Kobe Bryant
This year, the man has been fantastic, running one of the NBA’s most devastating offenses while regaining the defensive edge that he appeared to have lost last season. He put on a brilliant performance on national TV yesterday, registering 52 points (30 in the fourth quarter and overtime alone) and 11 rebounds while carrying the Lakers offensively in a win over Dallas.
When Bryant went to the free throw line, the Staples Center crowd chanted, "M-V-P! M-V-P!"
And they should stop it.
Actually, they can chant whatever they want. Chant it for Sasha Vujacic, see if he has a Slovenian sense of humor. My issue is in the incessant (in El Lay and on the national airwaves) proclamations of Kobe Bryant as the NBA’s best player.
He isn’t. Sorry, but he isn’t. He’s awesome, but he’s not the game’s best player. He has the best chance of any NBA talent at dropping 75 points on your ass, and that’s impressive, but Allen Iverson, Carmelo Anthony and Wade (when he’s healthy) aren’t far behind. And "best scorer" doesn’t always mean "best player."
And, while we’re at it, Kobe’s not even the best scorer any more. James is.
And, in this case, "best scorer" means "best player."
And, to anyone who takes the game seriously, "best player" should mean "M-V-P!"
It’s not a huge edge, but it’s decisive enough: James has Bryant licked in scoring per game (30.3 to 28.2), assists (7.5 to 5.4), rebounds (8.1 to 6.0) and shooting percentage (48.6 to 46.6). Bryant shoots better from long range (35 percent to 30), and has James’ number from the line, but so does Kyle Kolver. Otherwise, they’re even on steals and turnovers, and James blocks nearly twice as many shots.
James may play two more minutes per game, but he still owns a decisive edge in the per-minute numbers, and has to do his damage on a slow-down team (20th in the NBA in possessions). Kobe has a chance to pad his stats (not that he is, kindly read that carefully) with about five more possessions per game on the Lakers. That’s significant.
