Wednesday, January 25, 2006

the curious case of kobe bryant

Bill Plaschke wrote a piece on Kobe Bryant this week and while I usually do not care for Plaschke's work, and in this piece I think he was perhaps friendlier than necessary, I agreed with the main thrust of the piece. Kobe has been paying dues for a few years now and if I am, mad at him or disillusioned for his public mistakes, perhaps it is time to let bygones be bygone.

Plaschke's article was an excellent piece, (for an LA Times Sportswriter.) He may go a bit far in his love of Kobe, but at the same time he is right in proclaiming everyone else hard on him. The tricky thing about Kobe is the fact that the criminal justice system has either forgiven him, exonerated him or excused him, depending on how you want to look at it. That being the case, the Lakers and the NBA were/are only too happy to have him back on the court increasing the value of their product.

The tricky spot to be in is ours. For fans, this situation is a bit like knowing someone who has committed a murder, (let's just say,) but for whatever reason we are forced to live with this person and every single day, the person is just as nice as can be. The murderer is cordial and chatty, a good listener who gives of himself, has a sense of humor and is warm. In other words, we would be inclined to like the guy in every other way were it not for the fact he killed a person. But as time passes, and the nice input of the everyday interaction grows into a mountain of personal experience. . .(I guess it may be like the prison guard who grows close to a convict,) I think we forget or forgive or simply lose identification with the sin we still know of.

Kobe goes to work every day and he plays for my favorite basketball team. I see him doing his best all the time. I think he probably raped that girl in Colorado a few years back, (or at least had intercourse that was not concensual,) and that is unforgivable. I don't know for certain-it's just my feeling. I would never consider him a role model for myself or anyone else. I do find him to be immature on the whole. He lacks a certain grace, perhaps it is humility, actually.

I remember Jordan putting 63 up on the Celtics one year, (and if memory serves, it was in the playoffs.) I was living in japan so it had to be '86 or '87. I was stunned. I was wearing his shoes but I was still stunned. 63 points?! In this era?! Wilt was a physical specimen in his era unrivalled, but 63 points against a team w/ bird and mchale and parrish?!

I missed the game the other night. I had been watching sports earlier and had to give up the remote to maintain relations at home. (By the time the game against Toronto was on, I believe I was watching a movie called Hitch w/ my fiancé. Imagine the bullet contacting my chranium, shattering my skull and boring into my gray matter.) Bummer I missed it but I did get to see the highlights the next day on Sportscenter and as Kareem said, the variety I saw on the tape and in the box score is amazing. 7-14 from the 3-point line? 60% shooting from the field?! 18-20 from the line?! (Those are from memory so if there's a slight error...) that's 18 more points than Jordan scored when he impressed me so. 81? Yep, 81. 81!?!

I don't know if Jordan's performance was more impressive because he was playing a great team and it was the playoffs or if Kobe's was because he went for 81!?! I'm sure Kobe's field goal percentage was higher. I know Kobe is easily the closest thing this league has seen to Jordan since Jordan, and that is primarily because of his jump shot and the elevation he gets in order to shoot it. He is not Michael Jordan. Not today anyway. Then again, at 27 he may just be entering his prime. And with three championships under his belt and a lifetime of experience to draw on, I am closer to believing he could eclipse Jordan today than ever.

So it's hard to hate Kobe these days. He keeps showing up for work and perhaps thanks to Phil, he is getting better, (light years better than last year.) In my memory, he is likely a sex offender, but still, every third night or so, he is there, entertaining me while I eat dinner or play with my daughter. There is no one guy in the NBA who can stop him from scoring. Only a few teams have shown successful strategies for limiting his game. He plays defense like a mule: work, work, work. His shot is like chocolate. His sneer is fun to watch and his late game game, is unparalleled in the league today. He's so entertaining they should play scott Joplin when he walks on the court every night. And I can't help myself but re-embrace this guy.
To err is human and in so much as we have seen his errors, unlike just about any private person, he is super-human. Maybe having him in our faces every night doing daring acts of do on a basketball court is a lesson for us to know that even a sex offender can earn pardon by avoiding more trouble and being a responsible citizen in the time after the sin was committed? I don't know.

Native American tribes had very little crime in their midst in the days before this continent was invaded. When a man committed an undesirable act, he faced utter ostracism. I understand he could win his way back into the tribe but it took a considerable amount of time constantly showing regret and making amends. Because of that process and because of the consistency of treatment within the tribe, offenders were rare. That is not our world.

Our criminal justice system is set up to favor the wealthy, which explains why Kobe was not locked up and the key thrown out. He greased the machinery of justice plenty and while he still has endured much public derision and surely some personal problems, he avoided jail and a conviction. So maybe from Kobe we glean the essence of a dysfunctional system and we understand the nature of our society and its need to trade on commodities? I don't know.

Still, I think it is worth considering the duality within myself. I disdained Kobe both for the likelihood he committed a major crime, (a reprehensible act,) and for an immaturity evident in many of his public acts. And now he is in my face. And now he had a brilliant night, one for the ages. And now I find myself rooting for him more and more. And now I am supporting him for the MVP award, (stipulating the Lakers must make the playoffs.) It's not like suddenly I adore all things Kobe, but all things considered, I find I am rooting for him again. I don't know if this makes me a hypocrite or an ignorant or a dullard, I mean, I feel like a reasonable man, but I am, I'm rooting for him again.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

It's always nice to believe that people have the power to change and that if people can change ...then quite possibly the world we live in can change. I don't see why that makes you any more of a hypocrite or less human because you can appreciate talent and despite every thing you know and feel, you still have hope. I think you are in danger of becoming an optimist.