Kobe
Bryant Biography
Kobe Bryant was born on August 23rd
1978 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Pamela and Joe
Bryant (A former NBA player).
Kobe learned the fundamentals of basketball
in Italy when he was just a boy and chose to concentrate
solely on basketball when he had his growth spurt at
around 11 years old. He dreamt of going straight to
the NBA from high school and continued to improve his
skills from 11 to age 13 when he knew he could play
anyone. By the time he was 14 he was beating his former
NBA dad one-on-one and knew that basketball was the
sport for him.
His high school team was a big transition
for him when the team went from worst to first, to state
champion during his fours years with them. Kobe was
in school with a young girl who's dad was a coach for
the 76ers and later got a chance to perform infront
of him which led to him working out with them (He still
works with the same coach today).
He
did as he dreamed and went straight from high school
to the pros in 1996. He was transferred from Charlotte
Hornets to LA Lakers and was a significant contributor
as the Lakers won 56 games in 1996-1997. He scored double
figures 25 times and also grabbed the spotlight at the
All-Star Weekend by winning the Nestle Crunch Slam Dunk
and leading all players with an event-record 31 points
in the Schick Rookie Classic. In 1997 Kobe was the youngest
ever player to start an NBA game. In 1998 he was voted
a starter for the All-Star Game making him at 19 the
youngest All-Star in NBA history. In 1998-1999 he started
all 50 games for the LA Lakers (which no-one else did)
and averaged 19.9ppg which put him second on the team.
The
2000 - 2001 season heralded more successes as the Lakers
finished with a 56-26 record and Kobe reached a new
career high with an average of 28.5 points, 6 rebounds
and 5 assists per game. This year they met the New Jersey
Nets in the finals where they won their second title.
This
consistency continued into the 2001 - 2002 season with
Bryant named as MVP of the 2002 All-Star game. The Lakers
record bettered the previous year finishing up at 58-24
and Kobe averaged 25 points, 5.5 rebounds and 5.5 assists
per game. Partnered with O'Neal the prodigious pair
led the Lakers to their third title with a victory against
the New Jersey Nets.
This
wasn't to be repeated in the 2002 - 2003 season. Despite
Kobe having his best season yet with an average of 30
points per game the Lakers failed to make it past the
playoffs, falling to the San Antonio Spurs.
In
the summer of 2003 Bryant reached a peak of media frenzy
but this time relating to allegations off the Basketball
court rather than successes on it. A young woman called
Katelyn Faber, an employee at a hotel where Bryant had
stayed, filed a sexual assault claim against the Lakers
star, in which she accused Bryant of raping her. Investigation
continued into the 2003 - 2004 NBA season before Katelyn
Faber withdrew her support for the criminal prosecution.
Speculation at the time and since has suggested that
this was due to the fear of her personal life been publicly
examined. As part of this withdrawl Kobe released a
statement in which he said that he believed their encounter
to be consensual but that that Faber "did not and
does not view this incident the same way that I did."
He later settled a civil law suit with her.
Despite
the case not making it through to criminal prosecution
a significant amount of damage had been done to what
had previously been a clean public image regardless
of his on-court critics. Further conflict, this time
inside the Lakers team bewteen Bryant and Oneal over
leadership issues further damaged his image but this
has not stopped him having some major endorsement deals
over the years including giants such as McDonald's,
Adidas, Coca-Cola and Nike.
Back
on the court, in the 2003 - 2004 season Bryant opted
out of his contract becoming a free agent. This meant
that he could leave for another team if he desired.
Conflict inside the team at this time had further tarnished
his public image and the rift between O'Neal and Bryant
eventually became complete - O'Neal demanded a transfer
and Kobe took his seat at the helm.
His
first season as "leader" in 2004 - 2005 was
a difficult one. He was severely scrutinized following
what had now been a tumultuous couple of years. The
Lakers missed the playoffs for the first time in a decade
and Bryant failed to make the NBA-All Defensive Team
and was demoted to the All-MBA Third Team.
With
the sudden resignation of Rudy Tomjanovich as head coach
during that season, the 2005 - 2006 season saw the return
of Phil Jackson as LA Lakers coach. Surmounting their
past differences Bryant and Tomjanovich worked hard
to get the Lakers back to the playoffs. This they managed
and although they didn't make it beyond the first round
It may be that the Lakers now have their darkest hours
behind them and that they will soon be back to the magical
ways of the 1999 - 2001 season - this time with Bryant
leading the way.
Kobe
is currently ranked #2 in the world and continues to
push his game to perfection. Regardless of the public
scrutiny he has received his career
highlights show just how good he is on the court.
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