MEMPHIS, Tenn. – On a night when Kobe Bryant made history as the new No. 1 Lakers scorer of all time and rightfully used words such as “great honor” and “rich tradition,” the Lakers lost.
Then Pau Gasol talked about why they lost, and his annoyance might’ve even exceeded that of Ron Artest while he hung his head and slumped at the waist after missing the potential winning 3-pointer Monday night.
Bryant actually shot 57.1 percent from the field in scoring 44 points Monday night. Pretty good stuff, and when the Lakers’ offense bogs down, they often need Bryant’s energy to compete.
But Gasol, especially if the Lakers don’t win that way, believes it’s easier to win if he gets more of a chance to shoot his high field-goal percentage and Andrew Bynum gets to do the same. Bryant took 28 of the Lakers' 73 shots from the field and 13 of their 27 from the foul line.
Gasol had just 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting Monday and surely hoped to shine brighter in the city where he not only is already a franchise all-time scoring leader but holds 11 other all-time Grizzlies records.
“Obviously we’re not making a concerted effort at pounding the ball inside,” Gasol said after the loss.
He said he’s not sure why this plagues the Lakers despite their consistent size advantage, but added pointedly: “It happens often.”
Bear in mind that Phil Jackson was a little miffed at Bryant on his historic night, too. Jackson told the team at halftime, when Bryant had 23 of the Lakers’ 50 points, that Bryant was “forcing the action.” Jackson also said in the halftime locker room, alluding to the 29 points Bryant needed in the game to pass Jerry West: “Let’s get him over the hump, so we can play team ball again.”
That’s a lot like what Gasol said after the game, when Gasol also said “I totally agree” with Jackson’s assessment of it being a mediocre 5-3 trip. Gasol ended that comment by saying he hoped the Lakers now “understand what we have to do better.”
It’s the law of the hardwood that the big man needs someone to give him the ball to do his thing. It’s natural for there to be some helplessness felt on Gasol’s part. Even if his physical toughness isn’t explicit, Gasol’s will to win is underrated.
He needs to know he coughed up that Cleveland game – and he does. He should be thankful that he’s Bryant’s teammate – and he is. He harbors no ill will toward Bryant, as seen by my pregame exchange Monday with Gasol.
I mentioned not selling himself short for all the all-time Grizzlies records he holds. Gasol smiled but said about Bryant’s record: “That's a little different. Lakers? What do you think?”
Gasol has on several occasions offered passive-aggressive comments about not getting the ball enough after Lakers losses in the past. This time, the comments leaned a little harder toward aggressive, particularly when it came to Bryant.
Gasol was asked about Bryant’s new record and offered politically correct – and believably authentic – commentary (“I’m proud of him; I congratulate him”) before adding the kicker: “Now we can focus on winning games again.”
Bryant and Gasol have a good relationship, no doubt. There is a fundamental mutual respect, a shared obsession with the intricacies of the game and a necessary understanding that Bryant is the alpha male and Gasol is not.
(Quick flashback to just moments after the Lakers won the NBA championship last June. Bryant referenced past conflict with Shaquille O’Neal and said: “It’s probably the first dynamic duo that had two alpha males on one team. We managed to make it work for three championships.”)
There’s no question about Bryant’s affection and appreciation for Gasol as the perfect second All-Star. Bryant does want to help Gasol become an even greater player.
What remains to be seen as the days and years unfold is whether Gasol can live with days and years of Bryant’s often heavy-handed, sometimes borderline demeaning advice – and his lust for scoring.
Gasol has settled on the way he wants to answer when talking about Bryant’s greatness, describing Bryant as a sensational player who is “very aggressive to score.” It’s a compliment, yet it’s sort of not.
Bryant just won the game Sunday in Boston with a clutch shot. Faced with a triple-team at the end Monday, he passed instead of forcing the shot he clearly wanted to take – even if there wasn’t ideal timing on the play.
I said Gasol’s Grizzlies points record is still “something.” He nodded and agreed, saying: “It’s something.”
Same thing for Gasol’s annoyance. It’s not epic. It’s not dynasty-threatening right now.
It’s something.
Gasol’s no kid. He is 29 and has flecks of white in that beard already. He absolutely reveres Bryant on some level – and enjoys all this enough to have just signed a contract extension – but Gasol knows with unshakable mathematical certainty that his efficiency with the ball inside is gold, too.
Are the Lakers better when they go inside?
“One hundred percent,” Gasol said.