Kobe’s wise words taken to heart by Devin Booker and other young NBA stars

  • Slug: BC-CNS Kobe’s Impact. 800 words.
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By Valerie Gonzales
Cronkite News

LOS ANGELES – Kobe Bryant was only 18 when he joined the Los Angeles Lakers, and the winner of five championship rings inspired a generation of young NBA basketball players to mirror the way he played the game.

“Before I even knew him personally, he had shaped my life,” Phoenix Suns shooting guard Devin Booker, who was 19 when he was the 13th pick overall in the 2015 NBA draft, recently told reporters. “My basketball career. My approach to everything.

“The biggest thing for me was earning his respect. To even be the guy in the room after we play them that he wanted to talk to or share advice with. Then our relationship grew from there.”

One thing Booker will never forget is when Bryant autographed his basketball shoes and wrote “Be Legendary” on them. That was in April 2016, after Bryant’s final game against the Suns.

Booker turned pro, after attending University of Kentucky for a year under the “one and done rule” that mandated young players spend one year out of high school before they can enter the NBA draft. One and done is a reference to how long athletes spent in college. The rule may be dropped to allow players to be drafted out of high school by the 2022 draft, according to NBA Commissioner Adam Silver.

The 2006 rule was intended to give young adults time to mature and improve their chances of success before entering the NBA.

Before the rule, only 45 high school players from 1962 to 2005 were drafted into the NBA right out of high school. Of those 45, LeBron James and Amar’e Stoudemire won NBA Rookie of the Year Awards in their first season. Three of the draftees won most valuable player: Kevin Garnett in 2004, Kobe Bryant in 2008 and LeBron James in 2009, ’10, ’12 and ’13. Only 10 of the 45 draftees were selected to the All-Star Game.

Bryant was drafted in 1996, played his entire career with the Lakers, was an All Star 18 times, on the All-NBA Team 15 times, on the All-Defensive Team 12 times and was named Most Valuable Player in 2008. He gave himself the on-court moniker Black Mamba.

“It’s just rare to find raw talent like that,” said Todd Merkow, who teaches advanced issues in sports and media at Arizona State University.

Even though Bryant was young, he was one of the few to make the most of his talents, Merkow said.

“I think he just kept his head down to a degree and worked to be the best,” he said.

At the beginning of his career, Bryant didn’t have to face certain obstacles that other athletes deal with now, such as social media, said Ed Olsen, who teaches sports marketing at a Arizona State University.

“The new world we live in today where your actions are more open to the world and people can see and know what you do, even if it’s not the most awesome thing,” he said.

Although trash talking is common on the court, when it comes to social media, certain issues arise.

On June 11th, 2018, fans were entertained when Lakers Lonzo Ball and Kyle Kuzma went back and forth on social media platforms as a joke – until Lakers management had to step in when Ball’s diss track made a reference to Kumza’s relationship with his father.

“I think the majority of folks use their social media platforms for positive. You get those authentic moments where guys are human,” Keyon Dooling, a retired NBA player and now the player wellness counselor of the National Basketball Players Association, told Bleacher Report.

Los Angeles Lakers small forward Kyle Kuzma is another up-and-comer who idolized Bryant.

Young Kuzma wanted nothing more but to meet Kobe, and then three years ago, Kuzma became a Laker and those dreams came true.

Before Bryant, his daughter Gianna and seven others died in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26 , the former Laker was becoming an ambassador for young, talented athletes.

In 2016, he started the Mamba Academy, which Gianna, 13, was a part of. The academy brings experts in each sport to train the youth, amateur or elite athletes. He also endorsed ESPN’s Don’t Retire, Kid campaign, which is meant to encourage youngsters to keep participating in their sports and not to give up.

“Kobe was going to be a very strong youth sports advocate because you see him with his daughters and his understanding of what it takes to become an athlete on all levels,” Merkow said.

Booker  also was impressed by the way Bryant treated his family.

“Just figuring out what type of person he was outside of the Mamba mentality. How he raised his daughters and how much of a family man he was something that was just incredible,” he said.

Booker last saw Bryant when the legend brought Gianna’s AAU team to Phoenix for the Arizona Girls Report Desert Invitational in May.

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“Before I even knew him personally, he had shaped my life,” Phoenix Suns shooting guard Devin Booker said of NBA legend Kobe Bryant, who died last month in a helicopter crash. (Photo by Tyler Strachan/Cronkite News)
Fans left flowers at a mural in Los Angeles to honor former Los Angeles Laker Kobe Bryant on Jan. 27. (Photo by Valerie Gonzales/Cronkite News)