Sports

Nets loss, Lakers gain: Draft dodges kept Kobe from New Jersey in ‘96

First of two parts.

Kobe Bryant’s annual Garden variety visit tonight triggered me to re-examine the draft of 1996. Many people have gone straight from high school to Hollywood and become overnight sensations … after countless years of dejection and rejection. Bryant actually morphed into a Lakers legend almost on cue.

Jerry West was not the sole Lakers executive who recognized his potential greatness, but he was the only one prepared to risk his reputation on a 17-year-old (now 33). All it took were two workouts — one, really, the second. Defensive demon Michael Cooper had just retired and Bryant “kicked his fanny and didn’t want to stop,” West recounted yesterday. “He wanted more. That’s how competitive he was even then.

“I said ‘the hell with this’. Drafting kids at that time was not in vogue [Timberwolves general manager Kevin McHale had taken a plunge on Kevin Garnett at No. 5 in 1995]. Teams wanted a name, someone who can’t miss, but I knew then and there Kobe was a player for the ages.”

So, West futilely offered Vlade Divac to a dozen teams. The Cavaliers owned the No. 12 slot. Cleveland GM Wayne Embry passed on the chance to snatch Bryant or get Los Angeles’ starting center for the privilege of picking muscle man Vitaly Potapenko (Ukraine/Wright State).

Embry still tells West all the time, “Can you believe I took Vitaly Potapenko!”

Finally, the Hornets agreed to select Bryant at No. 13 and exchange him for the Lakers’ starting center; the official announcement didn’t take place until two weeks later in early July when a bigger salary cap allowed L.A. to maneuver and sign free agent Shaquille O’Neal.

“There was nothing wrong with Divac as many teams thought,” West said. “It was a case of everything being right about Kobe. He had a burning desire to do something only the great ones do. There’s something internally that drives and motivates them and he had that locked-in-look.

“What I admire most about him is how tough he is, how he’ll play through things that others won’t or can’t. That tells you what he really is. Fans don’t get cheated when they pay to see him play, that’s for damn sure!”

Bryant used to work out at the Sporting Club in Philadelphia, the summer before his senior year of high school. Some of the area’s NBA guys — Jerry Stackhouse, Doug Overton, Tim Legler, Ricky Mahorn, etc. — played against him every day.

John Nash was Washington GM at the time. He didn’t witness the workouts, but checked with some of those guys and was told Bryant was excelling in that setting.

“I called John Lucas one day and inquired as to how Stackhouse looked,” Nash recalled. “The 76ers took him with the third pick earlier that summer. [Lucas] replied, ‘He was the second best shooting guard in the gym.’ When I asked him who was best, he said, ‘Kobe.’”

Supposedly, the first time Stackhouse played against Bryant, he asked him where he went to school. Bryant answered, “Lower Merion.” The UNC star, who didn’t return an email request to comment about their battles, allegedly asked, “Is that Division II or Division III?”

During Bryant’s senior year, Nash scouted Kerry Kittles at Villanova practices and then watched Kobe play about five miles away. At the end of the season, Nash was let go by Washington, but then hired by John Calipari, who had just joined the Nets as coach and president.

“I started there about two weeks before the ’96 draft and Kobe had already worked out for them twice,” Nash said. “I was delighted to learn Calipari really liked him. I echoed John’s feelings and we arranged to bring him in a third time, which sealed the deal.”

The draft that year was at the Meadowlands, and on the night before, Nash and Calipari had dinner with Joe and Pam Bryant.

“John asked Joe what he expected for his son,” Nash said. “He said he thought Kobe would start as a rookie and be an All Star in his second season.”

Bryant, who supplanted O’Neal earlier this week as the fifth highest scorer in NBA history, started by the end of his rookie year (7.6 points, 41.7 field goal percentage) and made the All-Star team the next year when he more or less doubled his minutes (2,000) and scoring average (15.4).

“We went to bed that night determined to select Kobe with the eighth pick,” Nash said.

The next day, Calipari and Nash had lunch with Nets owner Joe Taub. He expressed concern about taking a high school kid.

“In John’s defense,” Nash noted, “Garnett had been the only high school player taken in almost 20 years and he had a modest rookie season (80 games, averaged 10.4 and 6.3 rebounds).

“Nevertheless, we arrived back at the office around 2 p.m. still planning to select Kobe,” Nash said. “Calipari had final say and although Joe Taub had been instrumental in bringing John to New Jersey, Kobe was still the choice. That’s when the spit hit the fan.

“Kobe’s representative called me. Even though Arn Tellem had been excited to know we were going to select his client, he now claimed Kobe did not want to be in Jersey and might not sign. I knew he was bluffing about signing. He had already renounced his collegiate eligibility by hiring an agent and Europe was no longer paying big money.

“At the same time, Kobe placed a call to Calipari and basically said the same thing,” Nash continued. “Why the sudden change of heart? I told John I believed someone behind us was angling to get Kobe. West previously offered us Vlade for No. 8. In the meantime, David Falk, who represented Kittles, had become aware of the situation and he called Calipari and pressured him to select his client.

“Calipari was concerned Falk would hold a grudge if we passed over Kittles. By 6 p.m., I had learned a deal had been arranged between L.A. and Charlotte involving Vlade and Kobe. I still lobbied hard to stay the course, but the combination of Joe Taub, Kobe, Falk and Tellem had worn away Calipari’s resolve. It was a tough spot for a rookie coach and top decision maker.”

At the owners’ dinner, just minutes away from the draft, Calipari announced Kittles would be the choice if he was still on the board. If not, it would be Bryant. Nash knew it was over.

The first seven positions already were padlocked in place: Allen Iverson (76ers; GM Brad Greenberg), Marcus Camby (Raptors; Isiah Thomas), Shareef Abdur-Rahim (Grizzlies; Stu Jackson), Stephon Marbury (Bucks; Ernie Grunfeld), Ray Allen (Timberwolves; McHale), Antoine Walker (Celtics; Rick Pitino), Lorenzen Wright (Clippers; Elgin Baylor).

Still, “What a deflating day!” he lamented 16 years later.

Sunday: How more teams dodged and dissed Kobe.