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Kobe Bryant on Mike D'Antoni's resignation: 'Honestly, I didn't care'
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mreinman
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5/9/2014  6:50 PM
http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/kobe-bryant-on-mike-d-antoni-s-resignation---honestly--i-didn-t-care-182602695.html

It was no secret that Kobe Bryant didn’t much care for the coaching stylings of the recently-resigned Los Angeles Lakers coach Mike D’Antoni. The former Nuggets, Suns and Knicks coach was brought in by the Buss family, or most of it at least, over Phil Jackson after Mike Brown was fired early in the 2012-13 season, and the two never seemed to click in spite of D’Antoni allowing Bryant unending minutes and shots during that disappointing year.

Following a 2013-14 campaign that was beset by injury, and after the Lakers declined to pick up D’Antoni’s 2015-16 option, the coach walked away from his gig. Bryant was on holiday at the time, but he’s back in Los Angeles now, and the future Hall of Famer decided to take a trip to Jimmy Kimmel’s set on Thursday evening to clarify his views on D’Antoni’s resignation.

Or, “non-views.” From ESPN’s Dave McMenamin:

"Honestly, I didn't care," Bryant said Thursday during a guest appearance on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," when asked whether he was happy D'Antoni accepted a buyout of close to $2 million instead of coming back to coach the team next season.
"Mike was dealt a really bad hand in dealing with all the injuries that he had here," Bryant said. "This is a tough place, man. If you're not winning, you're not going to survive, man."
Bryant went on to say that he’ll “sit down” with Lakers brass as they attempt to hire D’Antoni’s replacement, and he offered this shot to El Segundo along the way:

"On the last two they didn't," Bryant said, referring to Mike Brown and D'Antoni, who both failed to endure the length of the initial contracts they signed with the Lakers before parting ways. "On the third one, I'm hoping they do."
It should be noted that Bryant wasn’t exactly seething on Kimmel’s couch, lobbing shots at the departed D’Antoni, the Buss family, and Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak. That’s just how he talks. That’s just how he is. Because this is a family website, we can only say that Kobe Bryant is a bit … brusque.

As Kobe did, D’Antoni’s time in Los Angeles is worth defending. Steve Nash was never healthy during the coach and point guard’s reunion with the Lakers, Bryant was injured for just about all of 2013-14, Dwight Howard was distracted (to say the absolute least) both mentally and physically in his one season under D’Antoni, and the Lakers’ top-heavy payroll chart made it so solid supporting role players were few and far between in the team’s lacking rotation.

D’Antoni went 28-12 with the Lakers to finish 2012-13, though, even with Nash and Bryant missing chunks of games. With that in place, the former Los Angeles coach failed to adapt to his roster in many ways, he sold out star big man Pau Gasol to the press on a number of occasions, and he never won over Bryant – who reportedly idolized D’Antoni while growing up in Italy, where the former Olimpia Milano point guard starred.

Of course, for a player in Bryant that has clashed with each of his pro coaches, friendship between the two sides isn’t exactly a prerequisite to success. From the Kimmel interview:

"Honestly, it's not really about whether the players like the coach or not," Bryant said. "It's really about getting results. Liking somebody and those results don't necessarily go hand-in-hand.
"Sometimes when a coach is driving you, you don't necessarily like it, but it's a part of the process, and then once you win, everybody is buddy-buddy after that."
Kobe can play the passive/aggressive role when he wants to, especially on his various social media accounts, but in the course of conversation he can be brutally honest, even if he is attempting to be duplicitous at the same time. He’s modeled himself after Michael Jordan in so many ways, but it would be hard to imagine MJ going on Arsenio Hall’s show in 1989 following the firing of Doug Collins, and pointing out that he “didn’t care” about his embattled coach being separated from the gig.

Kobe does care. He wants a fresh start, he wants to be consulted, and he wants to be the NBA’s highest paid player, but also hey please sign another superstar to play alongside me but I still want all the shots and also bring my buddy Pau back and also let me feel wanted by asking me about coaches but I’m going to still pretend to be aloof and cold and distant while going on national TV. Is that cool?

Cake, eating it too, all that.

With Phil Jackson obviously out of the picture, running the show in New York while also attempting to find a coach for his new Knicks team, there are several intriguing candidates that the Lakers could work with. The team’s hiring of Rudy Tomjanovich was an absolute miss in 2004, Rudy T’s offensive stylings were made more or less anachronistic by new zone defense laws in 2001, and it was borderline shocking that the Lakers didn’t realize that while chasing down a big name.

The team weirdly brought in Mike Brown to replace Jackson in 2011, a year after he’d been completely tuned out by LeBron James and his Cleveland Cavaliers. Mike D’Antoni also had similar clashes with his pre-Lakers superstar while coaching the Knicks, as he and Carmelo Anthony did not see eye-to-eye. All three replacements had major warning signs that the Lakers’ front office completely overlooked, and all three fell short in their brief runs as Lakers coach.

Kobe’s going to be put on the spot in 2014-15, because he’s just about out of excuses. He’ll be healthy, he’ll be working with a coach and roster that he’ll be consulted on as it is being put together, and he’ll be the league’s highest-paid player. Pressure has never been an issue with Bryant, but it will be interesting to see where he’ll put the blame if things go pear-shaped in Los Angeles again.

- - - - - - -


Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @KDonhoops

so here is what phil is thinking ....
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NardDogNation
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5/9/2014  7:26 PM
To be fair, Kobe doesn't seem to be a guy that cares for much more than himself. I'm not sure if D'Antoni should take this personally.
OasisBU
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5/9/2014  8:09 PM
I thought Kobe liked MDA and his style before he came to LA?

Maybe I am mistaken but the whole Italian connection?

It doesn't really matter - Kobe seems to be a coach killer regardless. Only guy he respects is Phil and even they had issues.

"If at first you don't succeed, then maybe you just SUCK." Kenny Powers
meloshouldgo
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5/9/2014  8:37 PM
Kobe is old, he probably won't win any more rings. He is and has always been a selfish prick. He is only concerned with himself. D'Antoni did not do too well and his whole team was hospitalized. I don't understand why he even took the LA job. Bad situation for everyone. I think he will be good with GSW that's a much better for for him, if they offer him the job. Kobe is done.
I cannot teach anybody anything. I can only try to make them think - Socrates
Nalod
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5/9/2014  9:59 PM
Kobe wore number 8 because MDA was his childhood hero in Italy.

Kobe is a phuch face egocentric douche. Dude can ball though.

TheloniusMonk
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5/9/2014  10:09 PM    LAST EDITED: 5/9/2014  10:09 PM
If I were Kobe I wouldn't care about him quitting either. Why should I? Kobe = 5 rings. MDA = 0. Elephants don't swat flies. Kobe was never a fan of the hiring to begin with. Not many people were. D'Antoni over P Jax? Ehhhhh whatever. Which man goes down as the legend here? This is a nonissue. And this coming from a dude who is NOT a Kobe fan.
'You can catch me in Hollis at the hero shop!' -Tony Yayo
Nalod
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5/9/2014  10:19 PM
TheloniusMonk wrote:If I were Kobe I wouldn't care about him quitting either. Why should I? Kobe = 5 rings. MDA = 0. Elephants don't swat flies. Kobe was never a fan of the hiring to begin with. Not many people were. D'Antoni over P Jax? Ehhhhh whatever. Which man goes down as the legend here? This is a nonissue. And this coming from a dude who is NOT a Kobe fan.

ESPN.com: NBA [Print without images]

Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Updated: November 14, 9:41 AM ET
Kobe: Mike D'Antoni is a genius
By Dave McMenamin
ESPNLosAngeles.com

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. -- Before Kobe Bryant told reporters last week he wanted Phil Jackson back as his coach, there was a different name he told to Los Angeles Lakers management: Mike D'Antoni.

"I spoke with Jimmy (Buss) before everything went down and we talked about some of the coaching candidates and stuff and to be honest, I said D'Antoni was my first choice because I didn't even know Phil was going to be an option," Bryant told reporters after Tuesday's shootaround, recalling his conversation with the Lakers' executive vice president of player personnel.


"Then Jimmy was the one that brought up Phil's name," Bryant continued. "I said, 'I didn't even know that was a consideration.' They said, 'Well, it is and we want to know how you feel about it.' I said, 'I love it,' and that was it. So they knew my two guys that I liked and if one didn't work out, obviously with Phil, they knew that they had my approval to pull the trigger on the other one."

Bryant admitted he experienced "a little bit" of disappointment that Jackson did not get the job, but he hasn't spent much effort trying to investigate what happened behind closed doors.

"It's kind of a waste of time for me at this point," Bryant said. "What good is that going to do for me? It does nothing for me."

Bryant said after the Lakers' 84-82 loss to the Spurs on Tuesday night that he hadn't spoken to Jackson since the Lakers chose to hire D'Antoni instead of the 11-time championship-winning coach. However, he said Jackson and his assistant coaches have been underappreciated for their success.

"It seems like all our assistant coaches when they left here, to even mention the word 'Triangle' was like taboo," Bryant said. "I don't understand it. I really don't know the answer to that question. It's very strange, very bizarre. You would think that organizations and other coaches should try to learn from Phil. That's what you should try to do, right? If you have a coach that's won more than anybody in our profession, you would think you'd want to study them and analyze them, but they haven't done it."

When asked what aspects of Jackson's coaching he has carried with him since Jackson retired in 2011, Bryant said: "Everything. I'm basically the 'Baby Zen Master.'"

Bryant hopes D'Antoni's addition can do something for him -- get the Lakers back on track to win a championship. Bryant credited D'Antoni with installing the offense as an assistant coach with USA Basketball that led Bryant and the U.S. to gold medals in 2008 and 2012.

"He's an offensive genius," said Bryant, who had a short chat with D'Antoni over the phone on Tuesday morning. "If you talk to anybody, anybody that played on that Olympic team, that response would be unanimous. He's an offensive genius. So, does that mean that he's going to take the one system that he had in Phoenix and implement it here? No. It means that you give an offensive genius so many more options to play with. Now he has a great two-guard, he had a great point guard, he had a great power forward, he has a great center and he has an incredible small forward. He has a lot to play with."

More on the Lakers


For more news, notes and analysis of the Lakers, check out the Lakers Index. Blog

Bryant said he has a "great relationship" with the 61-year-old D'Antoni, who was both an inspiration to him when he was a child growing up in Italy and D'Antoni was a professional basketball player in Milan, and also an adversary when Bryant was an adult and D'Antoni's Phoenix Suns teams bounced the Lakers out of the playoffs in 2006 and 2007.

"I've been around him for quite a bit," Bryant said. "I've obviously played against his teams for a number of years. I know his philosophies, I know what he stands for and I know how competitive he is. He's a feisty, feisty dude, man. Temperamental, even. And I like that."

Steve Nash, who said he was "thrilled" to be back with D'Antoni, said the Lakers wouldn't be running the same "Seven Seconds or Less" system they ran together in Phoenix, but rather a tailored variation of it.

"I think he'll adapt," Nash said. "I think that's one of Mike's strengths that he's a thinker and he's willing to adapt. He's great in-game and I think he's also great going back, looking over a game, looking over a month and saying, 'I think this will help our team in shifting toward something that suits the parts.' "

Even though things should speed up on offense, Nash measured any run-and-gun expectations.

More From ESPN.com

How will new Los Angeles Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni fit with Dwight Howard, whose opinion ultimately will matter most of all? J.A. Adande asks. Dime

TheloniusMonk
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5/9/2014  10:31 PM    LAST EDITED: 5/9/2014  10:42 PM
^^^^^Congrats on that find. But you still cannot make a man CARE that another man resigned. Kobe being ok with D'Antoni being the coach just shows that Kobe is not a good person to pick a coach. I read a contradicting article that said Kobe wasn't asked about either coaching move. But hey, he's one of the greatest players. Not a GM. Mike sucks. It's just that simple. I wouldn't care if he quit either. I guess him saying he doesn't care bothers some people. Maybe at some point he'll look back and "care" and people will feel more comfortable. Who knows?
'You can catch me in Hollis at the hero shop!' -Tony Yayo
TheloniusMonk
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5/9/2014  10:36 PM    LAST EDITED: 5/9/2014  10:38 PM
Maybe Kobe stopped caring at this point.....

Lakers’ Mike D’Antoni calls Kobe Bryant ‘a fan’ after tweets during loss to Spurs
2013 PLAYOFFS, BEN GOLLIVER, KOBE BRYANT, LOS ANGELES LAKERS, MIKE D'ANTONI, SAN ANTONIO SPURS
BY BEN GOLLIVER

Mike D’Antoni and the Lakers lost Game 1 to the Spurs. (D. Clarke Evans/Getty Images)
Riding just a “B” or “B-” overall performance, the Spurs easily dispatched the Lakers in Game 1 of their Western Conference playoff series, leaving Kobe Bryant, out with a season-ending Achilles injury, to fume over his iPhone back in California.


“Nothing worse [than] watching your brothers struggle and [you] can’t do crap about it,” Bryant tweeted. “It’s horrible not being able to at least be there with them.”

Bryant’s tweets — which provided thoughts and analysis on L.A.’s play on both sides of the ball — poured forth as San Antonio put together a convincing, if somewhat ugly, 91-79 home victory.

In a televised postgame press conference, Lakers coach Mike D’Antoni tried to brush off Bryant’s comments.

“It’s great to have that commentary,” D’Antoni said, rolling his eyes. “He’s a fan right now. He’s a fan. You guys put a little bit more importance on that kind of fan. He’s a fan, he gets excited, I’m sure he wants to be part of it.”

Bryant immediately responded to those comments, which some interpreted as a slight: “A fan?? lol”. He later added: “Nervous response. I’m sure he didn’t meant it that way. No big deal.”

The Lakers’ 15-time All-Star guard referred to himself as “Coach Vino” on Friday.

The Spurs answered some questions in this one, with both Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili, who had missed time in April due to injuries, going off for 18 points a piece. Tim Duncan added 17 points and 10 rebounds, too, but this was a matter of San Antonio’s depth and unselfishness making up for a cold shooting night. The Spurs’ bench outscored the Lakers’ 40-10, with Matt Bonner chipping in 10 points.

Bryant lightly chastised the Lakers’ defense on Sunday and there’s a chance that blooms into full rage if the Spurs are able to really kick up their attack as the series unfolds.

“Matador defense on Parker,” Bryant said. “His penetration is hurting us. … Gotta keep the Spurs offense in front of our [defense]. They [are] great at penetrating and pitching to their shooters.”

The Lakers aren’t equipped to stop Parker, even with Steve Nash returning from a hip/hamstring injury to play 29 minutes. Nash finished with 16 points (on six-for-15 shooting) but tallied only three assists as the Lakers’ three-point shooting was off all night (just three-for-15 from deep as a team).

Bryant’s solution to the perimeter woes was simple and repeated multiple times: go inside.

“What I would say if I was there right now? Pau get [your] ass on the block and don’t move [until you] get it,” Bryant wrote. “Post. Post. Post. Gotta get to the block. See [what] Spurs [are] gonna do with [Pau Gasol] and [Dwight Howard]. … Gotta milk Pau in the post right now and [Howard]. Will get good looks from it.”

Howard led the Lakers with 20 points (on eight-for-12 shooting), 15 rebounds and two blocks. Gasol added 16 points (on seven-for-16 shooting), 16 rebounds, six assists and two steals.

San Antonio, the West’s No. 2 seed, took a 1-0 series lead over L.A., the No. 7 seed. Game 2 is on Wednesday.

http://nba.si.com/2013/04/21/kobe-bryant-twitter-mike-dantoni-lakers-spurs-playoffs/

'You can catch me in Hollis at the hero shop!' -Tony Yayo
CrushAlot
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5/9/2014  10:47 PM
TheloniusMonk wrote:^^^^^Congrats on that find. But you still cannot make a man CARE that another man resigned. Kobe being ok with D'Antoni being the coach just shows that Kobe is not a good person to pick a coach. I read a contradicting article that said Kobe wasn't asked about eithers s coaching move. But hey, he's one of the greatest players. Not a GM. Mike sucks. It's just that simple. I wouldn't care if he quit either. I guess him saying he doesn't care bothers some people. Maybe at some point he'll look back and "care" and people will feel more comfortable. Who knows?

Also, that was the day after D'Antoni was hired. Not sure he even was with the team yet as he was recovering from surgery. Kobe's recent statements were made after playing two years for Mike.
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Nalod
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5/9/2014  11:41 PM

Point was he was happy.

Kobe is a flake.
MDA is a flake.

I like MDA with the eye rolling and calling out the bullshyt. I like Kobes warrior tough talk.

Blame. She is a funny mistress, no?

TheloniusMonk
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5/10/2014  1:50 AM
Point is, when the story of Kobe is told, people will forget that D'Antoni even was anywhere near Kobe's stint in the league. Most people don't remember Rudy coached him. And he is a two time champ. D'Antoni? This is a nonissue when looking at the big picture.
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newyorknewyork
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5/10/2014  5:56 AM
"Mike was dealt a really bad hand in dealing with all the injuries that he had here," Bryant said. "This is a tough place, man. If you're not winning, you're not going to survive, man."
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newyorknewyork
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5/10/2014  6:00 AM
ants on, Pau. Via Fox Sports West:

"Pau has to make some adjustments, obviously, to his game. He might not be posting up as much as he likes, but he just has to adjust.

"The reality is, I've adjusted. I've never run this many screen-and-rolls in my entire life. But I've worked on it. I've worked on handling the ball; worked on coming off screens and making plays. I'm used to being in the post much, much more. You have to adjust; you have to master what it is we're trying to do here. Pau's talented enough and good enough to be able to do that." [...]

"Put your big-boy pants on,"

The highlight of MDA in LA.

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tj23
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5/12/2014  5:51 PM
If another team actually gives MDA a HC position they deserve to fail. Now if he would accept an asst coach job he could be very beneficial to a team.

Kobe always has something controversial to say.

nixluva
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5/12/2014  7:43 PM
This such PURE BULL!!! That stint for MDA wasn't much different than his stint in NY where he came into a non winning situation and got no support from the teams star nor front office. It's not like MDA failed with a team setup to win a title. As good as PJax is he came into teams on the precipice off winning a title. Teams with Elite talent in their primes, balanced rosters and good health. MDA didn't have any of that.

Kobe should've done the right thing and been the coaches best advocate in the locker room and on the court. That's what true leaders do. IMO Kobe is not a leader in that mold. If Nash was in his prime he would be that kind of leader. Pau and Dwight were also being spoiled brats as they followed Kobe's lead. Part of the problem was also the GM's fault. You have to make it clear that u support the coach. Just like how the Knicks made Woody more of a lame duck by not really supporting him. It just doesn't work.

CrushAlot
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5/12/2014  8:42 PM
nixluva wrote:This such PURE BULL!!! That stint for MDA wasn't much different than his stint in NY where he came into a non winning situation and got no support from the teams star nor front office. It's not like MDA failed with a team setup to win a title. As good as PJax is he came into teams on the precipice off winning a title. Teams with Elite talent in their primes, balanced rosters and good health. MDA didn't have any of that.

Kobe should've done the right thing and been the coaches best advocate in the locker room and on the court. That's what true leaders do. IMO Kobe is not a leader in that mold. If Nash was in his prime he would be that kind of leader. Pau and Dwight were also being spoiled brats as they followed Kobe's lead. Part of the problem was also the GM's fault. You have to make it clear that u support the coach. Just like how the Knicks made Woody more of a lame duck by not really supporting him. It just doesn't work.


Do you really think Dwight was following Kobe's lead? He left 30 mil on the table to get away from dantoni and Kobe.
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knicks1248
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5/14/2014  2:04 PM
newyorknewyork wrote:
ants on, Pau. Via Fox Sports West:

"Pau has to make some adjustments, obviously, to his game. He might not be posting up as much as he likes, but he just has to adjust.

"The reality is, I've adjusted. I've never run this many screen-and-rolls in my entire life. But I've worked on it. I've worked on handling the ball; worked on coming off screens and making plays. I'm used to being in the post much, much more. You have to adjust; you have to master what it is we're trying to do here. Pau's talented enough and good enough to be able to do that." [...]

"Put your big-boy pants on,"

The highlight of MDA in LA.

absolutely

ES
Knixkik
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5/14/2014  5:38 PM
nixluva wrote:This such PURE BULL!!! That stint for MDA wasn't much different than his stint in NY where he came into a non winning situation and got no support from the teams star nor front office. It's not like MDA failed with a team setup to win a title. As good as PJax is he came into teams on the precipice off winning a title. Teams with Elite talent in their primes, balanced rosters and good health. MDA didn't have any of that.

Kobe should've done the right thing and been the coaches best advocate in the locker room and on the court. That's what true leaders do. IMO Kobe is not a leader in that mold. If Nash was in his prime he would be that kind of leader. Pau and Dwight were also being spoiled brats as they followed Kobe's lead. Part of the problem was also the GM's fault. You have to make it clear that u support the coach. Just like how the Knicks made Woody more of a lame duck by not really supporting him. It just doesn't work.

Agreed. Bottom line is MDA was again set up to fail. If you hire him its because you have a team or a plan designed to play to MDA's strengths as a coach. The Knicks (personnel) and LAL (mostly health, no support from kobe or dwight) were not built for him to succeed. He is a niche coach, so people should know he was going to fail under these circumstances. A team like golden state would be designed well for MDA's style. He will excel with the right team, and fail with a team that can't play his way or never gets the type of players he needs. It is what it is.

BigDaddyG
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5/14/2014  6:13 PM
CrushAlot wrote:
nixluva wrote:This such PURE BULL!!! That stint for MDA wasn't much different than his stint in NY where he came into a non winning situation and got no support from the teams star nor front office. It's not like MDA failed with a team setup to win a title. As good as PJax is he came into teams on the precipice off winning a title. Teams with Elite talent in their primes, balanced rosters and good health. MDA didn't have any of that.

Kobe should've done the right thing and been the coaches best advocate in the locker room and on the court. That's what true leaders do. IMO Kobe is not a leader in that mold. If Nash was in his prime he would be that kind of leader. Pau and Dwight were also being spoiled brats as they followed Kobe's lead. Part of the problem was also the GM's fault. You have to make it clear that u support the coach. Just like how the Knicks made Woody more of a lame duck by not really supporting him. It just doesn't work.


Do you really think Dwight was following Kobe's lead? He left 30 mil on the table to get away from dantoni and Kobe.

Pau couldn't wait to leave. I get that hasn't been put in ideal situations during his last two stops. But doesn't anyone else notice a pattern here of start players tuning him out. Is that all on the front office? The man has a problem communicating with his players. He also has a problem teaching defense and adjusting to the strengths of his players, but that's neither here nor there. If it was just Kobe, I'd agree that MDA got a crappy deal. But we're going on how many players now?
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Kobe Bryant on Mike D'Antoni's resignation: 'Honestly, I didn't care'

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