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Rest In Peace: 30 Iconic Kobe Bryant Moments

Darren Ryding - January 29, 2020
Lists

Rest In Peace: 30 Iconic Kobe Bryant Moments

Darren Ryding - January 29, 2020

For 20 seasons, Kobe Bryant entertained the world on the basketball court. In short, he’s one of the greatest NBA players of all-time and an inspiration for millions across the globe. His records and achievements are beyond belief. Five NBA championships, 18 All-Stars, two NBA Finals MVP Awards, and one NBA MVP award are just some of his accolades.

Kobe’s tragic early passing in 2020, alongside his daughter and seven others, has brought his life into focus again. This article is going to focus on 30 of his greatest moments in the NBA. To sum it up, he was a special athlete and person with so much more to give to the world. We at SportsScroll send our best to the families, friends, and loved ones of everyone involved in the accident that took Bryant from the world.

Check out the list below.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

30. Early Days vs. Utah

Despite his many accolades in the game, Bryant had lessons to learn in the game too. While he was the most confident man in the world on the court, he was often strikingly humble in day-to-day life. He considered a game against Utah in 1997 as one of his most important professional experiences.

Kobe Bryant
Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

This is the single moment on this list where he didn’t play well or win something. What he did gain was a sense of how you can persevere from failure. The Jazz won 4-1 in a series against the Lakers in the Western Conference semifinals. Kobe’s trio of airballs proved costly but he later appreciated what it taught a young player.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

29. Taking On Steve Nash

Nash is one of the greatest foreign players to set foot on an NBA court. The eight-time All-Star never won an NBA Championship, even though he is a two-time MVP. However, before joining Bryant on the Lakers’ roster, he actually played against him a number of times.

Steve Nash
Mandatory Credit: NBC Sports

Their most iconic clash came back in 2006. Nash was playing for the Dallas Mavericks when Bryant came in hard. He scored a powerful dunk that sent his future teammate crashing to the ground. Bryant didn’t hold back against anybody. You had to love his competitive spirit.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

28. Slam Dunk Contest Win

Bryant won the 1997 Slam Dunk Contest. It wasn’t as glamorous or prestigious as it once was, but this was still a big moment for the young man on his rise to stardom. These events are as big as you make them and in Bryant’s case, it was an opportunity for him to awake the nation.

Mandatory Credit: The Hoop Times

Bryant still did his best and scored a game-high 31 points in the Rookie Challenge. It was a sign of things to come as he quickly gained a reputation for his fantastic shooting ability. The NBA didn’t quite yet know what was coming.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Youngest All-Star In NBA History

This is a record that still stands. Will anybody beat ever beat it? You know you’re doing something right if you win an All-Star award. They’re the league’s recognition of your excellence over the course of a season. Bryant was the youngest player ever to win it at the tender age of 19.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

For comparison, Zion Williamson is already 19, so even if he plays brilliantly for the Pelicans and wins the award himself, he’s already too old. Kobe showed that he belonged in the All-Star game, putting 18 points on the board. He was here to stay and it was time for the league to acknowledge the coming greatness.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

27. Degrading Ben Wallace

There are moments in basketball where one player eviscerates another. That can be really difficult to recover from because you’ve got to live with it being in everybody’s memory forever. Especially now with the internet. Kobe destroyed Wallace when they met in a preseason game in 1997.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Credit to Wallace though because he said that it helped him to refocus his career. He didn’t want to be the butt of jokes for the rest of his career, so he improved himself. So much so that he became a four-time Defensive Player of the Year.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

26. Beating Michael Jordan

Jordan was basketball’s – and indeed sports’ – first true megastar. The fact that his shoes are still in production today says a lot about how much of a legend he is. When Bryant played him in 2003, he was well past his prime, but there was still a sense of occasion about it.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

However, Bryant saw this as an opportunity to show the world who the better point guard was. He put on a clinic as the Lakers demolished Jordan’s Wizards. Kobe scored 55 points in one of the best games of his season. This was a massive statement of intent from the young man.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

25. A Lucky Escape

When you think about the Lakers, Bryant is always going to come to mind. He was synonymous with their brand on and off the court for so long that it’s impossible not to connect the two. But he might never have played for them. Whoever let him leave the Charlotte Hornets should never work in basketball again.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

They decided that they didn’t want the 18-year-old shooting guard but had an eye on Lakers center Vlade Divac. They traded the pair and Bryant played 20 seasons in LA. He was the first guard to play for this long in the NBA. A year later he would win his first All-Star award.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

24. All-Star Game MVP

For a long time, Shaquille O’Neal was the main man in Los Angeles. The pair made an excellent duo but until he retired, Shaq was the face of the franchise. However, Bryant had a real coming-out party in 2002 when he was MVP in the All-Star game.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

He had already appeared in back-to-back NBA Second Teams, but this was the chance to show that he was the best. It showed that he was ready for the next big step. This was taking up Shaq’s massive mantle when he finally moved on. Bryant announced he was the next Lakers’ poster boy with this All-Star Game performance.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

23. Winning First Championship

Not every player gets to win an NBA Championship. You can be absolutely brilliant and still never get a ring on your finger. Just ask Karl Malone and Patrick Ewing. These two men proved you can achieve legendary status without winning the biggest prize in the sport.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Bryant battled through an ankle injury to help the Lakers beat the Indiana Pacers in 2000. It was his first taste of team success. Even though he didn’t play well by his standards, only managing 15.6 points per game, it didn’t matter in the end. The Lakers got their first title since 1988.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

22. 1998 All-Star Game

As big moments go, this one was huge. We’ve already talked about how big it was for Bryant to embarrass Michael Jordan’s Wizards. Now imagine showing him up in the All-Star game. The two men faced off on opposite sides in 1998 with the stakes huge for Bryant.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Essentially it was the moment we saw what life would be in the NBA after Jordan. Both stars played very well, with Jordan scoring 23 points and taking the MVP award. However, Kobe didn’t let himself down. He put 18 points on the scoreboard. The Mamba was the future.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

21. First Shaq-Less Ring Win

It can’t be overestimated how important O’Neal was to the Lakers fanbase. When he finally left them behind, they suddenly felt exposed and vulnerable. When they lost in 2008 to the Celtics, things escalated. Suddenly, Kobe was under a lot of pressure.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

But he was able to handle it. After the Lakers rounded out the roster in the postseason, they were much stronger the following year. He got the weight off his shoulder in June 2009 when he finally got a ring on his finger without Shaq. Suddenly he was the man.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

20. Youngest to Reach 30,000

Bryant’s longevity was extraordinary. No point guard before him managed to play for as long as he did. As well as that, he maintained very high levels throughout his career. There were very few slumps until he got older. But even when injuries took hold, he was still frighteningly accurate on the court.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

All of this combined to make him break another record. At the age of 34, he became the youngest player in NBA history to score over 30,000 points. The man was quite simply unstoppable. However, LeBron James has since gone on to break that record at the age of 33.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

19. Entering the NBA

Bryant came into the NBA in a highly unusual manner. Most players enter the draft after a year of college. Others build up the experience of a college basketball career and life before putting themselves forward. However, Kobe was never one to follow the pack. He chose to go pro straight after high school.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

This led to a lot of media attention as he was only 17 at the time. He was only the sixth player in NBA history to go down this route. It’s not like he couldn’t have gone to college either. His basketball skills and SAT score of 1080 would have ensured admission to any school he chose.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

18. 18 All-Stars

Many players struggle to make one All-Star team. Bryant has a ridiculous 18. Only one man in history managed to than him. That was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar with 19. Nobody else in the modern era has got close to him. LeBron James is two behind with 16 right now.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Kobe won his first selection in 1998 and then every year from 2000-2016. He also has the second-highest number of consecutive All-Stars behind Jabbar, with 17. Very few players can maintain their fitness, form, and desire for that length of time. He truly was great.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

17. Laker’s Top Scorer

Bryant was the youngest player to reach the 30,000 points, ane he’s got a number of other records. For a long time, he was the second-highest scorer in the NBA, butt LeBron James recently overtook him. However, it doesn’t look like anybody will get close to his Lakers’ record anytime soon.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Since 2010, Kobe has been the Lakers’ all-time top scorer. He overtook Jerry West’s record and finally finished with a career total of 33,643. Longevity was key to this. He also has the joint-most games for one franchise (shared with Dirk Nowitzki). In short, it will take something similar to even get close to it.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

16. Consecutive NBA Finals MVPs

2010 saw the Lakers get revenge over the Celtics. They had lost to them in 2008 and it was time to get that one back. The 2009 season saw Kobe win the NBA Finals MVP award, and he had his eye on the prize again. After a poor game seven where he shot 6-24, Bryant came into the finals with a point to prove.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

He had one weak shooting game in the brutal series but was overall the best player there. Kobe averaged 28.6 points, 8.0 rebounds, 3.9 assists, and 2.1 steals per game. To sum up, he deservedly won his second MVP award and another championship ring.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

15. A Record 12 Threes

There was nothing like a Kobe hot streak. When he was on his game, there was no stopping him. The other team had to concentrate on damage control or things would turn embarrassing. A prime example is from 2003 when he dominated the Seattle Supersonics.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Most people don’t consider Kobe a three-point shooter. However, he still averaged almost four attempts per game. When he played Seattle, he obliterated them with a then-record 12 threes in one game. To sum up, there really wasn’t anything he was bad at.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

14. 2004 Overtime Win

Possibly the single-most dramatic moment from Bryant’s career, this sublime piece of play meant everything to the Lakers in 2004. They were playing the Minnesota Timberwolves in a closely fought clash. With the Pacific Division in the balance, Kobe sealed the win in style.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

He scored two of the greatest shots you’ll ever see. The first went over Ruben Patterson to force overtime. It literally saved the game for the Lakers. Then the second came with just one second left. It was a game-winning three-point basket for a 105-104 victory. Breathtaking.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

13. Four Consecutive 50-Plus Points

The Lakers’ shooting guard produced some outstanding numbers over the course of his time in the NBA. He had a hot streak of 178 points in three games back in 2007. This is still a league record. But over the same period, he posted over 50 points in four consecutive games.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Bryant had scores of 65, 50, 60 and 50 in those matches, which is incredible. Even more ridiculous is how consistent he was over the course of the season. He scored 50 or more points in ten games that year. There truly was nobody else like him back then.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

12. Olympic Gold Medal 2008

The United States national team missed out on gold in 2008 finishing an unprecedented third. By the standards of the US, having by far the greatest league in the world, this was a travesty. In 2008 ‘Team Redeem’ came along and put things right for the stars and stripes. Bryant had to bail his team out.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Kobe had to be at his best against an excellent Spain team. Despite the likes of LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony being on the same team, he stole the show. He scored 13 points in the fourth quarter and 20 overall, with a game-high six assists to help his nation to victory. It was the first of his two gold medals.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

11. First MVP Finals Win

Winning the NBA finals without Shaquille O’Neal was massive for Kobe’s legacy. However, the way he won it must have been better than even he expected. They went to war with the Orlando Magic and Bryant put on a clinic across the series to bring the championship home.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

He averaged 32.4 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 7.4 assists per game. This was more than enough to win the MVP award, the first of Bryant’s career. This was so important for him because it proved he could do it without Shaq by his side. And he would go on and do it again.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

10. The 40-Plus February

Few scorers in history have ever been as prolific as Bryant. He was able to maintain periods of consistency that few other basketball stars can compare with. The NBA legend has the greatest February in history, averaging 40.6 points per game.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

That kind of output is just outrageous. Nobody else has achieved that. He must have only played a couple of games right? No, he achieved at least 40 points in nine consecutive games. The only other man to do that was Michael Jordan back in 1986. A historical month for Bryant.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

9. 61 Points at MSG

Madison Square Garden is one of the most iconic sports arenas in the world. It doesn’t matter if it’s boxing, hockey. or basketball, just playing there once is the stuff of dreams for many athletes. Of course, Bryant took MSG by storm with a showing that’s still record-breaking.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

In 2009, Kobe made history by scoring 61 points, breaking Bernard King’s record for most points scored in the building’s modern era. Carmelo Anthony has since broken that record. However, Kobe still has the accolade of the most points scored by an opponent in MSG.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

8. Game 7 Alley-Oop

One of Bryant’s most iconic plays went down in Game 7 of the 2000 Western Conference Finals. It was a beautiful moment of collaboration between two of the game’s greatest ever athletes. The Lakers were battling Portland with under a minute left on the clock.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

The Lakers were up by four when Bryant dribbled into the lane and lobbed up a high arcing pass. O’Neal was there to meet it and dunked it in with one hand. In short, this iconic alley-oop sealed the game. This was also the start of the Lakers’ domination of the NBA.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

7. 62 Points in Three Quarters

The 81-point game is more famous, but arguably this was even more impressive. Bryant had a devastating game in 2005 against the Dallas Mavericks a month before the Raptors explosion. He scored 62 points on 31 shots in just 32 minutes of gameplay.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

In fact, the Lakers were so good that day that Bryant didn’t even play the final quarter. It could have been a record-breaking performance if he had. Even crazier was the fact that Kobe had scored more points at that stage than the entire Mavericks team. They had just 61 points by the end of the third quarter.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

6. 2010 Win Over Boston

This is the game that sealed Kobe’s championship pedigree. It’s wild to think that at one point people didn’t think he was a winner. However, he got his hands on three titles with O’Neal and then another in 2009. However, arguably his legacy-defining win was in 2010.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

His game seven performance against the Celtics saw him carry his team over the line to victory. He averaged 28.6 points per game over the course of the series as the Lakers slogged their way to another NBA championship. It also saw him earn his second straight NBA Finals MVP award.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

5. Free Throws After Achilles Tear

This Achilles injury was the beginning of the end for Bryant. At 34 years old, it was always going to be a battle to get back to anything near the full extent of his powers. He was playing against the Golden State Warriors when he fell to the ground and grabbed the back of his leg before hobbling to the side of the court.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Despite this, he stayed in the game and two free throws to tie the game at 109. It was a testament to his endurance and resolve because he was willing to battle through injury for the win. All of that even though he suffered one of the worst injuries that can happen to a basketball player.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

4. Winning an Oscar

Of course, Bryant is most famous for what he did on the court. But he stayed busy when he retired. How many NBA stars are also Oscar winners? It just goes to show what a genius Bryant was. In 2018 he won the Oscar for the best short animated film with ‘Dear Basketball,’ alongside his collaborator Glen Keane.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Based on a poem Bryant wrote for The Players’ Tribune, it conveys his love for the game and why he retired. Legendary composer John Williams created the score. It just goes to show what a thoughtful and artistic person Bryant was and it’s fantastic that his legacy lives on in different ways.

Mandatory Credit: Sports Illustrated

3. The Fake Pass

Bryant gained a reputation for his ice-cold demeanor. It’s very rare that he got emotional and lost control. Other NBA players thrive from living on the edge, but that’s not how Kobe was. The prime example of this was when he played against the Orlando Magic’s Matt Barnes and didn’t flinch.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

The pair were sniping at each other all game with Barnes getting increasingly mad. Known for his volatile personality, Barnes was Kobe’s polar opposite. Officials intervened to calm them down. Barnes had one more trick up his sleeve. He picked the ball up and faked a pass into Kobe’s face. Bryant didn’t even blink.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

2. Record 81-Point Game

Only one man has scored more points in a game than Bryant. That was the legendary Walt Chamberlain, who put 100 points on the board. But in the modern era, Bryant is definitely way out in front with this tremendous 81-point effort. It’s almost inconceivable how he did it.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

It happened in 2006 against the Raptors. Bryant scored 26 points in the first half but the Lakers were still down by 14. Nobody could have expected the relentless outburst that was about to come. Kobe scored 27 points in the 3rd quarter and 28 in the 4th. In short, it’s one of the greatest performances of all-time and will be forever.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

1. ‘Mamba Out’

After suffering an Achilles injury, Bryant was never the same again. Especially as he was getting older. He recognized the deterioration of his body and made the decision to retire. But his last game saw him leave him with a bang. In the final match of 2016, he saved his one of his best for last.

Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Bryant scored a fantastic 60 points, his highest total of the season. It was a vintage performance that had the crowd on their feet because they knew greatness when they saw it. He stood in front of the sold-out Staples Center and thanked them from the bottom of his heart. ‘Mamba out,’ he said.

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