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Home / Sport / Basketball

Why Kobe's Bryant's death means so much to us

By Sam Dolnick
New York Times·
29 Jan, 2020 02:41 AM5 mins to read

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A fan writes a message on a wall with an image of former NBA basketball player Kobe Bryant at the House of Kobe basketball court in Valenzuela, Philippines. Photo / AP

A fan writes a message on a wall with an image of former NBA basketball player Kobe Bryant at the House of Kobe basketball court in Valenzuela, Philippines. Photo / AP

Older Americans remember where they were when they learned about JFK's death. Now basketball fans have their own terrible moment.

To be a basketball fan is to rank the star you're watching with the stars you have seen before, constantly searching for the precise comparison.

He's a young Magic Johnson with a better jump shot. He's like Kareem in his prime but shorter. He's good, but does he have Jordan's killer instinct?

The search stopped Sunday night because there's no analogy to be made. Nothing like this had ever happened before in basketball. The tragic, hard-to-believe-it's-real death of Kobe Bryant simply has no comparison in the modern NBA.

A star so famous he had one name — Shaq, LeBron, Kobe — cut down so suddenly, so close to the peak of his powers.

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READ MORE:
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• Basketball: How Kobe Bryant made his millions and built a successful business empire
• Kobe Bryant detailed decision to start flying in helicopters in heartbreaking interview

Most baby boomers can tell you where they were when they learned that JFK was shot. Now basketball fans have their own terrible version.

If Kobe wasn't quite the president of the NBA, he was something kind of like it. Bill Clinton recently sat courtside to watch the Lakers and chat with LeBron. Kobe did so all the time, and it had a similar feel.

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One reason the NBA is so popular, so perfectly suited to this cultural moment, is the seeming accessibility of its stars. Basketball players aren't hidden behind bulky helmets. They are on the court in tank-tops, they are in the locker room as fashion icons, they are on Instagram as celebrities.

Because the NBA is so online, far more so than any other sports league, fans and players all experienced the news of Kobe's death together, watching one another learn the news in real time, grieving through selfies and memes and broken-heart emojis.

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Phoenix Suns forward Kelly Oubre Jr. looks down during a 24 second shot clock violation in honour of Kobe Bryant. Photo / AP
Phoenix Suns forward Kelly Oubre Jr. looks down during a 24 second shot clock violation in honour of Kobe Bryant. Photo / AP

We saw video of LeBron James sobbing as he learned the news, just a day after he had soliloquised about Kobe as he passed him in the record books. We saw Tiger Woods, who had been playing in a golf tournament when the news broke, as soon as he heard. We watched Dwyane Wade's raw selfie video, his weary face taking up the whole screen, his eyes puffy from weeping. "Today is one of the saddest days of my lifetime," Wade said with a broken heart emoji over the screen. "I wanted to be respected by him and when I reached that level I know I did something." He wiped his eyes.

On Sunday, the games went on. In San Antonio, the Toronto Raptors and the Spurs devised a moving tribute just hours after the news broke. To honour Kobe, who wore the No. 24, the Raptors held the ball for a 24-second violation; then the Spurs did the same. It was hard to picture that ever happening before, or happening again. The entire stadium chanted "Ko-be, Ko-be."

Tragedy has struck the basketball world before, of course. Len Bias died of a drug overdose the night he was drafted, never making it to the NBA. Reggie Lewis died of a heart attack while practicing. Magic Johnson announced that he had HIV, but came back and won the All-Star Game's MVP award. But an icon like Kobe, dying like this? Pro basketball's history books are blank.

Athletes have long compared retirement to death, but NBA stars never really fade away — they host halftime shows, they move into management, they make movies. With its ceremonial rocking chairs, its tribute films and its standing ovations, a player's easing into retirement is a softer, gentler, pretend version of the lights going out.

Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant reaches back for a rebound during the first half of game four of the Western Conference semifinals against the Sacramento Kings in 2001. Photo / AP
Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant reaches back for a rebound during the first half of game four of the Western Conference semifinals against the Sacramento Kings in 2001. Photo / AP

This was all too real, the harsh world devastatingly intruding into a setting where the stakes are never supposed to be this high. That Kobe's 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, and seven others also died in the helicopter crash compounded the tragedy.

In these tumultuous and politically toxic times, sports becomes a refuge, a place to retreat from the battles of public life. In Washington, reporters track the president breaking his own personal tweeting records — more than 130 times on a recent day. In the NBA, we watch Zion Williamson, the league's next big star, score 17 points in three minutes. (Williamson is like a cross between LeBron James and Charles Barkley. See? The comparisons are like oxygen.)

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NBA players are comic book heroes come to life, the league a theater of Adonis-like figures fighting battles against one another, against the legacies of those who played before them.

The death of Kobe Bryant was a devastating reminder that basketball is only a game, and the real world looms closer than you like.


Written by: Sam Dolnick
© 2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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