Horry provided Hall-of-Fame perspective, "I would watch [Olajuwon] in practice. 'Dream' would always work on his spin moves and stuff, work on the same things over and over, making that part of his game better. I would watch Tim Duncan in practice working on that bank shot all the time. But this guy (Bryant), oh, we know his baseline, right-hand fadeaway jumper is nice. I never saw him work on that because he knew he had that in his game."
Horry explained further, "But was his [sic] threes good at the time? No. He was working on his threes. Was his left-hand game good? No. He was working on it. He always worked on stuff he could not do, and that's [where] the appreciation and love I have for Kobe comes [from] because he was just growing as a player, evolving as a player."
Horry on What Set Kobe Apart from Olajuwon, Duncan
THE GOAT
Horry explained further, "But was his [sic] threes good at the time? No. He was working on his threes. Was his left-hand game good? No. He was working on it. He always worked on stuff he could not do, and that's [where] the appreciation and love I have for Kobe comes [from] because he was just growing as a player, evolving as a player."
Horry on What Set Kobe Apart from Olajuwon, Duncan
THE GOAT
