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Friday, October 10, 2008

A Real Work Ethic


Story from the Washington Post:

When Kobe Bryant voiced his desire that the Los Angeles Lakers trade him last summer, and even in the weeks leading up to the preseason, his chief concern was that the players around him couldn't help him contend for a championship.

Coach Phil Jackson said Bryant's belief stemmed from the rest of the Lakers struggling in the second half of last season. When that happened, Jackson said Bryant grew frustrated and tried to do it all, and the Lakers fell in the first round of the playoffs for a second straight year.

But once Bryant came to grips with the fact the Lakers wouldn't trade him, he met with Jackson to figure out a way to get more out of his supporting cast.

"When we met earlier this fall, we resolved that it wasn't going to happen again like [the second half of last year] to us," Jackson said of Bryant shouldering the load and seeing no payoff. "So he's been really inclusive and encouraged his teammates even to the point of getting guys going late in the ballgame when he feels guys need help or support to pick their game up. So that's been the key for us this year."

Bryant's new approach caused his teammates to pay attention more closely to how he approached games and practices. They began to understand how and why he did things the way he did.

With his teammates responding in a positive way and showing a desire to make sacrifices similar to his own to improve, Bryant felt encouraged. That encouragement help him trust his teammates even more both in practices and in games - even in pressure situations.

Here are some of Kobe's and his teammates thoughts:

He's very demanding," guard Sasha Vujacic said. "And at the beginning, my first year, I had to understand his way of being competitive and the way things are."

"You try to compete against him, and there's no competing against him," forward Lamar Odom said. "If we have a 10 a.m. practice, Kobe is there at 8:45 preparing to be the best. And some of that has rubbed off on me and my teammates, and that's why I'm sitting here talking to you today."

I think it was just an evolution," Bryant said of the improved relationship between him and his teammates. "The most important step towards trusting my teammates was seeing that they wanted it as much as I do. So by me seeing them work hard ... I saw they wanted to put for that effort. It made it a lot easier."