Two games and two wins in, D'Antoni knows Bryant's load is adding up. "He has to watch it," D'Antoni says. The Lakers have two days off before they play again, and then they play two games in three days. "We'll have to be careful," D'Antoni adds. "Going forward, we'll try to give him some more time."
"Hopefully," Gasol says, "all those minutes that he's playing won't affect him in a negative way down the road."
How tired Bryant's teammates say he looks after games, well, D'Antoni says this is all news to him.
"I'm not disputing it at all," D'Antoni says today. "I knew it was an abnormal thing, what he was doing. We talked about it. We talked about it every game."
But Bryant didn't budge.
"There was no talking him out of it," D'Antoni says. "I think even at one point, I talked to [Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak] about it. I said, 'Mitch, he can't continue to do this. He's got to come out of the games.' There was no denying him from doing what he wanted to do. We tried. He told me on different occasions, 'Mike, I'll tell you when I'm tired, and I'll tell you when I need to come out.'
"So be it. I didn't think we should get into a wrestling match right there in front of 19,000 people, and that's what it would've taken to get him out of the game, and he just wouldn't come out. It was unbelievable.
"Obviously, it's not ideal, and you don't want that, and you wouldn't play players like that, but again, there was no denying him from doing that. He even said, hey, if other coach didn't take him out, he's not letting me take him out. It is what it is."
If Bryant withheld from his coaches information about how he felt, he couldn't do that with the players.
"We all knew how hard he was pushing, how hard he was trying, how much he was playing," Gasol says. "I think it was remarkable, but at the same time, it tells you that it's probably not a good idea to do it."
If there was concern about Bryant, he says he didn't notice it.
"I didn't pick up on it, and I wasn't conscious about it whatsoever," he says today. "I had one task, which was to get us there. So everything I had with them was all executional. In conversations, it was all about getting my body ready all the way up until tipoff and then getting out there and being ready to go for the full 48."
"People can say he was stubborn, but his stubbornness for that many years has led him to greatness," Morris says. "It's kind of like the gift and the curse of being Kobe Bryant."
April 5, 2013: Lakers vs. Grizzlies
Bryant's voice is weary, rough. "I'm f---ing tired," he says after an 86-84 win over the Memphis Grizzlies. He notches 24 points, nine assists and five rebounds in almost 43 minutes. He asks D'Antoni for a three-minute break in the fourth quarter, but when Bryant returns, his legs fail him, and he misses five of his final six shots, including a 20-foot jumper with 17 seconds left. "I wasn't tired after the last shot," Bryant argues. "I just pulled it a little right."
Bryant has played 137 out of 144 minutes in three games. "I already said two games ago that I was concerned about it," Gasol says. "But he's the best at making plays down the stretch." That's the double-edged sword many Lakers face: They know Bryant needs rest, but they know they need him to win, and right now, they need to win more than ever.
"I was thinking that sometimes, he's playing too many minutes, and maybe we could throw in some younger guys to spare him a couple minutes," Morris says today, "but it was very tough because [of] the way he was producing."
April 7, 2013: Lakers vs. Clippers
Bryant had reached the playoffs in 15 of his 16 seasons, and another postseason berth is within reach, as the Lakers sit a half-game ahead of Utah for the final playoff spot in the West.
To compensate with Nash and World Peace sidelined, D'Antoni shortens his lineup to a seven-man rotation. But the Lakers have only so much in the tank, and the deeper, talent-laden Los Angeles Clippers -- once the NBA's punch-line franchise -- roll them 109-95.
Bryant finishes with 25 points but on inefficient 6-of-19 shooting. He adds 10 assists and seven rebounds. He plays all but the final 39.8 seconds. The Clippers clinch the Pacific Division for the first time and sweep the regular-season series against the Lakers for the first time since 1975. Coupled with Utah's win over Golden State, the Lakers fall to ninth place.
"My hamstrings were extremely sore," Bryant says. "Not like sore, but painful. They hurt. I couldn't stretch them. I have a wet room in my house where I have ice bath, so I'd ice bath, then I'd have to put three layers of clothes on to sleep because I'd be shaking in the bed. But I had to do that in order for my body to recover. God, man. It's crazy."
He pauses.
"But you know what the biggest thing in that stretch was?" Bryant asks. "This is really psycho detail. It was the right ankle. My right ankle was killing me, so I had to compensate more to the left. I had to put more weight on the left to compensate for the sore ankle on the right. It's always bothered me. I sprained it really, really bad in high school. Ever since, it's been nagging at me. But even [from an execution standpoint], the right ankle is extremely important because the left pull-up jumper was extremely important because teams always played this down coverage. And so when I go left and I pull up to shoot and you're stopping and you're jamming the ankle this way to pull up and shoot, if your ankle is bothering you, there's a lot of f---ing pain, and it's tough to shoot that shot. So I had to strengthen the ankle a lot. A lot of times, I had to shoot through pain."
April 9, 2013: Lakers vs. Hornets
The Lakers are tied with the 27-51 Hornets after three quarters. The Jazz, whom the Lakers are fighting for the West's final playoff slot, have just lost to the Thunder, which pushes the Lakers, for the moment, back to the eighth seed. Bryant, who has just seven points through the first three frames, scores 23 of the team's 34 points in the fourth quarter to carry the Lakers to a 104-96 come-from-behind win. But Bryant is perturbed. This game is the first of a back-to-back, and he played 41 minutes.
"This is supposed to be a light year for me," he says postgame.
Indeed, with Howard, Gasol, Nash and World Peace, the Lakers were built for champagne and championship parades in June. Meeks joined the Lakers believing he would be playing in the Finals for the next two years. Jamison spurned richer offers elsewhere after his agent called and said, "Dwight is going to L.A. Nash is there. It might be fun." That's precisely what Sports Illustrated forecast when it splashed Howard and Nash, newly clad in purple and gold, on its October 2012 cover with the now infamous headline, "Now this is going to be FUN."
The season has been a disaster of Hollywood-esque proportions. At the core of the drama are Howard and Bryant, who clash constantly. "The two-headed monsters couldn't coexist, and that really drained the team and just took so much out of us," Jamison says today.
"Despite what was going on the whole year, I kept saying to myself that we're going to win a championship, no matter how hard it will be," Howard says. "I just felt that we had the talent and the will and the right pieces to win."
April 10, 2013: Lakers at Trail Blazers
Four games remain, and the Lakers somewhat shockingly control their destiny, though tonight they face a test. Not only have the Lakers failed to sweep a back-to-back set in 15 attempts this season, but they also have lost 12 of their past 14 games in the Rose Garden.
Although the Blazers are missing two of their top four players because of injury and are starting four rookies for the first time in franchise history, they come out hot behind one of those rookies, point guard Damian Lillard, who scores 17 of Portland's 41 first-quarter points.
But the Lakers have Bryant, who counters with 17 points on his way to a season-high 47 -- a Rose Garden record for an opponent -- and adds eight rebounds, five assists, four blocks, three steals and only one turnover, a line Elias Sports Bureau says has never been achieved in league history. The Lakers win 113-106, and Bryant is serenaded with "MVP" chants, but Gasol calls the performance "bittersweet." Bryant's feat is impressive, Gasol points out, but it is also classic Kobe Bryant Hero Ball, with Bryant shooting 14-of-27 from the floor.
"I'm a player that likes to see a little bit more ball movement and better balance," Gasol says postgame.
"You don't look for excuses," Bryant says. "You don't wait for anybody else to try to make rotations. You do it yourself."
It's the first time in his career that Bryant plays all 48 minutes of a non-overtime road game. He has played nearly 274 out of a possible 288 minutes in the past six games.
"That's what happens when you open your mouth and guarantee that we're getting in the playoffs," D'Antoni says that night.
It's a night when Kobe is among the last to leave the showers and limp across a near-empty locker room. It's a night when he's the last to board the team's charter plane because he spends so long in the training room receiving treatment. Morris, who always sits with Kobe on the plane, notices how gingerly Bryant moves when he sits down. "Yeah, man. You logging all those minutes," Morris tells him.
Bryant arrives at his Newport Beach home at 2 a.m., stretches for 30 minutes and takes an ice bath -- his normal routine. He feels sore, he says, and he notices his left Achilles is tight, but no more than it had been in the past.
"Kobe is who he is," Lakers head athletic trainer Gary Vitti says now. "That's what makes him Kobe Bryant. Kobe is not the most talented player. He'll tell you that. He and I have discussed this. But he's got all those other things that override that. Tracy McGrady was more talented than Kobe, and they were contemporaries. But there are certain things that separate Kobe from the rest of the pack. I don't think anybody would've been able to stop him. I think if Jesus came down and said, 'Kobe, you can't do this,' Kobe probably would've said something like, 'Why don't you stick to making water into wine and raising people from the dead, and I'll take care of this basketball thing.'"
April 12, 2013: Lakers vs. Warriors
It's possible, in retrospect, to see what happened three years ago as something foreshadowed by ominous portents. The last game of Kobe Bryant -- the gladiator Kobe Bryant, the bulletproof, monomaniacal Kobe Bryant -- was full of such moments. But that's how history works. After the fact, everything is clear.
With 10:30 remaining in the third quarter and the Golden State Warriors leading by one, Kobe drives, leaps and is sandwiched between center Festus Ezeli and forward Harrison Barnes. Bryant goes down hard and clutches his left knee. Four teammates surround him as the crowd falls silent. Gasol motions to the bench, and Vitti approaches Bryant, who slowly rises and begins walking with a noticeable limp. He remains in the game and sinks a pair of free throws.
Just over four minutes later, with the Warriors leading by seven, Bryant penetrates and bangs knees with Ezeli. Bryant grimaces and hobbles in pain. He walks to the other end of the court and back. Again, the crowd falls silent.
"Man, this guy might fall apart," Morris recalls thinking.
"Damn, we need to take him out," Ham recalls thinking. "We need to figure out a way."
"People fall down all the time," Vitti says today. "What are you going to do? 'Hey, you fell down twice? We're going to pull you out of the game.' And then he chops your head off."
With 3:08 to play in the fourth quarter and the Warriors leading by two, Bryant, in his 45th minute of the night, drives against Barnes -- and collapses. Bryant feels a sensation in the back of his left foot. "Did you kick me?" he asks Barnes. Barnes says no. "F---!" Bryant says. Teammates surround him. He can feel his Achilles roll up his leg.
And then he does the most Kobe Bryant thing ever. Using his fingers, Bryant tries to pull the tendon back down.
"I just tried to buy a little bit of time," Bryant says now with a laugh. "I was trying to figure out a way to play around it because if I can walk on my heel, maybe I can get around it because I don't have to get up on my toe. I had worked so hard to get us there. I'll be damned if we lose this f---ing game and all that hard work goes to s---. I tried to finish the job."
He couldn't. Not this time. "Everything else, he found a way to get around it, to solve it, to overcome it, to conquer it, whatever," Seto says. "But in the end, he could not argue with this one. It was definitive."
As Bryant slowly walks flat-footed toward the Lakers' bench, he carries an expression that Seto, who has tended to Bryant for virtually his entire career, has never seen before. "There was a face that was like -- it's done," Seto says.
In the huddle, Bryant wears a blank stare, looking off to the side. He steps in small circles, testing his foot, telling teammates it feels as though his calf is in his ankle and he is walking uphill.
In that moment, Ham says, "It's almost like [Bryant] became two people. The competitor and the guy that's -- I don't want to use the term die -- but dies at battle with sword in hand, shield in hand, like gladiator-style. He had given it everything he could possibly give -- killed 50 soldiers, 20 animals. It's finally here, like you have to accept the fact that you're mortal."
Bryant has played every minute of the game. He stays in to sink a pair of free throws and swishes each one, an act that, in retrospect, seems inconceivable. Vitti tells Sacre to help Bryant off the court, but Bryant pushes Sacre away. "No, don't give me any help." He walks to the locker room on his own.