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KOBE BRYANT: A NOJENTA VERDADE VEIO À TONA

” But before we get to that hotel room in Colorado, there’s something you need to understand, because what happened that night didn’t begin that night. It began 35 years earlier, in Philadelphia, with a man who failed in the NBA and decided that his newborn son would never fail. August 23, 1978, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

 That’s where Kobe Bean Bryant was born, his father Joe Bryant, known as Jelly Bean, a professional NBA player, but a mediocre player, never an All-Star, never a champion. A luxury reserve who lasted 8 years in the league without leaving a mark. When SP Kobe was born, Joe was 30 years old. His career was ending.

 NBA teams didn’t want him anymore. The solution arrived three years later. Then. Italy, the Italian basketball league, where out-of-fashion American players could continue playing. In 1984, when Kob was 6 years old, the family moved to Italy. Riet, Radio Calabria, Pistoia, Radio Emilia. Every two years, a different city.

 Every two years, a different school. Every two years, some lost friends. Remember that detail. Italy, without friends, without a childhood. That’s the seed of everything that came after. Let’s go. The club grew in Italy, not in the United States. In Italy, he learned Italian before mastering English well. He watched European soccer, not American basketball.

 He ate pasta, not hamburgers. He was a strange kid. Too American for the Italians, too Italian for the Americans. He had no friends, no normal social life, only one thing, just one. Basketball. His father trained him every day in empty gyms, 5 in the morning, 11 at night, 7 hours a day. But there was something darker.

 Joe Bryant had failed in the NBA, he was never a star, he never was.  A champion, he never became what he dreamed of being and projected all that failure, all that pain, all that frustration onto his only son . One night in 1986, in an apartment in Radio Calabria, Joe Bryant sat beside Kobe on the bed, put his hand on the boy’s shoulder and spoke seven words.

 Seven words that Kobe never forgot. “You will be what I wasn’t.” And Kobe, at 8 years old, nodded in agreement in the darkness of that Italian apartment. From that night on, his life ceased to be his own. It became a project, a project to fix his father’s failure. “I didn’t have a childhood,” Kobe recounted in a private interview years later, which was never published in full.

Since I was 8 years old, my life has been basketball, only basketball. While the other kids played, I trained. While the other kids had friends, I was training. While the other kids were living their lives, I was training. In 1991, the family returned to the United States. COB was 13 years old, the same age Giana would be 30 years later.

  Keep that in mind, it’s a 13-year coincidence.  13 years old.  We will arrive.  Lower Marion High School, Philadelphia Suburbs.  For the first time in his life, Cobe played American high school basketball and dominated from day one.  Not because he was the most athletic, not because he was the tallest, but because he worked harder than everyone else.

Kobe would arrive at the gym at 5 a.m., his coach Greg Downer later recounted in an interview with HBO.  Before me, before the caretaker, I never knew how he got into the building.  He trained for two hours before and two hours after the official practice, every day without exception, and his teammates hated him.  “He’s a show-off,” they said.

 “Does he think he’s better than everyone else?”  And they were right.  Kobe really thought he was better, because he was.  Kobe would study videos of Michael Jordan until 3 a.m.  Every move, every feint, every shot.  The coach once asked him why he only watched Jordan.  There are other good players in the NBA.

  He spoke to him.  Kobe looked at him like he was an idiot.  Jordan is the best.  In his senior year of high school, Kobe averaged 31 points per game.  12 rebounds, seven assists.  He led Lower Marion to their first state championship in 50 years.   He was chosen as the national player of the year ahead of Kevin Garnett.

  Above all else , the top universities wanted him.  Duke, North Carolina, and the CLA.  Kob refused them all.  “I’m not going to college,” he said.  Why?  Because college is a waste of time.  I’m going straight to the NBA. June 26, 1996, NBA draft. The Charlotte Hornets drafted him with the number 13 pick. They immediately traded him to the Los Angeles Lakers for Vlade Divac, the biggest franchise in the NBA.

And now there was a 17-year-old kid. In that first rookie year, Cob averaged seven points per game.  Non-tenured reserve.  For any other newcomer, acceptable. Pro Kobe, [music] unacceptable. And there was a moment in that rookie season that defined everything that came after. Playoffs.  Second round.  Lakers vs.

Utah Jazz, and Kobe messed up in a way that changed his life forever.  Let’s go. Game C ends. Lakers are down by two points. Last seconds.  Kob stepped onto the court, asked for the ball, shot, airball, and completely missed. Second possession, Airball again.  Third possession, Airball.

  Fourth possession, fourth air ball in critical possessions of an elimination game.  Lakers eliminated. The team looked at him with disdain in the locker room.   ” That kid [song] cost us the series,” someone said. Shakil, who had joined the Lakers that year, didn’t say anything, but his gaze said it all.  Kobe cried that night. Not out of sadness, but out of anger.

  “I made a mistake because I wasn’t ready,” he told an assistant.  But I’ll never be unprepared again that summer, Kobe trained like crazy.  8 hours a day, every day.  Throwing, conditioning, weight, footwork.  A Lakers coach recounted seeing him arrive at the gym at 4 a.m. I asked him what he was doing there so early. He told me he had to make 1000 balls before breakfast, and that he had already made 300 balls before breakfast.

  That was Cobe, and that obsession, that same obsession, would take him to Colorado six years later.  In 1999, the Lakers hired Phil Jackson, the coach who had won six championship rings with Michael Jordan on the Chicago Bulls. Jackson gathered the team for the first practice, looked at Kobe, looked at Shakira, and said seven words: “We’re going to win championships, but together [music] worked.

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