Kobe Bryant: The NBA Is "Too Soft" Now

Newzz

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Kobe Bryant: NBA 'finesse' now
Updated: January 20, 2014, 11:21 PM ET
By Dave McMenamin | ESPNLosAngeles.com
CHICAGO -- Kobe Bryant said it's been hard to watch the Los Angeles Lakers as they've struggled in his absence, but it turns out he doesn't like watching the NBA in general with the way it is currently being played and officiated across the league.

"It's more of a finesse game," Bryant said before the Lakers played the Chicago Bulls on Monday. "It's more small ball, which, personally, I don't really care much for. I like kind of smash-mouth, old-school basketball because that's what I grew up watching. I also think it's much, much less physical. Some of the flagrant fouls that I see called nowadays, it makes me nauseous. You can't touch a guy without it being a flagrant foul."

Bryant said that the hand-check rule that was introduced nearly a decade ago during the 2004-05 season has made it easier for less-talented players to succeed. Bryant said Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni is at least partially responsible for the shift in style of play across the league.


"I like the contact," Bryant said. "As a defensive player, if you enjoy playing defense, that's what you want. You want to be able to put your hands on a guy. You want to be able to hand check a little bit. The truth is, it makes the game [where] players have to be more skillful. Nowadays, literally anybody can get out there and get to the basket and you can't touch anybody. Back then, if guys put their hands on you, you had to have the skill to be able to go both ways, change direction, post up, you had to have a mid-range game because you didn't want to go all the way to the basket because you would get knocked ass over tea kettle. So I think playing the game back then required much more skill."

Of course, Bryant has scored close to 5,000 points on free throws since the '04-05 season, but he said he doesn't think the rule change has benefited his career in any tangible way.

"Probably not," Bryant said. "Us players, upper-echelon players, are going to do what they do no matter what the rules are. It's not going to make any difference."

Is there any chance the league could revert back to the no harm, no foul ways of the 1980s?

"Kids might be a little too sensitive for that nowadays," Bryant said with a smirk.

http://espn.go.com/los-angeles/nba/...e-bryant-los-angeles-lakers-calls-nba-finesse

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Our GAWD has spoken:blessed:





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madness

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if they brought handchecking back kobe would go back to averaging 7.6 points per game like he did as a rookie

his soft ass ain't built for that 90s lifestyle...there's a reason he was a benchwarmer during that era:mjpls:
 

delta

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If scoring was so easy, how come Kobe got shut down in the Finals by the Celtics in '08 and '10?

Answer: Defenses will always adjust to the rules

I'd argue it takes more skill to be a 6'2 guard driving against 3 defenders in today's league Vs being a 7ft in the 90s Or playing some guy who fouls you every time you go by him

Only thing I would change 'bout defenses these days is handchecking. Bring it back
 

FLORIDA BOI

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Kobe2_crop_north.jpg


really cryin asz nikka
 
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