Sigma_Orionis wrote:I didn't know who this Bryant character was until his death and his daughter's made news everywhere.
geonuc wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:I didn't know who this Bryant character was until his death and his daughter's made news everywhere.
I don't think American basketball translates internationally quite as well as some other sports. By that I mean other than Michael Jordan, maybe not many stars are well known outside our borders. I don't know.
It's also that, despite the virtual canonization of Bryant as a player that's going on now, he wasn't all THAT good. He wasn't a Michael Jordan by any means and I can name at least four other LA Lakers players who were better or more influential in the sport (Chamberlain, Jabbar, Magic, West). He was the third top all-time scorer (now fourth as Lebron James has recently passed him) but how many people can even name the top two? And how many people that can would consider the number two guy (Karl Malone) one of the all time greats? My point is that scoring records don't necessarily correlate perfectly with greatness. Case in point would be Wilt Chamberlain, who was the dominant scorer of his time or any time, yet most basketball fans would rate his contemporary, Bill Russell, as the better player.
I'm rambling. TLDR: Kobe Bryant wasn't Magic Johnson. That's why you hadn't heard of him.
geonuc wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:I didn't know who this Bryant character was until his death and his daughter's made news everywhere.
I don't think American basketball translates internationally quite as well as some other sports. By that I mean other than Michael Jordan, maybe not many stars are well known outside our borders. I don't know.
It's also that, despite the virtual canonization of Bryant as a player that's going on now, he wasn't all THAT good. He wasn't a Michael Jordan by any means and I can name at least four other LA Lakers players who were better or more influential in the sport (Chamberlain, Jabbar, Magic, West). He was the third top all-time scorer (now fourth as Lebron James has recently passed him) but how many people can even name the top two? And how many people that can would consider the number two guy (Karl Malone) one of the all time greats? My point is that scoring records don't necessarily correlate perfectly with greatness. Case in point would be Wilt Chamberlain, who was the dominant scorer of his time or any time, yet most basketball fans would rate his contemporary, Bill Russell, as the better player.
I'm rambling. TLDR: Kobe Bryant wasn't Magic Johnson. That's why you hadn't heard of him.
Rommie wrote:It seriously depends on the country, and there are a few exceptions (Latin America gets into baseball for example too), but honestly in my experience the NBA is the best known of all the American pro sports abroad. Especially in Asia- people loved the NBA and ask you a ton of questions about it even if they only knew ten words in English, and freak out in excitement when I said I lived in Cleveland and had seen LeBron play. And the NBA wasn't on such pins and needles about players tweeting about Hong Kong protests due to a lack of interest.
But yeah I'm sure that audience knows Yao Ming a lot more than Kobe.
Rommie wrote:People are really saying that? What on Earth would the NBA do then when Michael Jordan dies?
I did notice the Oscars retrospective of people who died began with a picture of him. I guess he was probably in some Space Jam movie I'm unaware of, but still seemed random.
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