The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Death is a personal loss for the Hawks’ Trae Young and Vince Carter,

- By Chris Vivlamore cvivlamore@ajc.com

Vince Carter and Kobe Bryant spoke twice about retirement.

As much as Carter wants it, there won’t be another conversati­on.

Carter is calling it a career after this year, his NBA-record 22nd season. Bryant played 20 seasons before leaving the game in 2016. There was a hug and parting words of “See you soon” after Bryant and his daughter watched the Hawks play a game in Brooklyn this season. Surely, there would be time for the two NBA legends to further discuss life after basketball.

It was not to be. Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna were among nine people killed in a helicopter crash Sunday in Southern California. They were on their way to a youth basketball tournament.

Carter and the Hawks had a home game against the Wizards on Sunday. Carter recalled a conversati­on he had with Bryant when Carter was with the Grizzlies, in their final game against each other, before the Lakers icon called it a career.

“I remember asking him was he ready to retire,” Carter said Sunday night. “He said he is ready. How are you going to handle it? Twenty years of doing something, how do you handle it? He said he’d be OK.”

With Carter on the verge of retirement, they had another conversati­on on Dec. 21 as Bryant and his daughter watched the Hawks play the Nets from courtside seats.

“I said ‘How is it?’” Carter said. “He said he was the happiest he’s been, getting the opportunit­y to see his girls grow up. Helping his daughter figure out the game and understand it the way he understood it. You could see that in her game. The next time, he asked me if I was ready to handle it . ... He said, ‘You’ll enjoy it. It’s peaceful.’ He said that’s when he was his happiest.

“He said we’ll connect soon and we’ll talk about it, the steps he went through to be at his happiest and comfortabl­e with retiring.”

Carter called the sudden death of Bryant “crushing.” He sees himself in Bryant. He waits for the days when he can devote his time to his daughter’s endeavors. He appreciate­s that he can be at his happiest after stepping away from the sport he has devoted his life to mastering.

Carter said others could see Bryant’s new outlook after a playing career that was marked by his competitiv­e nature.

“You go through the 20 years of Kobe’s career and you think of how many people hated Kobe because of how great he was, and you get to that last game when he scored 60-something points,” Carter said. “I think the world grew to love him even more after retirement because of the love he started to show different people. I’m talking kids in college, Trae (Young), his last tweet to LeBron ( James, who just one day earlier surpassed him for third on the NBA’s all-time scoring list). You could see a man who was such a fierce competitor at peace as he sits courtside now. It’s not the Mamba competing against whoever. It’s the dad teaching his daughter the ins and outs of the game . ... That’s what I saw and that’s what I think a lot of people saw.”

 ?? AP 2016 ?? Apparent in each conversati­on they had, Kobe Bryant and Vince Carter shared more than hoops. They shared a desire to enjoy family all they could after a passionate life of playing the game.
AP 2016 Apparent in each conversati­on they had, Kobe Bryant and Vince Carter shared more than hoops. They shared a desire to enjoy family all they could after a passionate life of playing the game.

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