Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

BY ANDREW GREIF

Vanessa Bryant helped design her husband’s special and immersive Hall of Fame exhibit

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Kobe Bryant’s NBA career was like few others before him — and so is the way the Lakers star will be remembered within the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame upon his postinduct­ion humous Saturday.

For only the second time in its history, the hall has created a stand-alone space for an enmember shrined in the form of an exhibit dubbed, “Kobe: A Basketball Life.”

The only other Hall of Famer honored in similar fashion was Michael Jordan, whose exhibit opened in 2009 and ran for five years.

At 600 square feet, the Bryant exhibit “is about 600 square feet more than any other Hall of Famer gets,” said John Doleva, the hall’s president and chief executive. Its run is open-ended.

With little suspense that Brybe ant would a first-ballot seleceligi­ble tion when in 2020, plans to construct an exhibit honoring his career had been underway for at least two years before his January 2020 death, Doleva said.

The result is a space that Matt Zeysing, the hall’s historicur­ator, an and feels is as refleccele­bratory, tive as it is with dereflects sign that input from Vanessa Bryant.

“It’s like you’re immersing yourself in Kobe’s life, but there is this feeling of the future about Kobe,” Doleva said. “It makes you contemplat­e what could have been.”

Built with sponsorshi­p by trading-card company Panini America, the exhibit will include portions of the court at Lower Merion High in Pennsylvan­ia, where Bryant leaped from highto school star the 13th overall pick in the 1996 NBA draft; replicas of the five championsh­ip rings he won with the Lakers during his 20year career; the sneakers he wore while scoring a career-high 81 points in 2006; and a highlight video. In addition, “Dear Basketball,” Bryant’s Oscar-winning 2017 animated short film, will play.

“Vanessa really wanted the space partly to be reflective, and so ‘Dear Basketball’ brings that part in,” Zeysing said. “… She wanted a space for if someone wanted to just reflect for longer than even 30 minutes that they would have the opportunit­y to do that.”

Sharing rare company with Jordan is an appropriat­e cap for a career in which Bryant compared himself to, and found competitiv­e motivation from, the iconic Chicago Bulls guard. Bonded by an extreme competitiv­e nature, the two eventually grew close. Following Bryant’s death in a helicopter crash that killed eight others, including Bryant’s daughter, Gianna, Jordan described the 41-year-old Bryant as “my dear friend — he was like a little brother,” during a eulogy during a public memorial last year at Staples Center.

Jordan also served as Bryant’s presenter during Saturday’s induction in Springfiel­d, Mass. The nine-person class also includes big men Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett, coach Rudy Tomjanovic­h and WNBA star Tamika Catchings.

Bryant’s exhibit is part of a larger, $25-million renovation of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame that opens Sunday for the first time. By replacing the “sepia-toned plaques and two, maybe 2½ paragraphs of informatio­n” formerly given to each inductee, Doleva believes visitors will leave with a deeper sense of an inductee’s career through the combinatio­n of more technology alongside physical artifacts previously on display.

“You’re now able to walk up to a 55-inch monitor kiosk and really do a deep, deep dive on Kobe with pictures and video from all aspects of his career and ‘Mamba’ and whatever else,” Doleva said. “It really is much more obviously immersive, much more engaging. And I think we have an obligation also to educate, so while people know a lot about Kobe, I think they can learn a lot about other players that went before Kobe.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? FANS reach out to Kobe Bryant, whose inf luence extended beyond sports.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times FANS reach out to Kobe Bryant, whose inf luence extended beyond sports.

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