Chauncey Billups: I’m serious, man, we were so mad that Rip gave Kobe the space to score that shot to go into overtime in Game 2. I’m telling you, we all felt like we should’ve swept them. We were really mad that we didn’t sweep that team.
Jeanie Buss: You could just see it happening and slipping away. You knew that this team was coming to an end. It would’ve been nice to wait and not had it accelerated, that they could’ve played for the championship with clear heads and clear minds, but the rumor mill was at full speed, and I think it was a huge distraction.
Derek Fisher: Everyone had just grown kind of numb to all the things that surrounded us. We were all kind of internalizing things and maybe being protective of our own selves. We weren’t the type of close-knit and connected team we needed to be to break through in the Finals. In particular with the injuries, but also running into a team like Detroit that was more closely connected and bonded as a unit.
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The Lakers had no answer for Chauncey Billups, the Finals MVP.
Phil Jackson: Chauncey was the MVP. We tried to put pressure on Chauncey, then he would fall down and go to the foul line. We couldn’t even press them. Chauncey was using screen-rolls, and we couldn’t cover it. I tried Kobe on Hamilton, then Chauncey was beating Gary Payton. He was too strong and big for Fish. I think I tried everything but a zone. I put Kobe on Chauncey. That was a foul situation. Chauncey put him in foul situations.
Chauncey Billups: There was a cynical little smile I had because when they put Kobe on me because, for one, he’s made the switch and he’s coming to guard me, which means they’re desperate. And, two, there was nothing he could do defensively. No matter how good he is on the ball, I’m about to call pick-and-roll up here. So you could hawk and reach and do everything you want to do. You’re not going to steal it from me and two, I’m going to call the screen and, as soon as Ben Wallace finishes with this screen, you’re going to be behind the play so it really doesn’t matter, because now I’m going one-on-one with whoever the big guy is.
Kobe Bryant: They were more prepared than us. They were sharper. So that’s not like the
Celtics championship in ’08, where we had significantly less talent than that Celtics team. Even after losing that 20-point lead or something, I still felt like we had a chance to turn things around. That Detroit series? That wasn’t the case. Those dudes were sharp and we had to go deeper into our offense and we just weren’t prepared to do it.
Phil Jackson: I saw it coming. Being a lame-duck coach, having a group of kids that were at each other’s throat for most of the year, having two guys like Gary and Karl, who were brought in as ringers. Karl was out. Gary was...it was a struggle for him to try and match up at that point for a long period of time in a game.
We were clearly overmatched in that Finals.
Derek Fisher: You can have great players, you can have great coaching—the way we did—you can have all the resources available to you and you can actually make it all the way to the Finals, but the best team will win that series every single time.
Mitch Kupchak: The thing that Detroit had going for them, they hit their stride in the playoffs and they had great chemistry and they were playing their best basketball in the Finals. They were ready to play another series after that series and we weren’t. We were beat up emotionally. We had reached the end of our line.
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Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher leaving the court as the Pistons celebrate the 2004 championship.
The Lakers made it clear that re-signing Bryant was their No. 1 objective, and while they weren’t sure if retaining O’Neal and Jackson might discourage that, they weren’t taking any chances.
Jeanie Buss: Shaq’s agreement had been grandfathered into that collective bargaining agreement so he could be paid more than anybody else. He wanted an extension that my father wasn’t willing to agree to, and their disagreement was only about money and business. My dad didn’t harbor bad feelings about Shaq. In fact, it was important that they repaired their relationship before my dad passed away. It was a business decision, and there are always those kinds of issues on a team.
Shaquille O’Neal: Jerry Buss was good to me and you know we had a great time. I just wanted to clear that now. There was never a personal disagreement. But you know, when you’re business people, everybody has a business disagreement.
Phil Jackson: I think Shaq knew what was going on. Shaq knew that his time was limited. It was the last stand. I knew I wasn’t gonna be back. Our conversation had broken down, and they had decided to go another direction. And the die was cast, so to speak, in that situation.
Jeanie Buss: Because of all the speculation, Shaq demanded the trade and he got it. Phil was told on Father’s Day that he wouldn’t be coming back. It was just a disappointment not to come away with a championship and know that there wasn’t going to be a chance for redemption and get it right the next time because the band was breaking up.
Derek Fisher: You could feel the breakup coming. It had kind of been a slow crescendo, and now everything is about to change.
Gary Payton: I still thought we were going to win a championship. I really thought we were all going to come back. They could’ve just let us come back and play the way we were supposed to play. Let us all be there for a whole year. I don’t know why they broke us up after we went to a championship and we had so much turmoil. I didn’t really understand that. And that was my only disappointment. I was really mad about that because they gave up on us after we went to a championship.
Then all the controversy came and people started saying that Kobe wanted to have his own team, and he went to Dr. Buss and Dr. Buss chose a side and started trading us all. With me and Kobe, we were very close. I don’t think he went in there and said, "Let’s get rid of Shaq, let’s get rid of Gary, let’s get rid of Karl." I don’t believe Kobe was behind it. I don’t buy into it.
Kobe Bryant: I wasn’t going to play with Shaq anymore after that. That just wasn’t going to happen. Things he had said, criticism from the media in saying I can’t win without him. Look, I put that individual s--t aside to win championships and now I’m getting criticized for it. Now I’m going to show you f--ks what I can do on my own. So that challenge, I was going to answer that challenge no matter what—whether I was going to stay in L.A. or go somewhere else, I was going to answer that challenge.
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- Magic and Kareem had together, but it was the same amount of time Shaq and Kobe spent together. I think it was pretty phenomenal that it did work out as long as it did.
Shaquille O’Neal: That was probably the most talented team I’ve been on. You know, myself, I was playing with three Hall of Famers: Karl, GP—we all know Kobe’s going to be a Hall of Famer. And you know, at times, when the ball was moving, it was hopping, and the fans were going crazy. Jack [Nicholson] was giving us high-fives. It was sort of comparable to the early Lakers' Showtimes when they had all those Hall of Famers on that team.
If I had one wish, I wish we could have gotten those guys a couple years earlier. Karl was older. GP was older. Wish we could have gotten them towards the end of their prime. And you know, I think we would have won that series. And then, if Karl doesn’t get hurt, I’d probably still be a Laker to this day.