| Jackson Studying Dynamics of His Duo TIM KAWAKAMI , Times Staff Writer
At home or on the road, wherever they go and whatever they accomplish, the restless
moods still come and go in Lakerland.
A few weeks ago, in the middle of a 3-6 tumble, Coach Phil Jackson acknowledged, the
fever was high again, and there were familiar flash points.
Sitting outside during a quiet afternoon late last week at the team hotel, Jackson
said, with a weary smile, maybe it was a case of a "bad mood rising" over his
team:
There was anger; there were complaints raised and glares exchanged among teammates--all
the same frustrations that have plagued the Lakers for years.
Now the team is on another winning streak, and there is calm again.
Still, the signature drama of the Lakers--trying to fit the overwhelming talents,
presences and personalities of Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant into a cohesive,
championship-ready team--plays on.
Jackson said he expected it, has analyzed it, and, after 51 games as Laker coach to
measure the temperature of his players, knows it is time for him to do what he does best.
"I wanted to handle this situation," Jackson said when asked about the
relationship between the two strong-willed superstars. "That's why I'm here--to
handle this situation.
"And if this situation can't be handled, there are other ways of getting it done.
. . . We'll find a way to get this done. I'm pretty sure that I know how to do this. This
is one of the things I feel like I've got a pretty good handle on."
Several sources indicated that, during the 3-6 spell, O'Neal, as he has off and on
through the last two years, grew increasingly impatient with some of Bryant's more obvious
one-on-one tendencies.
Most specifically, after the team's tight victory over Cleveland on Jan. 19, the
sources said that O'Neal refused to join a postgame huddle in the Laker locker room,
telling Jackson loudly that there was no need to act as a team if the Lakers could not
play as one.
The day after that game, Jackson held his first meditation session with the Lakers, and
has since spoken about O'Neal's need to feel freer and less tangled in emotion, and about
Bryant's vast learning curve in life and basketball.
Recently, O'Neal's frustrations have quelled, but will they arise again the next time
the Lakers lose two in a row?
"I withhold making any statements about people, about incidents," Jackson
said. "I think it just goes back to the past and we're trying to build on the future.
"We've come over a little bit of a rocky spell right now. . . . We want to move
past it and be reaching toward what we're doing."
Jackson conceded that, along with every other Laker partisan, he watches O'Neal and
Bryant closely for signs of warmth or casual by-play and says he was pleased that the two
chose lockers next to each other at last weekend's All-Star game.
But Jackson was ambivalent about the recent surge in Bryant-O'Neal high-fives and
smiles.
"I think there was a little space in time when they might've been overcompensating
a little bit," Jackson said. "But I'm comfortable with the fact that they see
the better parts of each others' games. They're searching. . . ."
Bryant, who initiated a summer thaw when he invited O'Neal to his 21st birthday party,
shook his head recently when his relationship with O'Neal was brought up again.
Old story, Bryant said.
"I think Shaq was a little frustrated," Bryant said. "At the same time,
we were like, 33-6. It was just a matter of getting this system down a little better than
we had it. Once we did that, we were fine. . . .
"I think we're all, as a whole, understanding the system better, and as a result,
we're playing better in it together. I don't think it's me as an individual understanding
something. I think it's us as a team getting things down."
Jackson said that at the beginning of the season, he made O'Neal a co-captain of the
team, along with Ron Harper, to help him see things from a broader, team-wide view.
Meanwhile, Jackson compared Bryant's development, and relationships with his teammates,
to the early fitful years of Michael Jordan in Chicago.
"It's not unlike any other situation that I've seen on teams where players are
lining up as to how things are going to work, what's the order of how to get business
done," Jackson said.
"I want them to trust the fact that I'm going to ferret out what has to be done on
the team. . . . It's no mystery to anybody that there are times when Kobe gets into trying
to work out situations in a game and he has to learn when to either expand his game and
start doing things on the floor and when to wait for his time to do it."
O'Neal is, of course, the biggest part of the Laker equation on any level.
"I had talked to both of them individually before I got here and found out they
both respected each other and felt confident that they could play together," Jackson
said.
"I didn't know who they were, I just knew what they were and didn't know the
dynamics of how their personalities fit together. But now I know. . . . Kobe's a bit of an
enigma. He's a young man that has really got certain intriguing things about himself. . .
.
"It's going to be interesting to watch as a coach and I'm looking forward to it.
He's not totally formed--nobody is at 21. . . . I think Kobe's really willing to
understand that now. I don't see that as a problem that can't be overcome."
All of the things that are special about Bryant--his passion, his ability to beat
almost anybody off the dribble, his competitiveness, his single-minded dedication--also
sometime keep him apart from his teammates, Jackson said.
"Kobe's a real smart person," Jackson said. "He's got a good intellect,
and he can be reasoned with. When you have that ability, you can make decisions on the
court that are reasonable. And you don't have to play impulsively.
"And that's what Kobe gets caught in sometimes. I don't know if it's egotistical
or whatever. . . . The rest of the players know that sometimes he's more interested in
putting his head down and dribbling the ball than moving the ball and moving himself and
doing the things that I like to happen in our offense."
At those times, Jackson has not shied away from bellowing at Bryant. As recently as
Wednesday's victory at Charlotte, when Bryant put up a fast three-point shot, Jackson
instantly shouted: "If you want to stay on the floor, don't take those shots!"
Bryant said he doesn't mind the loud instruction, and several people who know him well
agreed that Bryant does not take offense to anything that is meant constructively.
"He just needs to know that there's someone that's firmly going to be there to
tell him there's some things he can't do," Jackson said.
"How did he get all the shots [during a later, game-changing eight-point spurt
against Charlotte]? He wasn't dribbling up the line on his own and shooting. He was
getting shots out of the format of our offense. . . .
"All of a sudden he got hot, and you could see him just enlarge himself. Just got
bigger. And that's the trust that comes along. And then everybody on the team feels good
for him, because they know how it's come."
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