Then people should stop comparing them. If MJ's game was more condusive to being more efficient then so be it. But then I always thought Kobe took too many 3's at times.
I agree, but for some reason when people give Kobe credit, it always comes back to that comparison. TBH, outside of mannerisms, in terms of how they walk, how they talk, they played the game itself
completely different.
I've always said MJ was more efficient, but Kobe is more skilled. Phil Jackson himself said that, it's not a knock against MJ at all to say Kobe has more skills. It's not a knock against Kobe to say he's not the most efficient, particularly late in his career. The bottomline is, the results are virtually the same. Three straight trips to the Finals, two separate times with two separate teams.
So a player has to be a HOF to be considered great. A great role player, great clutch players, being great for the short term but not necessarily long term....Tell me this, aside from Duncan what star has had better players around them then Kobe? I'll say squads to avoid the hangup on this HOF thing (I'm talking over a longer period of time ).You could throw Shaq in there obviously.
The thing is, people who hate Kobe act like he's had a great roster his whole career, and it's simply not true.
The Kobe/Shaq Lakers had good role players. Rick Fox, Robert Horry, Horace Grant & Ron Harper at that stage of their careers, Derek Fisher, I mean, these aren't
great players in any sense. What they were, were hard-nosed & tough, and filled a role. Every team in the NBA has pieces like that.
Top to Bottom, Portland, Sacramento and San Antonio were better at the time, Kobe & Shaq as a tandem is what made it special.
The mid-2000s Lakers were possibly one of the worst teams to make the Playoffs perennially. Smush Parker, Chris Mihm, Luke Walton, Kwame Brown, are you kidding? And this was when the West was still the dominate Conference.
The Kobe/Pau Lakers IMO, is probably the best team overall Kobe ever had, aside from Bynum who was basically non-existent for either of the three Finals appearances. So where is all this talent?
The Lakers team, as constituted last season, had zero bench, no consistent outside shooting, no perimeter defensive players, a soft PF who was encouraged by the coach to become even more so, and a moody & temperamental Center who decides when he wants to play and when he doesn't.