Now, Bryant needs to focus on his teammates, not his numbers. After all, he plays for the L.A. Lakers, not the L.A. Kobes.
Citing his laundry list of accolades, analysts often compare Bryant's career to Michael Jordan's. However, the comparisons are usually qualified by a statement like, "He's one of the greatest to every play, sure, but he will never catch Jordan."
It doesn't matter.
The Lakers will be in great shape if Kobe scores even half of what he scored in Game Five, provided his teammates do the same. That's what the Celtics have mastered: a team effort. Four of Boston's starters put up double-digit numbers in Game Five, and a defensive strategy that's not any more elaborate than "stay on Kobe" is not exactly hard to maintain.
If Kobe really wants to be compared to M.J., he needs to beat the Celtics.
Jordan never lost an NBA Finals series; Bryant has already lost two. Big numbers don't mean much when they don't lead to victories and, more importantly, championships. So Bryant's leadership—not his jump shot—is the key to Game Six.
Sure, that's an easy conclusion, but it makes the most sense. Kobe won't be able to repeat what he did in Game Five and expect a win.
Put simply, Kobe needs to aggressively motivate the other four Lakers on the court with him at all times. They have the ability—Pau Gasol is the best big man in this series, and Artest and the rest are not bad. They just need a true leader.
The Lakers are at home—ther...
Article Source: Bleacher Report - Los Angeles Lakers