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How Many Games Do You Project The Lakers Will Win This Season?

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  • They Will Break the NBA Record with 74+ Wins

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Q & A version with Lebron.

INDEPENDENCE, Ohio -- LeBron James declined to speak to the media Monday, a day after Kobe Bryant announced this would be his final season with a poem on The Players' Tribune. Perhaps James simply needed more time to gather his thoughts about the Los Angeles Lakers superstar. James opened up about Bryant on Tuesday, speaking from the heart and off the cuff for more than 10 minutes following Cleveland Cavaliers shootaround.

The following is a transcript of James' complete thoughts on Bryant.

Q: What was your reaction to Kobe's announcement?

James: It was kind of sad, actually. You know, just, obviously it was going to happen to everybody at some point, but to know that this is Kobe’s last year. It’s just sad, man, and the guy’s just had a hell of a career.
Kobe Bryant's Farewell Season

Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant will retire after this season. We have all of the news, reaction and analysis covered, and we'll break down what 20 years of the Mamba has meant to the NBA.
Complete Coverage

I mean, what he’s done for me and my career, is all the way from when I was a kid, to having his posters on my wall when I was growing up, to my junior year in high school when we played in a tournament in New Jersey, and I think the All-Star game was in Philly, I got an opportunity to go and meet him, and he gave me a pair of his shoes to wear in a game against Oak Hill, actually against Carmelo (Anthony), my junior and senior season, to me being a rookie, I think one of our first home games was against the Lakers and just playing against him, was like a dream come true for me because being a kid that came straight out of high school too, it was like, Kobe, T-Mac (Tracy McGrady), KG (Kevin Garnett), it was those guys you kind of looked up to. Kobe being at the ABCD camp talking to us and I was a 15-year-old kid that didn’t know much, listening to Kobe at the time and him doing great things.

I mean, in high school I wore a nappy-*** afro because of Kobe Bryant. Because he wore it. I wanted to be just like him, man. And I always said my inspiration came from (Michael) Jordan, but I always thought Jordan was so out of this world that I could never get there. Kobe was someone that I just always kind of wanted to be like and play like.

And then, just being a competitor. He took me to that next level, and understanding how important competition is and just have a willingness to never die. And you may lose a game, but you’re always going to win every battle, man, and or win the war, things of that nature. You get that all from Kobe, just competing against him every year.

I didn’t hold up my end of the bargain in 2009 for the fans, for us, to meet in the Finals. I know the world wanted to see it. I wanted it, we wanted it, he held up his end and I didn’t hold up my end, and I hate that. I hate that that didn’t happen.
LeBron James regrets this meeting with Kobe Bryant didn't take place on the NBA's biggest stage -- The Finals in 2009. AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill

To us becoming teammates at the Olympics in 2008 and also in ‘12, you know finally being on the same floor with him as a teammate, just seeing his work ethic and seeing how he carries himself every single day. Someone I always wanted to work out with in the summertime, putting my heart into it with him and just seeing everything that he accomplished, everything that he went through. He always left it all out on the floor, so, it’s kind of emotional for me it coming to an end for him because he’s just someone I’ve always looked up to, someone I truly have gained great respect for, not only as a competitor but as a friend, now. It’s something I could sit here and talk for an hour and a half and talk about it because I’ve got so many memories of personal things with him.

And then, the 81-point game, you know, the (62)-point game at the end of the third. The game winner against Phoenix on the right wing. The tip dunk against Indiana. The behind-the-back 360 dunk against Denver at the Staples Center. Um, I could go on and on just watching him. I was lucky because he played in the Western Conference his whole career and I’ve been in the Eastern Conference my whole career, so I could always go home and watch him play after my game. And to this day, you guys hear me say, "I’m going home to watch Bean play." To know that it’s coming to an end is truly sad for me.

Q: You said you don't like to compare greats, but where does Bryant rank?

James: It was someone that I always knew I had to be in the gym. I knew I had to be better because of Kobe Bryant. I knew he was in the gym and I knew he was working on his game. And I knew he was great. So every day that I didn’t want to work out or every day I felt like I couldn’t give more, I always thought of Kobe. Because I knew that he was getting better and I was like, "Man, if you take a day off, he’s going to take advantage of it. You cannot take a day off. You cannot take a day off." And I used him for my motivation throughout my career because I always knew that he was working on something. So, that part will be missed a little bit.

Q: How has your relationship with Bryant evolved?

James: I think he saw being (an Olympic) teammate of mine in ’08 and ’12 how much I put in the game as well. And the respect just rolled after that point. We’ve always competed against one another and we always wanted to dethrone each other. But we always had that mutual respect because we knew how much we put into the game. I’ve always voiced my opinion about Kobe, how great Kobe is and obviously there will never be another one of him in our league. Ever.

Q: Did you assume that a Finals matchup would happen when you were younger?

James: I couldn’t assume anything. I never assumed it. Obviously there was so much made about it from commercials to media talk to people just talking about the Lakers versus the Cavs, Kobe versus LeBron, Kobe versus LeBron, Kobe versus LeBron, but I couldn’t do that to my teammates to kind of assume. That’s not my job. I seen the stat that since ’07 either he has or I’ve been in the Finals but we’ve never matched up. And that definitely sucks, not only for us two being competitors, wanting to go against each other in the Finals, but also for the fans.

Q: There was some talk from J.R. Smith and Kevin Durant that Kobe is under-appreciated by the media. What do you think?

James: I think he’s perceived as one of the most fierce competitors, a five-time champion, a two-time Finals MVP, 17 All-Star appearances. I think the media has done a great job of building Kobe as who he is today. There’s no reason for me to say that the media has made him look a certain way. Throughout his career he’s done unbelievable things and part of the reason why he’s as big as he is because obviously the work he’s put into it but also the coverage that we all get from you guys. So, I don’t see it that way and I don’t really get involved in that side of things, but I don’t see it that way.

Q: What will your last two games against Bryant be like?

James: I think it’ll be very emotional and very fun. Obviously I want to win and he wants to win, too. But some things about that will be much bigger than a win or a loss. I actually looked on the calendar last night to see when we play them both games. Just to be able to see him and know it’s his last go-round. I don’t know. It won’t really make sense next year when you see the Lakers and you don’t see Kobe in a uniform. Twenty years, 13 out of my career. It’s almost half of my life I’ve seen him in a Lakers uniform as a professional. It’s going to be pretty weird.

Q: Will Bryant potentially playing in the 2016 Olympics in Rio affect your decision to play?

James: Nah it won’t. I don’t think it’ll affect it. For me I honestly have to worry about my situation when it comes to that. I understand he wants to be part of the team. Anytime you get an opportunity to play with a legend or a great like Kobe Bryant or whoever it is, you always hope that you're a part of it.

Q: What's your most memorable game with Kobe?

James: I would say our gold medal game in ’08 against Spain was probably one of the most memorable games I’ve ever played with him. That was a really tough game for our team. It was our "Redeem Team" and late in the game it was a very close game. Rudy Fernandez had just come down and made a really big bucket. They went zone on us and we needed to make a big bucket. We swung it around the horn, Kobe caught it on the left wing and shot a 3 with no thought about it. Got fouled, 4 point play and we put the game away from that point on. That was pretty cool.

The other game that was very inspiring and at the same time I knew he was on another level was during our first game we played Spain in ’08 in the preliminary rounds. The first play of the game he ran through the chest of Pau Gasol and got a flagrant. And Pau Gasol was his teammate with the Lakers. I was like, "Yeah, this guy is on another level." Yeah. I loved it. I mean, he wasn’t my teammate, but I was like, you guys can find that clip and you’ll see what I’m talking about. It was one of the first plays of the game. I was like, "This guy’s all about winning and whoever he’s playing for or who he’s playing with at that point in time." He really forgot Pau was his teammate. Like he really forgot that he was about to see him in like three weeks in L.A. I swear. It was crazy.
 
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the first rocky movie is an all time classic character study

2 and 3 are very solid movies

if you hate the 4th movie you hate america

5 is bad

6 has a lot of heart 

creed is one of the best movies of this year

F&F movies are just well made dumb action movies at best, non stop assault on the senses without any weight or heart to it except for a tribute to one of the actors dying 
GHSKABANALSBDUS

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CP1708 CP1708
 
Not even slandering the FF movies, they are exactly what the team set out to make and that in itself is an accomplishment
 
Can we all relish in the glory of the bullet me dodged in #12?

Straight pathetic...straight stealing money.

I'ma go ahead and say it....

Hibbert >>
 
The Lakers are suffering through their worst three seasons since moving to Los Angeles 55 years ago. But with Kobe Bryant  announcing his retirement at the end of the season, the team now has the clarity it needs to prepare for a future without Bryant.

Since the Lakers' hopes for a sixth championship with Bryant were dashed by his Achilles injury in April 2013, followed by Dwight Howard's departure for the Houston Rocketsthat summer, the franchise has been stuck in an awkward purgatory -- caught between trying to stay competitive in Bryant's golden years and developing young talent to eventually supplant him.

Now, the organization can fully commit to building the next great Lakers team. Here's what that should entail in six steps, some of them easier than others:

1. Build an offense around the Clarkson-Russell backcourt

On Saturday in Portland, Oregon, a two-play sequence just after halftime illustrated the potential of the Lakers' young guards. First, Jordan Clarksondrove and dished to D'Angelo Russell, who knocked down a 3-pointer. The next time downcourt, it was Russell who set up Clarkson for a triple.

The two guards have the potential to become interchangeable offensive weapons in a two-guard front, similar to how the Blazers use Damian Lillard  and C.J. McCollum  and the Phoenix Suns  use Eric Bledsoe  and Brandon Knight.

Having two proficient pick-and-roll playmakers will allow the Lakers to target the opposition's weaker defensive guard and utilize both sides of the court, swinging the ball from one pick-and-roll to another to catch defenders out of position.

Clarkson and Russell aren't at the level of those elite dual-ball handler backcourts yet. Russell in particular still is working to get down the nuances of NBA pick-and-roll basketball, a process slowed by the lack of an effective roll man on the Lakers' roster. Of course, he's also 19 and developing right on schedule after a sluggish start to his rookie campaign.

In a couple of years, though, defending Clarkson and Russell could be a difficult task.

2. Mold Julius Randle  into a playmaking 4

In what is essentially his rookie campaign -- he suffered a season-ending fibula fracture in the first game of 2014-15 -- Julius Randle has been predictably uneven. One problem is that Randle isn't particularly effective as a roll-man, and just 9.5 percent of his plays this season have come off pick-and-rolls, according to Synergy Sports tracking available on NBA.com/Stats  -- the lowest rate for any L.A. post player.

For the most part, Randle has created his offense by facing up and trying to beat his defender off the dribble. Amazingly, Randle has created more plays out of isolations than Bryant this season, per Synergy.

Though Randle might never become a scoring threat from the perimeter -- he's currently making 36.7 percent of his 2-point attempts beyond 16 feet, per Basketball-Reference.com, and has yet to make a 3 -- he can still pose problems for defenses as a "playmaking 4"  along the lines of Boris Diaw  and Draymond Green. Randle is averaging 2.8 assists per 36 minutes, nearly as many as Green in his second season (3.0).

3. Find a coach whose strength is player development

Current Lakers head coach Byron Scott has admitted that developing his team's young talent is not his primary goal.

"I'm not always thinking about necessarily developing them," he said earlier this season. "I'm always thinking about trying to win. The development part comes secondary to that, but in practice and everything is where you really work on the development part."

Scott's equivocation is emblematic of an organization caught between two goals. As the vision becomes clear, the Lakers need to prioritize a track record of player development in their next coach to find someone who can grow with their young talent.

Former Laker Luke Waltona player development coach for the franchise's D-League team  before joining the Golden State Warriors' coaching staff and taking over as interim head coach, would be a natural choice.

4. Find two-way contributors at small forward and center

The two obvious holes in the Lakers' lineup of the future are at small forward, currently manned by Bryant, and center, where Roy Hibbert  is a stopgap in the final season of his contract. Given the offensive-minded talent elsewhere on the roster, adding two-way players should be a priority for the Lakers.

A 3-and-D wing is a must next to the undersized backcourt of Clarkson and Russell. Barring unexpected development from 2015 second-round pickAnthony Brown, that player isn't currently on the roster.

At center, the Lakers need quality rim protection because of their difficulty containing penetration from the perimeter. However, they also need a rim runner who can play pick-and-roll basketball with Clarkson and Russell, given that isn't a strength of Randle's game.

The 2016 draft could provide solutions in the form of wings Jaylen Brown(California), Brandon Ingram  (Duke) or forward/center Skal Labissiere(Kentucky), assuming the Lakers ...

5. Get lucky in the lottery

At this point, the Lakers have no control over whether they keep their 2016 first-round pick, which goes to the Philadelphia 76ers  unless it lands in the top three in the draft lottery next May. Even if the Lakers can "catch" the Sixers and post the league's worst record, they won't be guaranteed to have a first-round pick.

But good fortune could accelerate the Lakers' timetable. If they somehow land LSU forward Ben Simmons, their plan would change dramatically, as Simmons' playmaking ability might make one of the Lakers' guards expendable.

6. Be patient in free agency

This might be the hardest part of the plan for the Lakers and their fans to stomach. For years the team has looked forward to using its cap space to bring in the next generation of Lakers stars, and meanwhile the fans have endured three especially dismal years.

The temptation will be stronger than ever in 2016. With Bryant's league-high $25 million salary coming off the books, the Lakers should have enough cap room to make two max offers next summer.

But that doesn't mean they should do so.

The worst thing the Lakers could do is respond by settling for second-tier free agents who don't fit their needs and would command max or near-max money, like L.A. native DeMar DeRozan  of the Toronto Raptors.

Instead, the Lakers should be selective. While the 2016 free-agent crop has only a handful of elite players in their prime -- most notably Oklahoma City Thunderforward Kevin Durant, though Miami Heat  center Hassan Whiteside  might also qualify and is an ideal fit for the Lakers' needs -- the 2017 class is loaded. Blake GriffinChris Paul  and Russell Westbrook  (another L.A. native) will all be unrestricted free agents that summer, and it's possible Durant will be a free agent in 2017 again.

Unless they can get Durant or Whiteside in 2016, the Lakers must ensure they remain in position to offer two of these players the chance to team up in purple and gold.

The close of Bryant's career has been a stormy voyage for the Lakers, but given the lure of L.A., they are just a few moves away from potentially vaulting themselves back into contention.

The Lakers will always be in the mix for top free agents, and if they can pair those expensive stars with cheaper talent developed through the draft, the Lakers may find much smoother sailing ahead.
 
Dear Kobe: A Letter From a Celtics Fan

Dear Kobe Bryant,

I hate you.

Can you blame me? As a Celtics fan, I rooted against you for two decades. I rejoiced in your agony when my Celtics beat you in the 2008 Finals. Paul Pierce deserved it way more than you did. You already had three rings at the time.

But three just wasn’t enough for you. You got your revenge and ultimately your fifth ring in 2010 while ripping my heart out in the process. I hope you still know how lucky you are that Kendrick Perkins was out for Game 7.

I read your letter in the Players' Tribune today and was shocked. Not because you announced your retirement – we all already knew that. I was shocked because of the way your letter made me feel.

In my mind, I have always grouped you and Derek Jeter together. You are the players that we as Boston fans bitterly hate, but cannot help but respect. You played the game the right way – with passion, pride, and professionalism.

You were true students of the game who pursued greatness by working harder than anybody. You became generational icons of your respective sports. You embraced every challenge. You gave it your all. You put your bodies on the line. You knew how to win. You respected your sport, your craft, and your rivalry with Boston.

December 30 marks the last time that you will play in Boston. This is also the last opportunity for us Celtics fans to cheer our team to victory against arguably the most dominant player in the storied history of the Celtics and Lakers.

As you go, so goes what is left of the rivalry that once dominated the NBA. Perhaps someday it will be rekindled by new faces. Perhaps not.

So when you come to the Garden next month, I hope the crowd puts you through hell. I hope we heckle you and boo you more emphatically than we did in the championship bouts. I hope you miss every single free throw. I hope you never forget what it’s like to be surrounded by 17,000 screaming fans who bleed green and would give anything to watch you fail one last time.

I hope we beat LA once again. And when you get pulled from the lineup halfway through the fourth quarter when my Celtics are up by 20 points, I think something beautiful will happen.

Every single person in the Garden will stop booing. We will rise to our feet and show respect in the form of the loudest, most passionate standing ovation you have ever witnessed. We will chant your name. We will wipe our eyes. We will say our bittersweet farewells.

They say you never truly know what you got 'til it’s gone. So before you go, I just want to say thank you for being far more than just a great basketball player. To an entire generation of NBA fans, you are basketball.

I can’t believe I’m saying this… but I’m really going to miss you.

Love (and hate) you always,
A Celtics fan who didn’t appreciate you enough ‪#‎DearKobe‬ ‪#‎WWLG4L‬

- Jonathan Jacobson
 
Yo this dude Antawn Jamison. Not only does he do Laker pre-games in LA, he does the pre-game for the Wizards too. :lol
 
:lol how dope was that

Were those MVP chants i heard :lol
 
Dear Kobe: A Letter From a Celtics Fan


Dear Kobe Bryant,

I hate you.

Can you blame me? As a Celtics fan, I rooted against you for two decades. I rejoiced in your agony when my Celtics beat you in the 2008 Finals. Paul Pierce deserved it way more than you did. You already had three rings at the time.

But three just wasn’t enough for you. You got your revenge and ultimately your fifth ring in 2010 while ripping my heart out in the process. I hope you still know how lucky you are that Kendrick Perkins was out for Game 7.

I read your letter in the Players' Tribune today and was shocked. Not because you announced your retirement – we all already knew that. I was shocked because of the way your letter made me feel.

In my mind, I have always grouped you and Derek Jeter together. You are the players that we as Boston fans bitterly hate, but cannot help but respect. You played the game the right way – with passion, pride, and professionalism.

You were true students of the game who pursued greatness by working harder than anybody. You became generational icons of your respective sports. You embraced every challenge. You gave it your all. You put your bodies on the line. You knew how to win. You respected your sport, your craft, and your rivalry with Boston.

December 30 marks the last time that you will play in Boston. This is also the last opportunity for us Celtics fans to cheer our team to victory against arguably the most dominant player in the storied history of the Celtics and Lakers.

As you go, so goes what is left of the rivalry that once dominated the NBA. Perhaps someday it will be rekindled by new faces. Perhaps not.

So when you come to the Garden next month, I hope the crowd puts you through hell. I hope we heckle you and boo you more emphatically than we did in the championship bouts. I hope you miss every single free throw. I hope you never forget what it’s like to be surrounded by 17,000 screaming fans who bleed green and would give anything to watch you fail one last time.

I hope we beat LA once again. And when you get pulled from the lineup halfway through the fourth quarter when my Celtics are up by 20 points, I think something beautiful will happen.

Every single person in the Garden will stop booing. We will rise to our feet and show respect in the form of the loudest, most passionate standing ovation you have ever witnessed. We will chant your name. We will wipe our eyes. We will say our bittersweet farewells.

They say you never truly know what you got 'til it’s gone. So before you go, I just want to say thank you for being far more than just a great basketball player. To an entire generation of NBA fans, you are basketball.

I can’t believe I’m saying this… but I’m really going to miss you.

Love (and hate) you always,
A Celtics fan who didn’t appreciate you enough
 
How has no one brought up DLo's amazing passes from the first half yet?!

Someone post the vines. :lol

You guys can't say he shows no flashes then ignore these gems he's dishing out :{
 
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