Mamba

The sports world is reeling after the death of Kobe Bryant in a Los Angeles-area helicopter crash Sunday morning. It is no surprise that this calamity has sparked intense media attention and over-the-top praise for Bryant, who lived just 41 years. I will praise him too, but in an even-handed way.

First, the accident. The former LA Lakers star was with his 13-year-old daughter Gianna, six other passengers and pilot Ara Zobayan; they were going to a basketball game in which the girl would be playing and Bryant coaching. The helo, Bryant’s Sikorsky S-76B, left John Wayne Airport at 9:06 a.m. Since the Federal Aviation Administration’s and National Transportation Safety Board’s investigations are far from complete, we will have to await definitive answers as to just Kobe Bryant crash sitewhat happened. But it is certain that flying conditions were not ideal. There was dense fog, causing many other flights to be canceled or delayed. Who, I would like to know, made the fateful decision to take off? Did any of those nine now-deceased persons hesitate? (The other six, whose lives are no less important than Bryant’s, were John Altobelli, his wife Keri and their daughter Alyssa; Christina Mauser; and Sarah Chester and her daughter Payton. Alyssa and Payton were teammates of Gianna’s.) The children aside, how many of them had qualms about climbing aboard and embarking on the flight? For that matter, one or more of the kids may have expressed some degree of trepidation.

These are sensitive matters, but I can easily imagine a strained conversation between Bryant and Zobayan. A licensed commercial pilot since 2007 and one with a spotless record, he had presumably flown in a variety of weather conditions. Piloting a helicopter requires intelligence, skill and confidence. An equally important quality, however, is discretion. There are times when it is best to stay on the ground. The group could have taken a limousine, but Bryant much preferred this cool, sexy and quick mode of transportation rather than sitting in clogged LA streets and highways. He was a famous and wealthy superstar, don’t ya know? Zobayan Kobe Bryant dunkingundoubtedly told Bryant that visibility would be poor up in the foggy sky. He realized the Los Angeles Police Department had called it a no-fly day, grounding all its aircraft, as had a local helicopter charter service. My guess is that Bryant insisted, Zobayan reluctantly complied and the others trusted that he would get them there safely. Zobayan talked to flight controllers and said he was activating “special visual flight rules,” which meant he would need their help.

The pilot got them north to Glendale and circled for 12 minutes before turning west and hopefully the destination of Thousand Oaks. There was a rapid climb, followed by an even faster descent, indicating that Zobayan was disoriented. Shortly after 9:45 a.m., in what must have been a very fearful cabin, the helicopter crashed into a hillside in Calabasas at 184 miles per hour. With debris scattered over an area the size of a football field, a brush fire was ignited. I want to avoid stating the obvious, but it is a tragedy that should not have happened. They might have expediently canceled the game, delayed it or even arrived late. Would it have been shameful for Bryant to admit that he was not the master of the universe and that those nine lives were much too valuable to risk?

The son of Joe “Jellybean” Bryant, a journeyman with the Philadelphia 76ers, San Diego Clippers and Houston Rockets, he was born in Philly but spent much of his youth in Italy—where the old man played out the string with a number of Italian pro clubs. A wunderkind Kobe Bryant in high schoolon the basketball court, he was back in the USA for high school. This 6′ 6″ guard never set foot on a college campus. Chosen by the Charlotte Hornets with the 13th pick in the 1996 NBA draft, his rights were traded immediately to the Lakers. Bryant came off the bench his first two years and was a luminous star by 1999. Smooth, explosive, sure-handed and fervent on defense, he drew inevitable comparisons to Michael Jordan.

Bryant scored 33,643 points and had 7,047 rebounds and 6,306 assists over the course of his 20-year career. Jerry West called him the greatest player in franchise history, and West was no slouch himself. Magic Johnson concurred. With Shaquille O’Neal in the paint and Bryant in the backcourt, the Lakers won titles in 2000, 2001 and 2002, but a petulant personality conflict caused O’Neal to demand a trade to the Miami Heat. Both were on Kobe Bryant exulting at Staples Centerwinners separately, but that tandem should have endured longer with them hoisting more big, shiny trophies; Bryant ended up with five, O’Neal with four.

Most of the Bryant obituaries I have seen in the last few days include a reference to his having been charged with sexually assaulting a 19-year-old European-American woman named Katelyn Faber who worked at a Colorado resort. Let’s not go into the ugly details, but it will suffice to say that in the end she refused to testify after pressure/threats/coercion from his attorneys and zealous fans. Had he been found guilty, Bryant might have been sentenced to four years in the pen. A civil suit was settled out of court with Bryant paying an undisclosed sum and apologizing—yet refusing to admit that he had done anything wrong. His statement contained artful language, something about him thinking the encounter was consensual, but he could see how maybe she did not. As a marital peace offering of sorts, Bryant bought his wife Vanessa an 8-carat purple diamond ring worth about $4 million.

(One more thing about him forcing his masculine charms on Ms. Faber. I doubt I would be engaging in wild speculation if I said it was probably not a one-off matter. That is, Bryant most likely did this or something like it again and again. He was stunned to find that she was willing to take it to the authorities.)

He lost a couple of endorsement deals after that mortifying episode, but Nike kept him on and his career suffered minimal impact. Bryant soon made two notable changes. First, he got some bad-boy, street-cred tats. They started with one on his right bicep displaying the name of Vanessa—the woman on whom he had so publicly cheated. That was followed by one for each of his four daughters, some Biblical verses and a number of abstract designs. Second, he gave himself the nickname/alter ego of “Black Mamba” or just “Mamba.” Although I was initially as skeptical about this as I was about the ink adorning his arms, legs and torso, I actually came to like it. It fcover of Kobe Bryant's bookit Bryant, the uber-talented, -focused and -driven athlete. He later said in an interview with Ahmad Rashad, “When I step on that court, I become that. I am that killer snake. I’m stone cold, man.” He wrote a book entitled The Mamba Mentality: How I Play, although in truth it was mostly a collection of self-glorifying photos.

Bryant reached his peak as a scorer in the 2006 and 2007 seasons, “dropping” (as young sports writers like to say) 35.4 and 31.6 points per game, respectively. He was on gold−medal winning teams in the 2008 and 2012 Olympics. But wrist, ankle, shoulder, back, knee and Achilles injuries took a cumulative toll. He played just six games in 2014, and some people began to call him over the hill. Mamba quit before he had to? No way. The Lakers gave him a $48 million, two-year contract extension, and I remember well how his game steadily declined—very much like what happened with Jordan at the end when he was with the Washington Wizards. Bryant could not or would not accept the fact that he was no longer the athlete he had been. He was not as adept at skying to the hoop, and he had trouble creating shots (he had been among the best ever at that) because he did not have the zip or lift of his younger years. If a game was close at the end, the ball had to be in Bryant’s hands and he was not going to pass. He made 37% and 36% of his shots his final two seasons, and LA had woeful records of 21-61 and 17-65. Yes, he scored 60 points in his final game, against the Utah Jazz on April 13, 2016. But good grief, he took 50 shots (including 21 from behind the line)! The man, who still holds the NBA record for missed shots, 14,481, had no shame.

In a 2018 TV talk-show interview, Bryant joked that he could not live in Los Angeles without “the Mamba chopper.” The untimely death of a sports legend is something to lament, and Bryant has been honored in ways both touching and mawkish. Several NBA teams agreed to start their next game with a pair of intentional 24-second violations—24, of course, being Bryant’s number in purple and gold. Condolences have come from President Donald Trump and his predecessor, Barack Obama. Soccer stars in France have chimed in, not to mention those in pro football, baseball, golf and tennis.

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18 Comments

  • Gary Scoggins Posted January 29, 2020 12:06 am

    This tragedy sounds a lot like the story behind the death of John Kennedy, Jr.s when his plane crashed. Bad weather day, stay on the ground. Your imagined conversation/argument between Bryant and the pilot must be very close to the truth. I’m sure that pilot’s experience told him the outcome was statistically going to be bad. I can’t imagine flying at 184 mph in those conditions of poor visibility and mountains. Bad combo. I agree with your assessment, his judgement was impaired. RIP Kobe.

    • Richard Posted January 29, 2020 9:43 am

      I was thinking about JFK Jr., too. Main difference is that he was the pilot and had little experience. Zobayan was no beginner. Too bad he couldn’t have just told Bryant, “we ain’t going up today.” Yes, he might have lost his gig as Bryant’s helo pilot, but he lost something far more important on Sunday morning.

  • Jana Posted January 29, 2020 2:57 pm

    I think your take on the situation is probably very close to the truth. The pilot
    Should have the final say, even though he is, possibly an employee, of Bryant. Bryant would not have accepted the advice of the pilot as to how he was to play his game that night (if Bryant was still playing) or how his daughter should play her game that day.
    Very Very sad situation. What a waste of 9 special people!!

    • Richard Posted January 29, 2020 3:46 pm

      Jana–thanks for your comment. I was admittedly speculating about the conversation(s) between Bryant and the pilot. But it seems far more likely that Bryant was saying “let’s fly” and not the pilot. You make a very good point–Bryant was telling an expert how to do his job, and the consequences were fatal. I can see Bryant telling him, “if you want to keep this job, let’s fly.”

  • Rex Lardner Posted January 30, 2020 2:34 am

    Richard:

    Great article with good research. I’m convinced Kobe insisted that they take off regardless of the weather. I admired him, though. He was the most competitive athlete I’ve ever seen and I always made a point to watch a Lakers game when they were on TV.

    Nice work!

    Rex

    • Richard Posted January 30, 2020 8:14 am

      I fully agree, Rex. It had to be Bryant who insisted on going up.

  • Kenneth Hausmann Posted January 30, 2020 6:15 am

    Great article. I might disagree on 2 points. First, Kobe was a devout Catholic and although he did stray, I am not sure if that was a common thing. I know NBA players have that rep, but nobody else ever came forward. Secondly, I am a pilot, and I am also instrument rated and seaplane rated, and I have owned 2 aircraft. I can’t imagine anyone ever talking me into taking a chance on the flight if I didn’t feel it was safe. It is a sacred duty of the pilot to protect his passengers. This is different of course in the Kennedy crash, as he was just going out with family. I think they will find that he became spatially disoriented and thought he was higher than he was. He was travelling at a high speed in bad conditions and at a lot altitude. All landings are crashes, it just depends on the angle and the speed. Most accidents aren’t due to a catastrophic event. They are the result of bad decision after bad decision, kind of a flowchart where the final move can only end in disaster. I enjoyed your article though.

    • Richard Posted January 30, 2020 8:20 am

      Thanks, Kenny. I never heard anything about Bryant being Catholic, fervent or not. And what he did to that young European-American woman was not unusual. He and O’Neal used to make locker-room jokes about how they liked to abuse and humiliate women they met as pro basketball stars. I suggest you read some of Bryant’s own words in the depositions he gave in Colorado. They show a truly despicable person. He said he liked choking and strangling, which explains why she was so bruised after their encounter. There were other things I would rather not speak of.

  • Kevin Nietmann Posted February 1, 2020 7:35 am

    It’s a tragedy of the first order when a group of young people die in an obviously preventable accident. I expect the findings when the investigation is complete will prove once again that there are old pilots and bold pilots, but no old, bold pilots and that the pilot should have kept his helo on the ground that day.

    • Richard Posted February 1, 2020 8:22 am

      Well said, Kevin. Meanwhile, the effort to honor and praise and sanctify Kobe Bryant goes on.

  • Bob Gibbons Posted February 7, 2020 5:43 am

    RIchard- As usual, you have done admirable research about Kobe Bryant, his accomplishments and his shortcomings. I suppose we could assume that the pilot was following the will of the athlete, but that is pure speculation and cannot be verified. Regarding the rape accusations in Colorado, I have not heard anyone opine on why charges were never filed in court.
    The day of the tragedy, I heard an interesting interview with a female reporter on ESPN. She noted that until the Colorado incident, Kobe refused to talk to her because he was not pleased with what she wrote about him. That incident seemed to humble him and serve as a “wake-up call” and he was extremely cooperative afterwards.
    I can verify what Kenny H said about his faith. Above reporter mentioned that the morning after he retired following a long night out, he got up early and attended Mass to express his gratitude and the morning of the tragedy, he had gone to Church with his daughter. As a retired Spanish teacher whose life has been enriched by my relationships with Spanish speakers, I was impressed by an interview Kobe did with Univision one week before his death in which he showed a good command of Spanish. He noted that his main motivation was a desire to know his Mexican in-laws better.

    • Richard Posted February 7, 2020 9:33 am

      Bob, there is as yet no way of knowing who made the decision to fly. Maybe the pilot, maybe Bryant, maybe there was no hesitation at all but I find that unlikely. And as for his encounter with the European-American lady in Colorado, it is problematic in many ways. She had several sex partners, she liked cocaine, she was emotionally unstable, and she chose to enter his hotel room. My reading of the situation is that a mutually consensual thing became much less so when he got rough with her. Bryant had Mexican in-laws?

  • Josef Posted June 8, 2020 10:52 am

    In the beginning I thought Kobe was super arrogant, and I can see why his some of his teammates hated him. I would have hated him if I were Shaq. Being outworked by some rookie who played like he was invincible and worked so everyday and made you look bad. I think a Kobe realized he wasn’t invincible when the rape allegations came out. He learned onemistakes could destroy everything you’ve worked for. One mistake could bring down your whole world. He turned into humble player and became an even better player and person. Although, I don’t believe Kobe is rapist, he definitely did sleep with her and he did lie about it a first. In the end Kobe did become a humble and hardworking person. RIP to Kobe Bryant. His story has inspired me to worker harder in school and work. We need to realize no one is perfect. We’re all going to make mistakes and bad decisions. Were going to make mistakes that are going to follow us to our grave. Mistakes that others will never forget. Your mistakes don’t define you, they help shape who you become. Kobe wasn’t perfect or invincible. Kobe was just like us, but he had a passion and a purpose, and that’s how he changed the world. That’s how he become the best Laker ever and one of the greatest players to ever play the game. Remember, your mistakes don’t define you, they help shape who you become. Thank you Kobe for everything. REST IN PEACE MAMBA🐐

    • Richard Posted June 8, 2020 5:20 pm

      Interesting points about him and Shaq…. I agree.

  • Izzy Rachman Posted June 8, 2020 10:55 am

    Immediately reading this after hearing the news of Kobe Bryant killed in a helicopter accident, along with his daughter and 7 others in there. Your article interesting, educational and well written. Thank you for your time and effort to write out the article. I really enjoyed it. Rest In Peace – Kobe Bryant (1978 – 2020)

    • Richard Posted June 8, 2020 5:18 pm

      Izzy, thanks for your comment. I very much appreciate it.

  • Moussa Posted June 8, 2020 11:02 am

    The thing with kobe now his passed is that great athletes and big personalities from all around the world talking about a friend not just a great player or a good man. He was something beyond basketball within 25 years of pro career he succeed not just in basketball but making the world happy and positive and his legacy it’s not his rings or his mvp awards. His legacy is making the people that his was or wasn’t close happy and inspire them how to be with a smile in their face that’s what kobe is an amazing player but his just not great person that’s not a word to describe it he is a wonderful man. Btw, Your writings always teaches to me, more than your descriptions!

    • Richard Posted June 8, 2020 5:18 pm

      Thanks so much…I love having readers like you.

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