Friday, March 30, 2012

What if Kobe Gets to Seven?

The NBA's greatest player of all time is pretty much undisputed. If you know what a basketball looks like you probably know it is Michael Jordan. His biography on NBA.com states: "By acclamation, Michael Jordan is the greatest basketball player of all time."

There's no use getting into his stats; we already know what kind of player he was and how he revolutionized the game of basketball. And he won six titles.

1991. 1992. 1993. 1996. 1997. 1998. Michael Jordan's Bulls, supported by Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman and others, achieved basketball dynasty status. Jordan, as any avid NBA fan would know, won the Finals MVP all six times.

Would Jordan still be regarded as the best ever had he only won, say, two titles? No doubt he would still be considered in the class of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain, and others. But would he be regarded as the singular greatest ever, in a category he shares with himself?

Probably not. Actually, definitely not.

Of course, Michael Jordan was as great a regular season player as anyone. But what defined him was his performances in the Finals: the 1997 "Flu Game," the 1993 Finals where he averaged a record 41 a game against Charles Barkley and the Suns....and so on.

So what am I getting at? Well, here is Kobe Bryant, who many consider the closest this generation will ever come to watching another Michael Jordan, sitting at five titles (one less than MJ), with three or so years left in the league on an always competitive Lakers team.

Don't mistake this as me calling Kobe Jordan's equal. What I am saying, though, is if Kobe can find a way to win another title (or two), his already legendary legacy would take a jump into Jordan's range.

But they would never be equals. Of Kobe Bryant's five championships, he has won the MVP Award in two of them. The other three were won by a fellow by the name of Shaquille O'Neal, who you might've heard of.

Jordan, with Scottie Pippen as Robin, won the Bill Russell Finals MVP Award all six times. That alone should anoint MJ untouchable status in basketball history.

Kobe may be statistically comparable for his career. Jordan does have the edge by a margin, but Kobe is up there. And in terms of revolutionizing the game, MJ beat the Black Mamba to it.

Let's just put it this way though. If Kobe finishes his career with five championships, (the way things are looking right now), that would be perfect regarding his comparison with Jordan. The way it should be.

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