| Q
and A with Kobe Bryant CLEVELAND -- Los Angeles Lakers rookie Kobe
Bryant, who went directly from high school to the NBA, had a busy All-Star Saturday as a
participant in the Rookie Game and the Slam Dunk Contest.
The teen sensation took time to answer questions from ESPNET SportsZone users Friday
before he won the dunk competition and led the rookie game in scoring:
Danny Tang, Baltimore: What do you think the Lakers' outlook for the rest of the
year is after beating the Bulls, even without Shaquille O'Neal?
Kobe Bryant: That win was a big emotional lift us, not just for the players, but
for the coaching staff. Having the ability to go in there against a tough Bulls team and
beat them -- minus Shaq -- I think that's a confidence-booster.
I think coming into the second half of the season, you'll see us playing a lot better
basketball.
Willie Musty, Anaheim Hill, Calif.: If you went to a lesser team where you got more
playing time -- maybe as a starter -- instead of coming off the bench for a talented
Lakers team, do you think this would change the skill level you are at right now or at the
end of the season?
Bryant: I really don't know, because I only play for one team and that's the Los
Angeles Lakers, and I'm going to make the best out of this situation.
I was always taught that the person makes the situation; the situation doesn't
make the person. That's how I look at things, and that's how I take things.
Chris Rogers, Lufkin, Texas: The Lakers have three superfly guards (Nick Van Exel,
Eddie Jones and yourself), a solid rookie guard (Derek Fisher) and Robert Horry at small
forward. Is there room for all of you? It seems awful hard to get any minutes.
Bryant: Because Eddie Jones and myself are versatile -- and Robert Horry as well --
we're very interchangeable. We can go in there and mix things up a bit, according to the
matchups with the other team.
Pat Wandalowski, Philadelphia: What are your thoughts of Eddie Jones' game (and his
emergence as an All-Star)?
Bryant: I think it was more of a mind thing with Eddie. I think everybody in the
league knows that he has a lot of talent; it was just a matter of him stepping up
and taking things over. I think he's done that this year.
D.J. Burke, Los Angeles: When you got traded to the Lakers were you worried about
the L.A. media or the pressure of playing in L.A.?
Bryant: I think the pressure a human being feels should be the pressure he puts on
himself.
All the talk that the media puts around you -- the hype and expectations -- that's good
because it's good to have people's support. But at the same time, you just have to do the
things you expect out of yourself and that the team expects out of you.
Also from D.J. Burke: It seems that you are much more looked at and studied than the
other high school phenom, Portland's Jermaine O'Neal (who plays in a smaller market).
Bryant: I think it depends on personalities. Jermaine O'Neal is more of a quiet
type of guy who keeps to himself a lot. I am, to some degree, the same way, but I can be
outgoing a little bit more. But I think you have to see how the personalities fit.
Jessica Klein, Vernon, Conn.: Did the players on the Lakers accept you when you
first started out in the preseason, or did they think that since you had jumped from high
school to the NBA that they could just do anything they wanted boss you around?
Bryant: They treated me like just another basketball player. (Lakers rookies) have
been really fortunate because guys haven't gotten into rookie-bashing. There hasn't been
much of that.
Scott Wright, Sandstone, Minn.: What current NBA player do you most look up to and
why?
Bryant: I try to draw a little bit from every basketball player. I want to be a
well-rounded basketball player, so I think I need to pick up something from every player
and add it to my game. |