Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Kobe wants to be Traded- or does he

Options
  • 31-05-2007 6:43am
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 2,066 ✭✭✭


    The story lines that have engulfed the Los Angeles Lakers in the last week hit a crescendo Wednesday when Kobe Bryant said he would welcome a trade.


    Kobe: "I would like
    to be traded."

    Kobe Bryant tells Stephen A. Smith on 1050 ESPN Radio in New York that he wants to be traded from the Lakers -- and that there's nothing the Lakers can do to change his mind. Listen

    And later, in another radio interview, he seemed to back away from the demand.

    First, Bryant said on 1050 ESPN Radio in New York: "I would like to be traded, yeah. Tough as it is to come to that conclusion there's no other alternative, you know?"

    Bryant, interviewed by Stephen A. Smith, was asked if there was anything the Lakers could do to change his mind.

    "No," Bryant said. "I just want them to do the right thing."

    "[The Lakers] obviously want to move in a different direction in terms of rebuilding," Bryant said, adding he could have opted to sign with the Los Angeles Clippers or Chicago Bulls instead. "Three years ago when I was re-signing they should have told me they wanted to rebuild."


    Asked if he had any preference for a trade destination, he said "At this point I'll go play on Pluto."



    "They said nothing to me about a long-term plan. Absolutely nothing," Bryant told KLAC. "They told [Lakers coach] Phil [Jackson] one thing and they told me another. Actions speak louder than words."


    Bryant talked to Dan Patrick on ESPN Radio and seemed to reconsider slightly.

    "I'm so tired of talking," Bryant said. "It's tough. I always dreamed about retiring as a Laker. I just hope and hope that something can be resolved. Something can be figured out. Just something so I can stay here and be in this city and be with the team I love."


    Bryant told Patrick he talked to Jackson after talking to Smith and felt resassured.

    "When Phil and I spoke, he was optimistic and determined that we'll both be back," Bryant told Patrick. "Phil is somebody I listen to. I lean on him a lot. He assured me things are going to be OK. Things are going to be all right. Don't go full bore just yet. Take a deep breath and let us work these things out and everything will be all right. Which was very encouraging.

    "I don't want to go anywhere else. I want to be here for the rest of my career. It was encouraging to hear that."

    Bryant earned $17.72 million last season and is owed $88.6 million over the next four years. He can terminate his contract following the 2008-09 season -- a move that would leave $47.8 million on the table.


    By requesting a trade, Bryant would obviously waive his no-trade clause, but he has a trade clause in his contract that is believed to add about $13 million to his total contract value, a cost to be absorbed by any team that acquires him.

    "We are aware of the media reports. However, Kobe has not told us directly that he wants to be traded," Lakers owner Jerry Buss said in a statement Wednesday afternoon. "We have made it very clear that we are building our team around Kobe and that we intend for him to be a Laker his entire career.

    "We will speak directly to Kobe and until we do that, we will not comment publicly about this."

    Earlier in the day, Bryant said Buss masterminded the trade of Shaquille O'Neal -- and Shaq later confirmed Kobe's account.

    The issues between Bryant and the Lakers have reached a boil, beginning with Bryant voicing his displeasure with the club's direction, his suggestion that Jerry West should return to fix things, West's statement that he has no intention of undermining GM/good friend Mitch Kupchak, and, unrelated but bizarre in its timing, Buss' arrest early Tuesday for investigation of driving under the influence of alcohol.

    Bryant was left "beyond furious" by a report in Tuesday's Los Angeles Times that read, "as a Lakers insider notes, it was Bryant's insistence on getting away from Shaquille O'Neal that got them in this mess."

    O'Neal was traded to the Miami Heat after the 2003-04 season, and the long-held belief has been that the deteriorating relationship between O'Neal and Bryant was a factor in O'Neal's departure.



    In response to the Times' story, Bryant, interviewed by Smith for a Philadelphia Inquirer column, said Buss "called a meeting with me after he spoke with Jim Gray [of ESPN] to talk with him about Shaq's future in the middle of the 2004 season.

    "He met with me at the Four Seasons Hotel here [in Newport Beach, Calif.] across from Fashion Island, which is now the Island Hotel," Bryant told Smith. "I went up to his penthouse suite. [Buss] looks me dead in the face and says: 'Kobe, I am not going to re-sign Shaq. I am not about to pay him $30 million a year or $80 million over three years. No way in hell. I feel like he's getting older. His body is breaking down, and I don't want to pay that money to him when I can get value for him right now rather than wait.

    "This is my decision. It's independent of you. My mind is made up. It doesn't matter to me what you do in free agency because I do not want to pay [Shaq], period.'"

    "Dr. Buss said that," Bryant told Smith. "And I haven't said anything for years because I've always felt like folks were just looking to create controversy. Now I know. I realize what extent [the Lakers] will go to, to cover themselves."

    Reached afterward, O'Neal told Smith that he believed his former teammate to be beyond reproach.

    "I believe Kobe 100 percent," O'Neal said when reached in Los Angeles. "Absolutely. There's no doubt in my mind Kobe is telling the truth. I believe him a thousand percent.

    "I would have respected Dr. Buss more as a man if he would have told me that himself, because I know he said it. But he didn't [tell me]. He never said a damn word to me."

    Buss was unavailable for comment Tuesday. Buss, 74, was booked early Tuesday for investigation of drunken driving and driving with a blood alcohol content of 0.08 or above.

    Kupchak, at the NBA pre-draft camp in Orlando, declined comment when asked about it by ESPN.com's Andy Katz. Kupchak said Buss was the only person speaking for the Lakers' organization on the matter.

    Bryant told Patrick having West back with the Lakers would console him. "That would definitely help out the situation," he said. "I want to feel like there's somebody up there I can trust. Phil is one of those people. I have an idea who said it. I'm not going to get into speculation ... I know who's the insider."

    The Lakers missed the playoffs in the first season after O'Neal was dealt for Lamar Odom, Caron Butler, Brian Grant and a first-round pick, and have been eliminated in the first round the last two seasons. O'Neal and the Heat won the NBA championship last season.

    "Sure, Shaq and I had our issues," Bryant told Smith. "So what! We always did and we won three titles. That doesn't change what was told to me. It doesn't change the fact I never, ever, said to get rid of him."

    While Bryant re-signed for $136 million for seven years the day after O'Neal was traded, he has pushed for trades -- he wanted Carlos Boozer, then Jason Kidd, then Ron Artest -- that the Lakers were unable to pull off. Meanwhile, Odom has undergone shoulder surgery but is expected to be ready for training camp in October; Kwame Brown has undergone reconstructive surgery on his left ankle and might not be ready for the start of camp.

    And now Bryant, who reportedly has made it clear to the Lakers that he may see fit to terminate his contract in two years, has told Smith he won't continue to wait for Buss to build the roster around him.

    "Promises made to make this team better have not been kept," Bryant told Smith. "So where does that leave me

    Can anyoone figure this out :confused:


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,249 ✭✭✭✭Kinetic^


    Yeah, he's realised that he can't win a championship on his own and that his current supporting cast is sh1t so he wants to go somewhere with a chance to win something. I can't really see anyone wanting to play with the muppet but he's a good player for an organisation.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,806 ✭✭✭Lafortezza


    If the lakers can trade Odom+others for Garnett then he has a chance, but Garnett will be in big demand around the league.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,249 ✭✭✭✭Kinetic^


    Garnett looking to move or what?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,066 ✭✭✭Sea Devils


    lafortezza wrote:
    If the lakers can trade Odom+others for Garnett then he has a chance, but Garnett will be in big demand around the league.


    I extremely doubt that. The sceanrio that has been talked about the most is Phoenix. The suns would give up Marrion, Barbosa and Banks. I don't think we would trade him to our Division rivals although with Buss you never know. I certainly think the Minnesota one is a no go jermaine o Neal is more likely to go to us


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,806 ✭✭✭Lafortezza


    Garnett is in his last contracted year before Free Agency (I think). So if he waits one more season he leaves for nothing, therefore Minnesota want to trade him and get some value.

    I agree that it's unlikely that Garnett will go to LA, Sea Devils, I'm just saying that it's one way to keep Bryant happy with the Lakers.
    PHX lineup would be crazy with KG.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,249 ✭✭✭✭Kinetic^


    Hmmm, if the Suns got him then that would be savage.........although I'm not sure if he'd be suited to their style of play.


Advertisement