Boston Herald

Bryant tributes rule day; AFC tops NFC

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Green Bay linebacker Za’Darius Smith hastily organized an homage to Kobe Bryant minutes before the Pro Bowl.

Smith and his NFC teammates learned about Bryant’s death while they were in the locker room getting ready for the NFL’s all-star game Sunday. Smith suggested the best way to pay tribute the late NBA great was to mimic his fadeaway jumper after big plays. So they did — repeatedly. It was one of several ways NFL players remembered Bryant during the celebrator­y event, which the AFC won 38-33 for its fourth consecutiv­e victory in Orlando.

“I don’t even want to talk about it anymore,” Smith said in the locker room hours later. “I don’t want to get emotional.”

Detroit cornerback Darius Slay didn’t duck his feelings. Slay grew up idolizing Bryant so much that he had a custom Lakers hoodie made to warm up in before NFL games. Slay also got to meet Bryant a few years back.

“It’s heart-wrecking,” Slay said with tears in his eyes. “There’s not any words you can say. I’m in shock. I just imagine him growing old, being part-owner of the Lakers and having a future son I could cheer for next. It’s just shocking. Me saying the words ‘Kobe’s gone,’ that’s just crazy.”

Bryant died in a helicopter crash early Sunday near Calabasas, California, and the news spread shortly before the game. It put a damper on the NFL game held on the other side of the country.

Players checked cellphones on the sidelines for updates, all of them looking for informatio­n and answers.

“It shocked the whole locker room,” Philadelph­ia defensive tackle Fletcher Cox said. “Nobody thought it was true, but it was. It’s a sad day for sports.”

Smith, Slay and Tampa Bay’s Shaq Barrett got together following a secondquar­ter sack and delivered their first “Kobe J.” Even more NFC teammates performed the routine following a fumble in the third.

Green Bay receiver Davonte Adams pointed to the sky and flashed the No. 24 on his fingers as an ode to Bryant’s jersey after a touchdown catch in the third.

Seattle quarterbac­k Russell Wilson led a prayer for Bryant and his family before the game.

The NFL also held a moment of silence for Bryant at the 2-minute warning in the first half, showing the retired

NBA star’s picture on the scoreboard­s while announcing his death at age 41.

Several guys removed their helmets during the break. Others took a knee and prayed. Fans broke the silence by chanting “Ko-be! Ko-be!”

“I felt hurt,” Chicago safety Eddie Jackson said. “It’s sad. I don’t know how it feels to lose a husband and a child, so I don’t understand what the family’s going through. It’s got to be tough.”

Aside from the Bryant tributes, the NFL’s annual all-star game went as expected. There were big plays everywhere and few tackles anywhere. The teams combined for 834 yards and 10 touchdowns.

The play of the day was Pittsburgh linebacker T.J. Watt’s 82-yard fumble return in the fourth. Jacksonvil­le’s Calais Campbell beat Dallas’ Travis Frederick and sacked Kirk Cousins on a fourthand-goal play from the 9. Campbell stripped the ball, which Watt scooped up and went untouched the other way to put the AFC ahead 38-27.

The NFC had a chance to rally late and tried to take advantage of a new rule that allows the scoring team to retain possession by facing a fourth-and-15 play from its own 25-yard line. Cousins threw a deep ball that Baltimore safety Earl Thomas intercepte­d.

Campbell was named the AFC’s defensive player of the game. Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson was the offensive MVP.

The winners earned $70,000 each. The losers got $35,000 apiece.

 ?? AP ?? AFC safety Jamal Adams holds up a tribute to Kobe Bryant in the second quarter of the Pro Bowl.
AP AFC safety Jamal Adams holds up a tribute to Kobe Bryant in the second quarter of the Pro Bowl.

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