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In 2006-07, the NBA is ready for the Year of Kobe.
There won’t be any fireworks or colorful costumes (unless you count throwback jerseys). And there probably won’t be a massive celebration, because in the NBA that only comes with championships, and the Year of Kobe doesn’t figure to end with one.
Yet it will be the Year of Kobe because, simply put, this will be the season when he plays his best basketball. And that will be a festive display indeed.
Granted, it may not seem like the Year of Kobe at the start. Right now, Kobe Bryant is still nursing a sore knee from offseason surgery, and he’s questionable for Tuesday’s opener at Staples Center against the Phoenix Suns, although he said Saturday that he would play. If Phil Jackson can hobble to the bench on a cane a short four weeks after undergoing hip replacement surgery, Bryant probably will feel obligated to show up for work as well.
Once the year does get into full swing, however, look for Bryant to put on an eye-popping display of theatrics — and, more important, it will happen in the process of helping his team win basketball games.
Make no mistake, the Lakers have arrived. They’re ready. They’re poised. They’re positioned for maximum success.
They could even make it to the conference semifinals.
The Lakers also have to hope their new free agent perimeter shooter, forward Vladimir Radmanovic, justifies the five-year, $30 million contract they gave him in the offseason; that second-year center Andrew Bynum breaks out at the ripe old age of 19; that Smush Parker can locate his outside shot after misplacing it during the Phoenix series last year; and that Chris Mihm eventually returns from an ankle injury that has plagued him since March 12.
Yet if all the stars align properly, the Year of Kobe could be here.
There is little question as to the man’s ability to score. He averaged 35.4 points last season, the highest in the NBA in 19 years. He also had averages of 5.3 rebounds and 4.5 assists.
The assists are a telling stat, because that figure is his lowest since 1998-99, when he posted a 3.8 average. That happened to be the season before Jackson arrived as head coach and led the Lakers to three straight titles.
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Last year, Odom and Brown — two forwards with unique histories of inconsistencies — had to learn the triangle offense in Jackson’s first season back on the Lakers’ bench. It was slow going. Odom seemed passive and unsure. Brown fumbled the ball a lot and was often out of position.
Dwyane Wade scored 41 points, LeBron James added 28 and Miami finished off the Indiana Pacers, sending the Heat back to the Eastern Conference finals with a 105-93 victory in Game 6 on Thursday night.
PBT: If Dwyane Wade's 41-point outburst in the Heat's 105-93 series-clinching win over the Pacers is any indication of what's to come, Miami may waltz through the Eastern Conference finals.
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