http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/stor...ant-passing-key-los-angeles-lakers-hot-streak
After averaging 4.7 assists for the season, Kobe Bryant dished 39 assists in three wins -- 14, 14 and 11. In those games, Bryant registered only 34 field goal attempts, this from a player who has attempted 20 or more field goals (up to a high of 41 FGAs in an OT win) in 28 games this season. Bryant now joins point guards Chris Paul, Rajon Rondo and Greivis Vasquez as the only players this season to record at least 11 assists in three straight games.
This metamorphosis speaks to Bryant's mastery of the game. Despite enjoying one of his most efficient shooting seasons (his .574 true shooting percentage sits just below his career-high of .580 in 2006-07), Bryant decided to involve his teammates more on offense and look to feed open shooters.
So, is this good for the Lakers?
At first glance, the evidence seems clear. The Lakers are just 1-13 when Bryant tallies three assists or fewer but 6-1 when he drops eight or more dimes. Score one for Bryant the facilitator! Furthermore, the Lakers are just 5-20 when Bryant fires up at least 22 field goal attempts, but 9-1 when he limits himself to 15 or fewer.
That suggests Kobe is shooting the Lakers out of games, but it's not quite that simple.
In fact, the evidence points in another direction: Kobe is trying to shoot the Lakers back into games.
We haven't seen Bryant the ruthless scorer in the last few games, and it probably has something to do with the fact that the Lakers haven't needed to rally from big deficits.
Check out these numbers from the NBA StatsCube database and you'll see the Kobe we've come to know. When the Lakers are behind, Kobe has 30.6 points and 4.0 assists, with 22.1 field goal attempts and 8.4 free throw attempts per 36 minutes. (In NBA analysis, we often use 36 minutes because that's about the standard number of minutes per game for stars.)
But when the Lakers are ahead, Bryant's gunning instincts appear to dissipate: He puts up 22.3 points and 5.8 assists with "just" 17.4 FGAs and 5.8 FTAs per 36 minutes. That's a scoring difference of 8.3 points per 36.
This is not normal, even for big-time scorers. Rather, Kobe has the widest discrepancy among the NBA's top 25 scorers -- nearly triple the average uptick by those top scorers.
Kobe Bryant's scoring numbers
Score margin Mins PTS/36 AST/36 FGA/36 FTA/36 USG% TS% eFG%
Lakers behind 933 30.6 4.0 22.1 8.4 33.8% 59.2% 53.0%
Lakers ahead 701 22.3 5.8 17.4 5.8 29.6% 56.2% 50.6%
The bigger the deficit, the more Bryant increases his scoring numbers. When the Lakers trail by double digits, Bryant scores 32.9 points per 36 minutes, which would easily surpass the best scoring average of his career if it held for a full season. Contrast that to his 22.3-point scoring average per 36 when the Lakers are ahead.
But that 1-13 record when Bryant tallies three assists or fewer still means something, right? I mean, one win in 14 games!
After averaging 4.7 assists for the season, Kobe Bryant dished 39 assists in three wins -- 14, 14 and 11. In those games, Bryant registered only 34 field goal attempts, this from a player who has attempted 20 or more field goals (up to a high of 41 FGAs in an OT win) in 28 games this season. Bryant now joins point guards Chris Paul, Rajon Rondo and Greivis Vasquez as the only players this season to record at least 11 assists in three straight games.
This metamorphosis speaks to Bryant's mastery of the game. Despite enjoying one of his most efficient shooting seasons (his .574 true shooting percentage sits just below his career-high of .580 in 2006-07), Bryant decided to involve his teammates more on offense and look to feed open shooters.
So, is this good for the Lakers?
At first glance, the evidence seems clear. The Lakers are just 1-13 when Bryant tallies three assists or fewer but 6-1 when he drops eight or more dimes. Score one for Bryant the facilitator! Furthermore, the Lakers are just 5-20 when Bryant fires up at least 22 field goal attempts, but 9-1 when he limits himself to 15 or fewer.
That suggests Kobe is shooting the Lakers out of games, but it's not quite that simple.
In fact, the evidence points in another direction: Kobe is trying to shoot the Lakers back into games.
We haven't seen Bryant the ruthless scorer in the last few games, and it probably has something to do with the fact that the Lakers haven't needed to rally from big deficits.
Check out these numbers from the NBA StatsCube database and you'll see the Kobe we've come to know. When the Lakers are behind, Kobe has 30.6 points and 4.0 assists, with 22.1 field goal attempts and 8.4 free throw attempts per 36 minutes. (In NBA analysis, we often use 36 minutes because that's about the standard number of minutes per game for stars.)
But when the Lakers are ahead, Bryant's gunning instincts appear to dissipate: He puts up 22.3 points and 5.8 assists with "just" 17.4 FGAs and 5.8 FTAs per 36 minutes. That's a scoring difference of 8.3 points per 36.
This is not normal, even for big-time scorers. Rather, Kobe has the widest discrepancy among the NBA's top 25 scorers -- nearly triple the average uptick by those top scorers.
Kobe Bryant's scoring numbers
Score margin Mins PTS/36 AST/36 FGA/36 FTA/36 USG% TS% eFG%
Lakers behind 933 30.6 4.0 22.1 8.4 33.8% 59.2% 53.0%
Lakers ahead 701 22.3 5.8 17.4 5.8 29.6% 56.2% 50.6%
The bigger the deficit, the more Bryant increases his scoring numbers. When the Lakers trail by double digits, Bryant scores 32.9 points per 36 minutes, which would easily surpass the best scoring average of his career if it held for a full season. Contrast that to his 22.3-point scoring average per 36 when the Lakers are ahead.
But that 1-13 record when Bryant tallies three assists or fewer still means something, right? I mean, one win in 14 games!


