Imperial Valley Press

All-Star weekend, as expected, was about honoring Kobe

- BY TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

CHICAGO — It has become one of the NBA’s most revered traditions: On the morning of the NBA AllStar Game, the league pays tribute to retired players with what is called the Legends Brunch.

It brings together about 3,000 guests, and every year a recent retiree with ties to the game’s host city is honored.

When the game was in Los Angeles two years ago, the NBA wanted to honor Kobe Bryant.

He declined. He couldn’t attend. His reason: his daughter Gianna Bryant had a game that morning.

“That said, to us, everything about his priorities,” NBA Commission­er Adam Silver said Sunday as he recalled that conversati­on with Bryant.

This All-Star weekend is in Michael Jordan’s longtime home of Chicago, which will be highlighte­d by a game where LeBron James and Giannis Antetokoun­mpo will serve as captains — but it was, predictabl­y and understand­ably, overshadow­ed by Bryant. It’s been three weeks now since he, 13-year-old Gianna and seven others were killed in a helicopter crash in Southern California. And the mourning period is still very active, very real, very necessary.

The first Kobe Bryant MVP Award will be handed out later Sunday night, given to the player voted as the biggest star of the AllStar Game — a trophy that Bryant hoisted four times. Jennifer Hudson is doing a pregame tribute to Bryant, players on James’ team will wear Gianna’s No. 2 on their jerseys and players on Antetokoun­mpo’s team will wear Kobe’s No. 24 on theirs. And all players are wearing a patch with nine stars, one for each victim of the crash.

It’s a doubly somber time for the NBA, since the league is still coming to grips with the Jan. 1 death of Commission­er Emeritus David Stern — the person credited for taking a fledgling league and turning it into one of the planet’s most powerful sports brands, a multi-billion-dollar entity with a reach that touches nearly every outpost on earth.

Stern was remembered as well at the Legends Brunch, and Silver drew a parallel between Bryant and his former boss.

“Just as a reminder: Who more embodies the spirit of All-Star than Kobe? ... He always played hard. He didn’t care if it was an AllStar game,” Silver said. “And I think that’s what he and David had in common. They always competed. They believed in the power of sports.

They believed in winning and they believed it was necessary to always give their all. And I think that’s why their losses have resonated with so many people around the world.”

Magic Johnson — like Bryant, a Los Angeles Lakers legend — had been hired two years ago to introduce Bryant at the Legends Brunch, the one that Bryant couldn’t attend because his daughter had a game that morning.

On Sunday, Johnson finally got his chance to speak at the event and pay tribute to Bryant.

He told the story about how, before Bryant was drafted in 1996, Jerry West called him to say that he had seen the greatest draft workout that he could recall.

He was speaking of Bryant’s workout.

“And I said, ‘ Really,’” Johnson said. “He said, ‘Yes, this guy named Kobe Bryant. Just was incredible in his workout and we’re going to do everything we can to draft him.”

The rest is history. Bryant came to the Lakers in a draft- night trade and played there for 20 years, winning five titles. Johnson said he was quickly impressed with Bryant’s work ethic, how he would work for two hours before practice and then go through another two-hour session with the team.

 ?? AP PHOTO/FILE ?? At left, in a March 4, 2018, file photo, Kobe Bryant attends the Governors Ball after the Oscars in Los Angeles. At right, in a May 28, 2019, file photo, Jennifer Hudson sings “Amazing Grace” in tribute to Aretha Franklin during the 2019 Pulitzer Prize winners awards luncheon at Columbia University in New York. Jennifer Hudson is coming to the All-Star Game to pay tribute to Kobe Bryant with her voice.
AP PHOTO/FILE At left, in a March 4, 2018, file photo, Kobe Bryant attends the Governors Ball after the Oscars in Los Angeles. At right, in a May 28, 2019, file photo, Jennifer Hudson sings “Amazing Grace” in tribute to Aretha Franklin during the 2019 Pulitzer Prize winners awards luncheon at Columbia University in New York. Jennifer Hudson is coming to the All-Star Game to pay tribute to Kobe Bryant with her voice.

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