Parker an 16 u.a. nach Ray Felton angesiedelt wird...

http://www.hoopshype.com/fantasy/point.htm
edit: ja, natürlich ist es ein fantasy ranking, aber trotzdem *duck und weg*
 

Kobe 8

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^ Hätte besser in den "Dinge die keinen eigenen..."-Thread gepasst, aber egal.

Was Rankings anbetrifft, sollte man Hoopshype sowieso nie Ernst nehmen. Da sei nur mal der alljährliche Mock Draft als weiteres Beispiel genannt ;)
 

Gast1512

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Ich wollte das Thema aufgreifen:
KillerHornisse schrieb zu seiner Zeit:
Ich bin einfach der Meinung, das Mr. Bryant jeden Tag in der Lage ist die absolute Bombe platzen zu lassen. Potential wäre ein passendes Wort dafür, was man aber nicht auf die Zukunft beziehen darf. Das soll aber auch nicht heißen er spiele sonst unter seinen Möglichkeiten, sondern er kann obwohl es physikal. und mathemat. gesehen nicht möglich ist auch 200% seiner Fähigkeiten entfalten.

Ich weiß das das wohl sehr schwer zu verstehen war, darum will ich es versuchen an einem Beispiel zu erläutern:

Im Allgemeinen gilt er nicht als sonderlich stark von der Dreierlinie, trotzdem hielt er bis gestern den alleinigen Rekord.
Er gilt eigentlich auch nicht als typ. Teamplayer trotzdem gelang ihm in der ersten Phase der Saison 02/03 ein triple D nach dem nächsten. Ich hoffe ihr wisst was ich meine.
Das trifft den Nagel auf dem Kopf.
Im Allgemeinen gilt er nicht als sonderlich starker Passer, trotzdem in den ersten sechs Minuten des ersten Viertels gegen die Nuggets 8 Assists verteilt.

[...]

Ich bin einfach der Meinung, dass Bryant jeden Tag etwas Außergewöhnliches schaffen kann. Wie KillerHornet das gut erläutet kann er theoretisch an einem guten Tag "eine Bombe platzen lassen" (81 Punkte etc.), für mich war das gestrige Spiel wiedermal ein Beweis dafür, dass er - sofern er will - sehr viel anstellen kann. Das macht ihn in gewisser Hinsicht außergewöhnlich, denn andere traue ich das zB nicht zu. Sei's eine alleinige Scoring-Schlach (62, 81 etc), hervorragende Defense (zB gegen Iverson beim Allstar-Game), Assist-Festival (gestern, vs. Washington irgendwann 2002) oder Allround-Fähigkeiten (die besagten "Wochen" 02/03).

Ich find das auf eine gewisse Art faszinierend und beängstigend, auch wenn jetzt wieder viele mit "LeBron schafft das auch" o.Ä. kommen werden.
 

AK84

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Ja, ja, dieser Thread wird nie aussterben. Übrigens ist mir aufgefallen, dass LeBron dieses Jahr ja total unterm Radar fliegt. Total nervig ist auch, dass man sich jetzt schon auf Nash als MVP geeinigt zu haben scheint, weil sein Team ja noch besser geworden ist, letztes Jahr wurde es ihm zum Vorteil ausgelegt, dass Amare nicht dabei war, dieses Jahr ist er wieder dabei und trotzdem ist Nash der absolute Frontrunner bei den MVP-Kandidaten. Zum einen bin ich der Meinung, dass es sowieso noch zu früh ist jetzt schon mit MVP-Diskussionen anzufangen, aber wenn man jetzt schon bei jedem Suns-Spiel, bei jedem Lakers-Spiel, bei jedem Mavs-Spiel, bei jedem Spiel mit einem ernsthaften MVP-Kandidaten hört, dass Steve Nash ja noch bessere Zahlen liefert als letztes Jahr und sein Team ja außerdem auch so eine unglaubliche Bilanz hat, kriegt man echt das :kotz: .

Dabei fand ich seinen ersten Titel sogar noch einigermaßen berechtigt und schau dem Typen auch echt gerne beim Spielen zu und schätz ihn als einen sympatischen Typen ein. Aber schaun mer mal wann ein Steve Nash Team einen Titel gewinnt und nicht nur die meisten Punkte aller NBA-Teams macht. Das Zeitfenster ist nicht mehr soo groß. Nicht, dass ich es ihm nicht wünschen würde. Aber wenn er mal was gewinnt, dann nicht weil er sein Team vorne zum Sieg führt, sondern weil sein Team hinten den Job für ihn erledigt.

Zum Thread-Titel:
Ich zweifel schon lange nicht mehr daran, dass er der beste ist. Er hat einfach schon in sämtlichen Kategorien Leistungen aufgestellt, die in dieser vielfältigkeit an Kategorien in denen er dies getan hat, einfach kein aktueller Spieler herranreicht. Lediglich Tim Duncan kann man derzeit auf eine Stufe mit Kobe stellen, da er als unbestrittene Nr.1 seines Teams 3 Titel geholt hat.
(Um Missverständnisse vorzubeugen: Kobe war nicht die klare Nr.1 bei seinen 3 Titeln sondern eher die Nr.2, Duncan hat allerdings individuell statistisch keine solchen Glanzlichter gesetzt wie ein Kobe Bryant, in Abwägung dieser Tatsachen stelle ich sie auf eine Stufe)
 

Bulls 4ever

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...Duncan hat allerdings individuell statistisch keine solchen Glanzlichter gesetzt wie ein Kobe Bryant, in Abwägung dieser Tatsachen stelle ich sie auf eine Stufe

Ein Beispiel gefällig?!
Tim Duncan im entscheidenden Finalspiel gegen New Jersey:
21 Punkte
20 Rebounds
10 Assists
8 Blocks
Gegenspieler Kenyon Martin bei 3 von 23 gehalten

Ein herausragenderes Spiel habe ich glaube ich noch nicht gesehen, also wäre ich da vorsichtig :belehr:

Allgemein bin ich aber deiner Meinung: Bryant ist z.Zt. der beste der Welt :thumb:
 

stillwater

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[...] Assist-Festival (gestern, vs. Washington irgendwann 2002) [...]
Jep, hätte er noch einen geschafft, hätte er gestern fast soviele gemacht, wie der Saisonschnitt von Steve Nash lautet und seine eigene Saisonbestleitung eingestellt. Drei mehr und er hätte die von McGrady eingestellt. Und nur 21 mehr und er hätte den Rekord von Scott Skiles gebrochen. Was für ein Festival. ;)

Also wenn man die Kirche im Dorf lässt, sollte es nicht neben den 81 Punkten stehen.
 

Gast1512

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Also wenn man die Kirche im Dorf lässt, sollte es nicht neben den 81 Punkten stehen.
Ich wollte hier nur mal andeuten, dass ein Bryant in der Lage ist soetwas zu schaffen. Wenn er will, kann er den Scoring-Modus aus und den Passing- und Defense-Modus anschalten und seinem Team verhelfen. Das habe ich bislang selten von Spielern gesehen, auch wenn es wahrhaftig so ist, dass Bryant seine Fähigkeiten öfter den Umständen eines Spiels anpassen sollte.
 
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