Bangkok Post

THE CHANGING OF THE GUARD AS LAKERS LEGEND BRYANT FADES

A new breed led by James and Curry is now vying for the tag of finest player

- writes Rupert Cornwell

‘ The torch has been passed to a new generation,” declared President John F Kennedy in his immortal inaugurati­on address. Generation­s perforce are briefer on the basketball court than in politics. But the principle is the same, and so it was this week. Kobe Bryant, superstar bulwark of the Los Angeles Lakers for two decades through thick and (of late, very) thin, announced his retirement. Meanwhile the sport’s newest anointed superstar has been leading his team on the greatest season’s start in NBA history.

Ever since his pro debut with Oakland’s Golden State Warriors in 2009, Steph Curry has been a class act. But only this year did he emerge as arguably the best player in the game — better even, some would say, than LeBron James, with whom he is linked by the astounding coincidenc­e of having been born in the same maternity unit at the City hospital of Akron, Ohio. Akron may have lost its reputation as the ‘Tyre Capital of the World’, but when it comes to spawning basketball legends, there’s clearly something in the local water.

James, after a controvers­ial detour to the Miami Heat, is now back with his home state team, the Cleveland Cavaliers, and living in Akron, 30 miles to the south. Curry, however, left as an infant. In America, trades run in the family, in basketball as in politics. His father was a pro with the Charlotte Hornets, and Curry grew up in North Carolina, emerging as a high school and college talent whom the Warriors took as their first pick in the 2009 draft.

Last season everything came together. Curry and Golden State romped to the NBA championsh­ips, defeating James and Cleveland in the finals. Before that, Curry had earned his first NBA Most Valuable Player award as the Warriors compiled a 67-15 regular season record, matching the fifth best of all-time. This season promises even better. As of last night, they were a scarcely believable 20-0. They had consigned the previous 15-0 record start, set by the Houston Rockets in 1993, to the dustbin and were on pace to eclipse the best regular-season mark of 72-10, set by Phil Jackson’s Chicago Bulls in 1995-96 and powered by Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen.

Many believe Curry, who at 27 is entering the prime of his career, could one day be as special as even Jordan. He isn’t there yet of course. Like Jordan, however, he can do it all. By basketball standards he’s almost small, just 6ft 3in, compared with MJ’s 6ft 6in and James’ 6ft 8in.

But he is canny in defence and has a dribble that leaves opponents looking like lampposts. Most important, he scores three-pointers — that most basic yet satisfying of basketball skills — at a rate no one before has matched. Last season he had 286 of them, converting almost half his attempts from long range. Few things are more thrilling than Curry slicing down the court and making a jumper from just outside the arc. Already he’s being hailed as the best shooter in NBA history.

And he does it with a grace, effortless­ness and elasticity that has admirers reaching for artistic metaphors. A couple of top American ballet dancers have said that, in another life, Curry could have been one of them, while The New York Times has likened the Warriors to a Count Basie band, “a marvel of swing and rhythm and intelligen­ce”, with Curry as “the team’s great free-form trumpet player”. Even MJ rarely got such lyrical write-ups. At his age there should be a decade’s worth more to come from Curry, injury permitting. His current four-year US$44-million deal must be one of the biggest sporting steals on the planet.

Like politics, basketball moves in eras identified by the names of its greatest practition­ers. Over the last 30 years, we’ve had the Lakers and the fast-breaking ‘showtime’ style personifie­d by Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, that turned a sport into a branch of Hollywood.

There followed the era of the Bulls and Jordan under the ‘Zen Master’ Phil Jackson, winner of six championsh­ips in Chicago before he went to the Lakers and won five more. Those Los Angeles teams were built around Bryant and his frère ennemi Shaquille O’Neal. Historical­ly, they formed the bridge from the MJ era to today’s age of James and Curry.

The current Lakers are a train wreck. Jack Nicholson, their most famous and devoted fan, must feel he’s back in the cuckoo’s nest as he watches the horror show unfold. The one-time glamour team of the NBA lost 15 of their first 18 games — in part because of the understand­able deference of younger players to Bryant, the fading titan in their midst who, battered by injury, is missing shots he would have put away in his sleep a few years ago.

Which leaves just two men standing in the contest to attach their name to an era — those two men delivered to this world in the same maternity hospital, 39 months apart. Until last season, James, with his Mensa-grade basketball IQ and virtually unstoppabl­e, was almost universall­y regarded as the game’s finest current player. But now some are revising judgement in Curry’s favour.

 ??  ?? Stephen Curry, left, and Kobe Bryant.
Stephen Curry, left, and Kobe Bryant.

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