All eyes on Kobe Bryant in final NBA All-Star Game

Sport360 staff 09:47 14/02/2016
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Mail
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • WhatsApp
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • LA Lakers' Kobe Bryant goes for record fifth All-Star Game MVP in last go.

    Kobe Bryant makes his 18th and final NBA All-Star Game appearance tonight in Toronto, with the Los Angeles Lakers legend surrounded by a new generation of playmakers he inspired to greatness.

    The 37-year-old American, who last November announced he would retire after this season, was the top vote-getter with 1.9 million ballots from fans worldwide for the annual mid-season showdown between Eastern and Western Conference talent. The East leads the all-time rivalry 37-27.

    “It’s time for me to go,” Bryant said. “Guys I’m playing with that are tearing up the league were like four for my first All-Star Game.”

    That’s how old Bryant’s West team-mate Anthony Davis was when Kobe made his All-Star debut in 1998. Now Davis will be among those trying to make sure Bryant wins a record fifth NBA All-Star Game Most Valuable Player award, breaking the record Bryant now shares with 1950s icon Bob Pettit.

    “It’s going to be crazy, a lot of (fans wearing Kobe’s) No24 jerseys,” Davis said. “We’ll try to get him the MVP.”

    Former Lakers team-mate Shaquille O’Neal says he expects Bryant to go for an MVP performance.

    “Knowing Kobe as well as I do, I’m sure if he gets going, the crowd is going to want it to happen and certain players are going to want it to happen,” O’Neal said. “I can guarantee you he’s going to go for the MVP. It’s his last one. Why not go out with a bang?”

    Bryant has scored a record 280 points in All-Star games. Only 19-time All-Star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has more appearances in the elite matchup.

    The five-time NBA champion said his biggest regret was not winning in his two other Finals appearances with the Lakers, losing to Detroit in 2004 and Boston in 2008.

    “Those are the things that get to me still,” Bryant said. “I wish I could have won the two that got away. Damn it. Those are tangible things I think I could have changed, adjusted from a leadership perspective.”

    Bryant, who played on the 2008 and 2012 US Olympic gold medal teams, struggled with injuries in
    recent seasons, including a torn Achilles tendon, left knee fracture and torn rotator cuff in his right shoulder.

    “I can’t believe I’m still playing,” Bryant said. “I had three major injuries. I always believed I could come back but you never know.”

    Four-time MVP LeBron James was among the youth who dreamed to be like Bryant.

    “Obviously, with Kobe’s generation, they paved the way for us,” James said. “As a kid growing up, watching Kobe straight out of high school was something I admired. To go from that to be a competitor of his, to be going out there for his last All-Star Game, it’s going to be a great thing.”

    Recommended