Friday, June 8
Bryant eagerly waits for shot at redemption

Special to ESPN.com

LOS ANGELES -- History, apparently, will only remember them as The Greatest Team Of All-Time That Lost Game 1 In The Finals.

And that's only if they win Game 2.

Kobe Bryant
Kobe Bryant will face more tough defense by Eric Snow and the Sixers.

Only if Shaquille O'Neal's idol comes back as the Kobe Bryant everyone remembers. The Kobe from those long-ago Western Conference finals.

He doesn't have to be a Next Jordan to pacify the Pacific Coast Lakers and their suddenly sullen fans, but the Bryant they got Wednesday night was less than insufficient. He made only seven baskets. He committed six turnovers. He missed 15 shots and settled for 15 points, less than half his playoff average of 31.6

"He's got something to prove," said Lakers coach Phil Jackson, who fanned all the Next Mike hubbub in the San Antonio series by fawning over Bryant's end-to-end brilliance.

One game into the championship round, against the team his father played for, Kobe Bryant has already fumbled some of that mystique. Jackson and Bryant both acknowledged that No. 8 will be handling the ball less in Friday's Game 2 to negate the effect of Philly's full-court pressure. Which also somewhat negates Zen Master Jackson's earlier statements about Bryant playing "the best I've seen a player of mine play with an overall court game."

Seems that, now that the Lakers are down a game in a playoff series for the first time since Jackson came to coach them, L.A. can't afford to worry about how it ranks with the greatest juggernauts of all-time. Or whether Bryant can continue "jumping over the top" of the high bar Jackson has set for him. The focus has shifted solely to tying the series, before the Finals shift to Philly, after three sweeps past 50-win powers that saw Kobe moonlight as a playmaker.

Things have turned so unexpectedly for the heavy favorites that Jackson might also have to deviate from his trusted triangle offense even more than he did against the Spurs. He wants Derek Fisher and Tyronn Lue bringing the ball upcourt, instead of Bryant, and he'll undoubtedly consider running more screen-rolls to get Bryant some open looks.

Everything he flung was contested in the opener. That's largely because Larry Brown opted to let Dikembe Mutombo absorb O'Neal alone down low, leaving Bryant with lots of company on the perimeter and in the paint. In perhaps the most stunning statistic of a ground-shaking upset, Kobe sprinkled zero dunks into that 7-for-22 shooting. Surely you've seen the oft-replayed highlight of Mutombo rejecting Bryant at the rim.

Question is, in response, will Bryant try to do too much to make up for the shaky start?

If there's a positive that can come out of Game 1, it's the fact that we had an opportunity to win the game and we didn't play anywhere close to our best basketball. Some of the credit has to go to Philly for that, but we're also at fault for that.
Kobe Bryant

"I think he'll play within the game," Jackson said. "He's the kind of guy that's going to say, "I've got to step this up here and find a way to overcome the pressure that they're applying.' "

Said Bryant: "We have to be pleased. If there's a positive that can come out of Game 1, it's the fact that we had an opportunity to win the game and we didn't play anywhere close to our best basketball. Some of the credit has to go to Philly for that, but we're also at fault for that.

"... As far as having a poor shooting game, I don't think about stuff. In the past, I might have tried to force the issue. Now I just stay within the context of the game and let the game flow."

Bryant makes an undeniable point up there. The Lakers definitely should be up 1-nil in spite of his struggles and Allen Iverson's 48-point detonation. Remember that they recovered from Bryant's ill-advised drive late in regulation -- a flashback to his too-wild days, barreling into the teeth of three defenders on a go-ahead possession -- to craft a five-point lead in OT with less than 90 ticks left.

It wasn't just Bryant, either. Looking like they had become last spring's Lakers during that nine-day layoff, L.A. dredged up a few ills long thought purged from its system -- most notably O'Neal's free-throw woes. Shaq shanked seven of his last 10 attempts from the line and 12 of 22 overall. Combined with the inability to stomp on the Sixers, early in regulation and again in the extra session, the flaws proved fatal.

Little wonder, then, that the Sixers -- for all their admirable resilience in winning another seemingly hopeless cause -- are already bracing for the retribution. They know Bryant has ripened too much in these playoffs to stay sub-par.

"I think Kobe is as good as it gets," said Sixers coach Larry Brown. "You can guard anyone for a little while."

Aaron McKie was equally respectful, refusing to gloat after surviving Round 1 with Kobe. Doesn't matter that McKie is just three more wins, one closer than the Greatest Team Of All-Time To Sport A 1-0 Finals Deficit, from adding Bryant's name to his impressive list of scalps.

The list: Reggie Miller, Jalen Rose, Vince Carter, Dell Curry, Ray Allen and Glenn Robinson.

"If guys are making shots, then it's going to be, 'This guy had a great game,' " McKie said. "(If) he shot the ball well, there's no answer for him.

"So you can't win with (gloating). It just wasn't (Bryant's) night. He wasn't making shots."

Marc Stein, who covers the NBA for The Dallas Morning News, is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.

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