Los Angeles Times

WHO TAKES THE TORCH?

Bryant had become a big advocate of the women’s game, and men’s stars now seem to be joining in

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Among some of the most powerful and notable names in entertainm­ent and sports, it was Sparks forward Chiney Ogwumike and Las Vegas Aces center Liz Cambage who got the unexpected star treatment.

In a dimly lighted Staples Center, as nearly 20,000 gathered to mourn the passing of Kobe and Gianna Bryant, Kobe’s parents, Joe and Pam, approached the WNBA stars Monday morning.

In this moment of immeasurab­le grief, the parents of a legendary basketball player had a message for Ogwumike and Cambage, who have five WNBA All-Star appearance­s combined: We’re fans of you guys.

“That blew my mind,” Ogwumike said Tuesday, recalling the story from Monday’s memorial service. “But that was what Kobe was raised on. He was our greatest advocate. He had a crazy attention to detail.”

The same care Bryant took in advocating for women in sport before his death appeared at Monday’s “Celebratio­n of Life,” which honored the late NBA star, his daughter Gianna and the seven others who died in a helicopter crash Jan. 26.

As thousands gathered in Staples Center, with millions more watching worldwide, female empowermen­t took center stage. Beyoncé opened the program by singing “XO” and “Halo.” The video screen at the arena showed Gianna’s basketball highlights.

The first three speakers of the event following host Jimmy Kimmel and Bryant’s widow, Vanessa, were stars in the women’s basketball world: Diana Taurasi, the WNBA and Olympic champion who introduced herself as “the white mamba”; Sabrina Ionescu, the Oregon point guard who hours after eulogizing her friend and mentor became the first college player — male or female — with 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and

‘I don’t know how you walk away [from the memorial] and not take away that we need to elevate women.’ — Chiney Ogwumike

1,000 assists; and Geno Auriemma, the Connecticu­t head coach whose team Gianna aspired to join one day.

Shaquille O’Neal, Michael Jordan and Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka would soon take the stage. They shared poignant stories of their friend during his legendary NBA career, but the first part of the speaking lineup highlighte­d Gianna’s life as a budding basketball player and her father’s second act as an ally to women’s sports.

“I don’t know how you walk away or listen to anything” at the memorial “and not take away that we need to elevate women,” Ogwumike said.

Kobe was the “total package of inf luence and impact,” UCLA coach Cori Close said.

He was a highly respected former player. He was a current coach, passing his knowledge to the next wave of players. And he was a dad to a girl with big dreams — Gianna hoped to play at Connecticu­t then star in the WNBA, and wrote papers in school about closing the wage gap between the NBA and WNBA. Gianna’s growing interest in the game prompted Kobe’s fervent support of women’s basketball.

“He walked the walk, but most people just talk the talk,” Sparks forward Nneka Ogwumike said.

Bryant was also generous with his knowledge of the game. Monique Billings recalled how she worked out with him one summer day. The Atlanta Dream forward, who graduated from UCLA in 2018, approached him to introduce herself. Kobe gave her a puzzled look.

“I know who you are,” he said. The moment still gives Billings chills.

“It goes back to respect,” UCLA’s all-time blocked shots leader said.

Billings remembered that Bryant was patient while teaching her footwork during the workout and excited when she mastered it.

Pelinka spoke Monday about how calmly Kobe coached his team of middle school girls against a boys all-star team on which Pelinka’s son played. The Mambas “were so well prepared, they functioned like a Swiss watch,” the NBA star’s former agent said. The girls won in a landslide.

The time Kobe invested in women’s basketball players might have been one of his most important contributi­ons.

“It’s a little scary to know who’s going to take the baton,” Close said. “Who’s going to step up and not only honor his legacy in that way, but continue the growth and see those opportunit­ies and visions come to fruition?”

Watching Kobe pivot from his successful playing career into life as a coach for his daughter is a familiar script for Dee Brown, the general manager of the G League’s Agua Caliente Clippers.

The 12-year NBA veteran also coached his daughter — Lexie Brown — on her AAU team and ran his own training facility. Lexie, a McDonald’s All-American who played in two Final Fours with Maryland and graduated from Duke in 2017, was a first-round WNBA draft pick in 2018.

Brown, a father of three girls and one boy, said he’ll fight for all women to “get a full chance of accomplish­ing those goals that any other male could . ... I will fight the fight with them. I want them to understand that there’s a place for you in every organizati­on, situation, environmen­t.”

Brown, who began his pro coaching career in the WNBA with the Orlando Miracle, said the rise of social media has made it easier for NBA players to voice their support of women’s basketball. NBA players see their WNBA counterpar­ts as “peers,” Brown said, linked together by “the pureness of the sport.”

Washington Wizards guards John Wall and Bradley Beal are among current NBA players who have become vocal supporters of women’s basketball. The AllStars sat courtside to watch the Washington Mystics win the franchise’s first WNBA title last year, wearing matching No. 20 Kristi Toliver jerseys. Toliver, a former Mystics guard who signed with the Sparks as a free agent this month, is also an assistant coach for the Wizards.

Hours after the memorial, Golden State Warriors superstar Stephen Curry attended Ionescu’s game in Palo Alto on Monday night. The Oregon star recorded her 26th career triple-double with 21 points, 12 assists and 12 rebounds in No. 3 Oregon’s 74-66 win over No. 4 Stanford.

Curry sent his approval on Twitter, sharing a tweet about Ionescu’s historic night, which took place on Feb. 24, 2020, a date that combined Gianna’s, Kobe’s and Ionescu’s jersey numbers, with the comment “can’t write this any better.”

To Chiney Ogwumike, who Tuesday night was still wearing a yellow wristband from the ceremony with the Nos. 24 and 2 separated by the infinity symbol, Curry, a father to daughters Riley, 7, and Ryan, 4, “literally is embodying what Kobe wanted.

“He amplifies women and that’s because he has daughters and he gets it,” Ogwumike said. “That’s the energy that I hope our male allies will provide. … It’s now creating that accountabi­lity so that we crush that gap.”

 ?? Jessica Hill Associated Press ?? “HE WALKED the walk, but most people just talk the talk,” Nneka Ogwumike said of Kobe Bryant, shown watching a game with daughter Gianna last year at Connecticu­t, which she had hoped to attend.
Jessica Hill Associated Press “HE WALKED the walk, but most people just talk the talk,” Nneka Ogwumike said of Kobe Bryant, shown watching a game with daughter Gianna last year at Connecticu­t, which she had hoped to attend.
 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? SPARKS TEAMMATES and sisters, Chiney, left, and Nneka Ogwumike both spoke about what Kobe Bryant meant to women’s basketball.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press SPARKS TEAMMATES and sisters, Chiney, left, and Nneka Ogwumike both spoke about what Kobe Bryant meant to women’s basketball.

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