The Phnom Penh Post

Kobe looms large as NBA playoff Lakers ready to start

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LEBRON James said on Monday memories of Kobe Bryant are still looming large for the Los Angeles Lakers as the team steps up preparatio­ns for the NBA’s re-launched season in Florida.

Six months after Bryant, his daughter Gianna and seven other people died in a helicopter crash in Los Angeles, James said he still thinks of the late Lakers legend every day.

“A day doesn’t go by where I don’t think about him,” James said when asked about Bryant. “A day doesn’t go by where our organisati­on does not remember him and think about not only Kobe, but Gigi, [wife] Vanessa, and the other girls.

“They’re part of this family. Just as big as anybody in this organisati­on’s history, so we still wear 24 and 8 and No2 with pride and remembranc­e of how great they were.”

Lakers coach Frank Vogel said he believed Bryant’s death, which sent shockwaves around the world of sport, had bound his team closer together.

“Any time a group like ours goes through something so emotionall­y deep, I just think it forms bonds, strengthen­ed our group,” Vogel told reporters in Orlando.

“You never want something like that to happen, but I do think that’s the effect of something like that. We always, even prior to this happening, we wanted to embody what he stood for and even more so now with what happened. We want to honour his memory.”

Vogel said the sense of shared purpose amongst the Lakers squad could serve the team well once they enter the playoffs determined to honour Bryant’s legacy.

Honouring toughness

“I think there’s going to be a daily mindset of honouring the work and having that toughness about us,” Vogel said.

“When we get into the playoffs, there will be opportunit­ies and situations where we’ll refresh our mindset of things that he stood for and what his approach was from a competitiv­e spirit standpoint.

“I think it will help us in our mission this year.”

The Lakers enter the NBA restart having already assured themselves of a playoff berth.

When the season was halted due to the coronaviru­s pandemic on March 11, the Lakers led the Western Conference standings with 49 wins against 14 losses, 5.5 games ahead of the secondplac­ed Los Angeles Clippers.

James meanwhile said he was unfazed by news that this year’s NBA Most Valuable Players award would be decided before the league restarts on July 30.

That decision by the league leaves Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo in pole position to claim MVP honours.

“I’m not disappoint­ed because things happen,” James said on Monday. “Control what you can control, and I can’t control that.”

James instead took satisfacti­on from the fact he had proven himself in the ultra-competitiv­e Western Conference.

“There was a lot of conversati­on about, ‘LeBron can do those things in the East, but if he ever came to the West, what can he do?’” James said.

“I heard all of that. To be able to have our team at the top of the Western Conference and playing the way that we were playing at that time and the way I was playing, that’s definitely a good feeling.”

 ?? AFP ?? LeBron James says memories of Kobe Bryant are still looming large for the Los Angeles Lakers as the team preps for the playoffs.
AFP LeBron James says memories of Kobe Bryant are still looming large for the Los Angeles Lakers as the team preps for the playoffs.

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