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Kobe Bean Bryant (/ ˈ k oʊ b i / KOH-bee; August 23, 1978 – January 26, 2020) was an American professional basketball player. A shooting guard, he spent his entire 20-year career with the Los Angeles Lakers in the National Basketball Association (NBA).
In 2006, Bryant scored a career-high 81 points against the Toronto Raptors, the second-highest number of points scored in a game in NBA history, [5] [6] behind only Wilt Chamberlain's 100 point performance, and highest output for a guard, as well as being the most points scored by an individual during a televised performance.
Led Lakers from an 18-point deficit. Bryant was in the middle of a free throw scoring streak which came to an end at 62. Scored 28 of the Lakers' 31 points in the fourth quarter. Scored 19 consecutive Laker points between the end of the first half and the middle of the third quarter. C 3 OT; set a then-record for points in a game. Most points ...
Kobe's monster performance remains one of the milestone days in modern NBA history. We take a look at some of the prominent personnel from that night.
Kobe Bryant was named All-Star Game MVP four times and had the award named after him posthumously in 2020. LeBron James holds the record for the most All-Star selections of all-time with 20. Jayson Tatum set the record for the most points scored in an All-Star Game in 2023 , scoring 55.
Vanessa Bryant, the mother of four daughters with her late husband Kobe Bryant, is a proud mom. Vanessa Bryant joined her daughters Capri, Natalia, and Bianka at a Los Angeles Dodgers game on Aug ...
Then his eyes lit up, referencing a clip of Bryant in the 2009 NBA Finals when the Lakers were up 2-0 on the Orlando Magic, but Bryant was stone-faced in the postgame news conference.
Kobe Bryant * SG: Los Angeles Lakers (1996–2016) 8,378 10,011 .837 6.22 5 James Harden ^ SG/PG: Oklahoma City Thunder (2009–2012) Houston Rockets (2012–2021) Brooklyn Nets (2021–2022) Philadelphia 76ers (2022–2023) Los Angeles Clippers (2023–present) 7,864 9,130 .861 7.13 6 Oscar Robertson * PG Cincinnati Royals (1960–1970 ...