BOSTON -- Can the Boston Celtics contain KobeBryant? That is the key question that hovers over this series. Can the Celtics contain Kobe, or is this NBA Finals going to turn out to be the Kobe Bryant Invitational, a showcase for all his basketball gifts, like the earlier rounds for the Los Angeles Lakers were. So Thursday night was the first in this cat-and-mouse game, as both the Celtics and the Lakers survived all the pre-game hype and all the stories of their history and actually played against each other. Can the Celtics contain Kobe, keep from him from being Superman in baggy shorts? And this starts with the premise that no one can guard Kobe. Not really. He is the one player that comes every generation or so, someone so gifted that he's essentially unguardable. You don't stop Kobe. You just try to make things difficult for him, and hope he has a bad shooting game. And let's not kid ourselves here. Without Kobe the Lakers would be hanging out in Marina Del Ray, not here in the Garden in the first game of the NBA Finals. He is not the one-man team that LeBron is with the Cavaliers, but he is still the show, the guy who puts the rest of the Lakers on his back and carries them. He came in as the MVP of the regular season, averaging nearly 32 points a game, came in here billed as this generation's version of Michael Jordan. And if that's heavy baggage, it's as if Kobe's been preparing for it all his life, as if born to be on this kind of stage. He had said after the Lakers had disposed of the Spurs in the Western Conference finals that getting back to the NBA Finals was "the answer to a prayer."For he knows he's no longer playing for money and celebrity, two things he's had for a long time now. He is playing for his ultimate legacy, playing for immortality. As if he's come to know that great players need NBA titles for validation, fair or not. The Celtics began Game 1 with Ray Allen guarding him, and Kobe was 0-for-3, missing three medium-range jumpers from the right side before he finally made a jumper from the foul line. Even so, he was only 2-for-8 in the first quarter, and that was missing several makeable shots, betrayed more by his midrange jumper than anything Allen was doing to him. Still, the Celtics couldn't have hoped for more. But Bryant is the basketball definition of explosive. After a rest he came into the game shortly into the second quarter and made a medium-range fallaway from the right side, vintage Kobe. He then threw three excellent passes to Pau Gasol, but the half ended with him having scored only eight points on 3-for-10 shooting. Still, the Lakers were up by five. Could the Lakers come in here and beat the Celtics in the Garden without Kobe being Superman? At the half that still remained an interesting question, with interesting ramifications. Kobe got it going in the third quarter, hitting a jumper from out front, then a beauty of a fallaway on the right, then a honey of a drive over Paul Pierce, the play Pierce got hurt on. The Lakers were up four, it was midway through the quarter, and he was like a great pool player on a roll -- a shot here, another there, the feeling that he could make them forever. Then he dunked on the break on an alley-oop from Derek Fisher, and followed that up with his toughest shot of the night, a fallaway from the right corner. One long jumper later and Kobe already had 18, his slow start all but forgotten. Was this about to become what Magic Johnson used to call "winning time?" Was this going to be Kobe time, when he starts to put the game in his pocket? Not on this night. He made a short bank shot for his 20th point of the game, and after that? That was about it. The Celtics started putting their imprint on the game, and curiously that came at a time when Kobe was on the bench for a breather. When he came back there was 5:14 left to play, the Celtics had a lead, one they never relinquished. The big Laker charge? The late-game Kobe heroics? The Jordanesque finish? The Kobe of myth. Not on this night. He finished with 24 points, nearly eight below his average. A good night for sure. But not a super one. No indeed. Not the kind of night the Lakers needed if they were going to win here last night. Bottom line? Kobe was not Superman, and the Celtics won. Connect the dots.(Contact Bill Reynolds at breynold@projo.com.)(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
Latest Stories
By DAVID MOULTON, Scripps Howard News Service
By JOSE de la ISLA, Hispanic Link News Service
By DAN WALTERS, Sacramento Bee
By BABE WAXPAK, Scripps Howard News Service
By DAVE BOLING, Tacoma News Tribune
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By TERRY MATTINGLY, Scripps Howard News Service
By AIDIN VAZIRI, San Francisco Chronicle
By DAVID YOUNT, Scripps Howard News Service
By GREGORY K. FRITZ, The Providence Journal
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By MIKE HARRIS, Scripps Howard News Service
By MARTIN SCHRAM, Scripps Howard News Service
By LAVINIA RODRIGUEZ, Tampa Bay Times
By JAY AMBROSE, Scripps Howard News Service
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By POHLA SMITH, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
- 1 of 2396
- ››
Celtics highjack Bryant's spotlight
Submitted by SHNS on Fri, 06/06/2008 - 14:34
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




ShareThis





