Bangkok Post

The man who created his own ‘Dream Team’

Kobe’s devotion was massive all the time

- SCOTT CACCIOLA ©2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES

NEW YORK: Kobe Bryant was 17 when he worked out for the Phoenix Suns before the 1996 NBA draft.

Jerry Colangelo, who owned the team at the time, already knew a great deal about Bryant, who had emerged from Lower Merion High School in suburban Philadelph­ia as the flashiest phenom of his generation.

Colangelo knew, for example, that Bryant had spent part of his childhood in Italy.

Sure enough, there was something about Bryant’s demeanour, the way he carried himself, the way he spoke, that struck Colangelo as different.

Bryant was not a typical teenager, and Colangelo suspected that had a lot to do with his childhood.

“He was becoming a man of the world as a young guy,” Colangelo said in a recent telephone interview from his home in Phoenix.

“And there’s a maturity that goes along with that. Once you travel and you’re involved in other cultures, you just kind of grow up differentl­y and more quickly, and probably with a little more depth.”

The workout itself was spectacula­r, Colangelo said — so spectacula­r that it was the best pre-draft workout Colangelo had ever seen.

“He had this self-confidence,” Colangelo said. “He knew he was special. He knew he was good — really good. And then you add to that the incredible desire he had to be the very best. It was the combinatio­n. It’s one thing to have confidence. It’s another thing to be able to back it up with talent.”

The bad news for Colangelo was that the Suns had the 15th pick in the draft and were unable to move up in the order.

Bryant went 13th to the Charlotte Hornets, who had agreed to trade him to the Los Angeles Lakers for veteran centre Vlade Divac.

Bryant went on to spend the bulk of his career torching the Suns and the rest of the league.

Colangelo saw it all — and even found an opportunit­y to nurture his relationsh­ip with Bryant through their associatio­n with USA Basketball, which culminated in a gold medal at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

Another punctuatio­n of sorts will come later this year when Colangelo, in his role as chairman of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, is scheduled to preside over Bryant’s posthumous induction.

Bryant, who died in a helicopter crash near Los Angeles on Jan 26 along with his daughter Gianna, is part of a celebrated class that also includes Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett and Tamika Catchings.

Bryant retired in 2016 with five championsh­ips and all the gluttonous statistics befitting an 18-time NBA All-Star.

But far beyond his longevity and the production he crammed into a 20-year career, Bryant will be remembered for the moments he created.

He was the rare player capable of turning basketball into theatre.

His alley-oop to Shaquille O’Neal during the 2000 Western Conference finals.

His jersey-tugging celebratio­n after he hit a game-winning jumper against the Suns in 2006.

The 61 points he scored against the New York Knicks in 2009.

The two free throws he sank on a freshly torn Achilles’ tendon in 2013.

“He was the fiercest competitor I ever played against,” Michael Redd, a retired shooting guard, said in a telephone interview.

“He made me a better basketball player.”

For the first half of Bryant’s career, Colangelo had to watch Bryant’s handiwork from a distance, and for a rival team.

They would exchange pleasantri­es — “a nod hello, a shaking of hands,” Colangelo said — but that was pretty much the extent of their involvemen­t with each other.

That all changed in 2006. A couple of days before Bryant scored 81 points against the Toronto Raptors, Colangelo invited him to his office in Phoenix.

The Lakers were in town to face the Suns, but Colangelo had something else on his mind: He wanted Bryant to represent the United States at the 2008 Olympics.

“I knew in advance that he really wanted to be a part of USA Basketball,” said Colangelo, who had taken over as managing director of the men’s national team after its disastrous third-place finish at the 2004 Olympics in Athens — a far cry from the standard of excellence set by Michael Jordan and the so-called Dream Team that won gold in 1992.

“It was on his list of things that he wanted to accomplish, because he had never played for USA Basketball. No junior teams or anything like that. So it was important to him, and his commitment was huge.”

Bryant’s desire to be the team’s driving force became clear to Colangelo at the 2007 Fiba Americas Championsh­ip in Las Vegas, where he scouted a couple of tournament games from the stands with Bryant.

“He had so much insight,” Colangelo said.

At the team’s pre-Olympic training camp the next summer, Bryant was the first player to arrive. In fact, he beat most members of the coaching staff — and was getting in workouts at 5.30am.

The rest of the team, which included the likes of LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony and Dwyane Wade, soon followed his lead.

“I think Kobe challenged everybody,” said Jim Boeheim, one of the team’s assistants and the men’s basketball coach at Syracuse.

“He was like, ‘I’m going to defend the toughest guy on every team, I’m going to push everyone, so just come along with me.’ And he did that from Day One.”

For Colangelo, it was a window into greatness.

The foundation for all of Bryant’s feats — the 81-point game, the scoring titles, the series-clinching jump shots, the three championsh­ips he had already won with the Lakers — was his work ethic and desire.

The spectacula­r was rooted in the mundane, in the monotony of hard labour.

At the Olympics, Bryant helped lead the way in the gold medal final against Spain — and did it with flair.

With about three minutes remaining in a tight game, Bryant effectivel­y sealed the win with a four-point play. He raised an index finger to his lips to silence the Spanish fans in the crowd.

A few minutes later, as the Americans celebrated on the court, Colangelo embraced the player he had once dreamed of drafting. The wait, in some ways, was worth it.

“How often does someone have an objective, a goal, and have it perfectly executed?” Colangelo asked. “It was just so special.”

 ?? AFP ?? Kobe Bryant celebrates after the USA won gold at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.
AFP Kobe Bryant celebrates after the USA won gold at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

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