Opening night in the NBA. The San Antonio Spurs get their rings and show off their fifth championship banner. The first full season under Commissioner Adam Silver gets underway.
That’s enough reason for buzz.
Kobe Bryant’s return will only add more.
Bryant’s 19th season gets started tonight when the Los Angeles Lakers open at home against the Houston Rockets. What he has left in the tank — after two injury-filled years — might be one of the biggest questions heading into the season, with the Lakers already being widely written off in the loaded Western Conference and Bryant hardly expected to regain the elite form that he displayed for so long.
“The official start of the journey,” said Bryant, who played in just six games last season.
There’s an easy answer to why is he still out there.
Bryant is already wealthy beyond belief, a five-time champion, a lock to be a Hall of Famer, a lock to be in the Top 50 players ever whenever that list gets updated. But he still feels like there’s something for him to prove on the floor; hence, he’s going to do what he’s done for so long: try and lead the Lakers to the playoffs.
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THE CLASS OF ‘96: The 1996 NBA draft class was simply awesome — Bryant, Allen Iverson, Ray Allen, Steve Nash, Stephon Marbury, Antoine Walker,
Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Derek Fisher, Jermaine O’Neal, Peja Stojakovic, Zydrunas Ilgauskas and more. It also serves as a reminder of some of the biggest draft blunders in history. Bryant went No. 13 in that class. Here’s the six players taken immediately before Bryant: Lorenzen Wright, Kerry Kittles, Samaki Walker, Erick Dampier, Todd Fuller and Vitaly Potapenko. Combined, they scored 27,871 points in their careers, which is 3,829 and counting less than Bryant.
BIG APPLE STAR: He’s from Philadelphia and spent his whole career in Los Angeles, but Bryant seemed at his best in New York. His career average at Madison Square Garden is 30.7 points, the highest road-site average of his illustrious career. The Lakers are at New York on Feb. 1

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