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NBA plunged into mourning as Kobe Bryant dies

general27 January 2020 05:27| © AFP
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The NBA grappled with the sudden death of league great Kobe Bryant on Sunday, players saying they felt sick to their stomach taking to the court without having ample time to absorb the shocking news.

A haunting moment of silence preceded the Houston Rockets' game against the Nuggets in Denver, which tipped off just hours after the helicopter crash in suburban Los Angeles in which Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna were among nine who perished.

In San Antonio, where the Spurs hosted the reigning champion Toronto Raptors, both teams took 24-second shot-clock violations on their first possessions of the game in honour of Bryant – who wore the number 24 in the later years of his career.

And in a move that other NBA teams are also expected to adopt, the Dallas Mavericks announced that they were retiring the number 24 jersey.

Several NBA stars said they were reluctant to step on the court after learning the news.

"I don't even know how we are supposed to play this game tonight," said Portland's Damian Lillard said before scoring 50 points in a 139-129 win over Indiana. "It makes you sick to your stomach. It is disturbing.

"It is bigger than just our heroes and the people we look up to dying. It goes deeper than that."

Newly-retired Miami Heat star Dwayne Wade described Sunday as "one of the saddest days of my lifetime," adding that he couldn't believe Bryant was gone and that his family had been sharing Kobe stories all day.

"It seems like a bad dream that you just want to wake up from. It is a nightmare," he said.

"It is not going to go away soon. We will weep forever."

WE SHOULD HONOR HIM

Eight NBA games were on tap Sunday, and the prevailing mood in every arena was sadness and shock.

Lillard said their coach Terry Stotts told them to go out and honour Bryant by not holding back.

"Coach said Kobe is the toughest to ever play this game. He said we should honour him that way.

"It was on all of our minds. In the time outs... it hurt all of us in our hearts. I look up to him. He's our hero. It is sad man, real sad day."

Reigning NBA finals MVP Kawhi Leonard said all of Los Angeles was feeling the loss.

"No words can explain the impact he had on the floor," said Los Angeles Clippers Leonard. "We are a team from Los Angeles so we know the LA history with him. It is just sad."

New Orleans Pelicans rookie Zion Williamson was preparing to start just his third career NBA contest against Boston when he was floored by news of the death.

"I couldn't focus at first when I heard the news," said Williamson, who was born the year Bryant won his first NBA championship in 2000. "It was tough getting out there. I just hate to see it happen like that to him and his daughter."

Clippers coach Doc Rivers fought back tears as he spoke to reporters before his team took on the Magic in Orlando.

"We're all Lakers right now," Rivers said, calling himself "lucky" to have had a chance to coach against Bryant – who won five NBA titles with the Los Angeles Lakers.

"He was such a great opponent," Rivers said. "It's what you want in sports. He had that DNA that very few athletes can ever have – the Tiger Woodses and Michael Jordans.

CRAZY DAY TO PLAY BASKETBALL

"Looking at my young players and seeing how devastated they are," Rivers said as he lost his battle to hold back his tears.

New Orleans coach Alvin Gentry said Bryant was one of the most driven players he has ever seen.

"I don't know where you could even start," said Gentry before his team's game against Boston.

"Great competitor, great guy, great father. Just really a sad, sad day for the NBA.

Atlanta Hawks rising star Trae Young said he was just getting to know Bryant and his basketball playing daughter.

"This is a crazy day to play basketball," Young said before the Hawks beat Washington 152-133. "I talked to him couple of times.

"He's only been to three games this year and two of them were ours. His daughter was a big fan of mine."

Bryant was one of the best closers the NBA has ever seen. Throughout his career, Bryant would baffle his coach Phil Jackson with his penchant to start games slowly before assuming total command in the fourth quarter.

Former German all-star Dirk Nowitzki referred to Bryant's finishing skills in a heart-tugging written tribute.

"I remember coming home after games so I could watch you dominate in the fourth quarter! You will always be loved. Rest in Peace with your angel Gigi," said Nowitzki.

HOW WORLD MEDIA REACTED

Journalists from inside and outside the world of sport lined up to pay tribute to NBA champion and two-time Olympic gold medallist Kobe Bryant after his death in a helicopter crash.

US Sports magazine Sports Illustrated ran with a single black and white photo of Bryant in profile and the headline: "Kobe Bryant, 1978-2020".

Below, it posted links to every cover that had featured the star.

"How does that happen? Kobe is stronger than any helicopter," wrote Bill Plaschke in the Los Angeles Times, the newspaper of the city that adored Bryant, who won five NBA titles with the Los Angeles Lakers.

"He didn't even need a helicopter. For 20 years he flew into greatness while carrying a breathless city with him."

At the other end of the country, the New York Times website carried a lengthy profile of Bryant, hailing his "extraordinary career" as well as mentioning 2003 rape accusations that were levelled against him.

Kobe Bryant "personified the modern sports alpha," wrote Jason Gray in a Wall Street Journal article headlined "What Kobe Bryant Meant".

"On the court, he was the alpha, really—for better, and, sometimes, worse, in greatness and defeat, demanding to put the whole game on his shoulders when it mattered most, and even when it didn't matter much at all."

The grief was just as strongly felt in Europe, particularly Italy, where Bryant spent part of his childhood and where his father played professional basketball.

In Italy, the La Gazzetta dello Sport ran with the headline "La Tragedia" – "The Tragedy" – and paid tribute to Bryant's "fluent Italian", picked up during his stay in the country.

La Gazzetta also posted a video of a young Bryant playing basketball in Pistoia in Tuscany.

The Corriere sports daily recalled Bryant's love for Italy and its football – he was an avid AC Milan fan – quoting Roma legend Francesco Totti as saying he was "honoured to have known the American champion".

In France, where Bryant also briefly lived when he was a teenager, L'Equipe dedicated nine pages to the star's death, underneath a photo of Bryant posing against the Paris skyline.

"Basketball alone does not define me," he told the French publication in 2017.

Marca, the most popular sports magazine in Spain talked of "pain and glory" after the death of Bryant.

"Most players are either consumed by the marathon of the NBA or worn down by the grind of 82 games, plus playoffs, year upon year," wrote Roy Ward in Australia's Sydney Morning Herald.

"Kobe was one of the rare ones who transcended the grind. He worked himself until he could stand up to every road trip, every injury, every boo; every missed shot and every loss."

HOW THE WORLD OF TWITTER REACTED

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