A Tribute to Kobe
January 26, 2020 the world was shaken by the sudden loss of NBA Champion and All-Star Kobe “Bean” Bryant. He was a role model, not just to basketball players, but to all athletes. His #MambaMentality was his basketball persona. Mambas are fast moving venomous snakes.
“Kobe also remembered getting the idea from the nickname from Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill, where the Black Mamba is described as a deadly assassin due to its agility and aggressiveness, Mirror claims.”
Muhammad Ali floated like a butterfly and stung like a bee. Jordan had his “Airness” and Kobe was black mamba. Finding ways to strike at the heart of the opponent every season, every game, every play. Kobe mastered the game of basketball. He studied the game. He trained for the game. He lived for the game.
I was washing my car when I found out the news. I thought it was fake news. The first phone call I made was to my uncle. He is hands down the biggest Kobe fan I have ever known. Outside of dress shoes, I’ve only seen him wear Kobe shoes. He has every Kobe shirt, book, jersey, apparel you can think of owning. He hadn’t heard the news yet. He thought I was joking so I read the article that was sent to me to him. I told him it was on every news outlet. He said, “if it isn’t on NBA tv, it’s not real.” So, I went and turned the tv on. Simultaneously, my dad was walking out of his room and I told him the news because he hadn’t heard either. While still on the phone with my uncle I am holding the below conversation with my dad.
T: Dad, Kobe died in a helicopter crash!”
D: “Kobe who?”
T: “Kobe Byrant.”
D: “WHAT??!!!”
He couldn’t get the tv remote out of my hands fast enough to find the news on tv. It was confirmed. I sent a few pictures of what we were seeing on tv to my uncle, while he was simultaneously searching on the internet. I’m not sure who was on his work shift, but they are not going to like him. I could tell in his voice he was hurting.
Facebook posts ensued and my timeline was flooded with tributes to Kobe.
After watching the tv for a few more minutes and scrolling Facebook, I went to go pick up my dog from the groomers. On the drive there is when the news broke that Kobe’s 13-year old daughter, Gianna, was also on board the helicopter. If anyone followed sports even in the slightest, know that Kobe and “Gigi” were inseparable. She was a young, driven and motivated basketball player absorbing everything her dad had to teach her about the game; from work ethic to understanding the game to taking care of your body.
My heart felt extremely heavy. My chest was searing with pain. After I picked up Oakley from the groomers and got in the car, I couldn’t hold the pain inside any longer. I sat in my car and cried. I was hurting because a man I looked up to as a young aspiring basketball player, a man I watched on the court intently was gone. In high school I wore his jersey (his original number 8 jersey when he had the fro). I remember sitting on my night stand hour after hour sitting 3 feet from my 13 inch box tv (flat screen tv’s weren’t a thing in 2000, at least not at my house) re-watching the entire 2000 NBA Finals series of the Los Angeles Lakers vs the Indiana Pacers. Larry Bird was the Head Coach of the Pacers. This Pacers team had Jalen Rose, Reggie Miller, Chris Mullin, Sam Perkins and Mark Jackson among others. Kobe was in his fourth year with the Lakers and in his NBA career. He was a baby, by leagues standards. This Lakers team, led by Head Coach Phil Jackson, had Shaq, Kobe, Rick Fox, Robert Horry, Derek Fisher, Glen Rice running the classic triangle offense. The same triangle offense Phil Jackson used in Chicago to win 2 3-peat championships with the bulls in the 90’s. This was a proven system and Kobe thrived in it. The Lakers went on to win the series 4-2. I recorded Kobe’s interview following the game onto a cassette tape (yes, I said cassette tape. It was 2000 MP3 players/ipods/iphones and streaming music weren’t as popular as they are now). I listened to that cassette tape before every game all through high school. It was my motivation, my fuel to play at my highest level. I even had his single K.O.B.E ft Tyra Banks (how many of yal remember that song??).
Obviously, the rest of his career speaks for itself, but even with the continued success on the court; it was his post-career (or second career) activities that showed us just how intelligent and giving this man was.
He was more than just a basketball player. He was a husband, a father, a teammate, a coach, a creator, a storyteller, a role model, philanthropist, and an inspiration to everyone.
He will be truly missed not only for what he brought to the NBA and how he changed the game, but to his post career passions that showed everyone a much more creative, family-oriented, and giving side to Kobe.
Thank you, Kobe “Bean” Bryant, for everything you gave to this world. Thank you for inspiring millions of athletes everywhere. Thank you for showing us how using our platforms in the right way can shape and impact many, many lives (www.kvbff.org). Thank you to his family for sharing him with the world. The world is praying for you!
While playing his entire NBA Career with the Los Angeles Lakers (after being originally drafted by the Charlotte Hornets and traded to the Los Angeles Lakers) below are his highlights and awards:
- Playing Career: 1996 – 2016
- NBA Draft 1996: Round 1, Pick 13
- 5-time NBA champion (2000, 2001, 2002 2009, 2010)
- 2-time NBA Finals MVP (2009, 2010)
- NBA MVP (2008)
- 2-time Olympic Gold Medalist (2008, 2012)
- 18-time NBA All-Star (1998, 2000-2016; 2nd most in NBA history)
- 4-time NBA All-Star Game MVP (2002, 2007, 2009, 2011)
- 11-time All NBA first team selection (2002-2004, 2006-2013; Tied 2nd most in NBA history)
- 2-time All-NBA Second team (2000-2001)
- 2-time All-NBA Third team (1999, 2005)
- 9-time NBA All-Defensive First Team (2000, 2003-2004, 2006-2011)
- 3-time NBA All-Defensive Second Team (2001-2002, 2012)
- 2-time NBA Scoring Champion (2006, 2007)
- NBA Slam Dunk Contest Champion (1997)
- NBA All-Rookie Second Team (1997)
- All-time Lakers leading scorer (33,643 points; 4th in NBA all-time)
- Youngest player to 30,000 (December 7, 2012; age 34 years, 104 days)
- Second highest single game scoring performance (81 points) January 22, 2006
- Youngest NBA All-Stat starter (1998, age 19 years, 170 days)
- Final NBA game April 13, 2016. Scored 60 against the Utah Jazz
Career Stats:
- Points: 33,643 (25 ppg)
- Rebounds: 7,047 (5.2 rpg)
- Assists: 6,306 (4.7 apg)
- The only player to have 2 jerseys retired by the same team (8, 24)
Post Career Highlights:
- Academy Award Winner for Best Animated Short Film (2018)
#RIHKobe #RIHGianna #RIHGigi #2 #8 #24 #Bean #Kobe #Bryant #Lakers #Legend #5Rings #MambaMentality #BlackMambaOut










