Shaq & Kobe Feuding Again

Looks like the Lakers may be unravelling already. Shaq wasn’t too happy with Kobe’s play the other day and let it be known:

O’Neal and Bryant seemed to be interacting comfortably Sunday on the practice floor, sharing the ball freely during an afternoon workout. Then they traded nasty verbal jabs after the session — arguably their harshest comments since L.A.’s second championship season — all stemming from O’Neal’s suggestion Friday night in Las Vegas that Bryant “should probably look to be more of a passer until he gets his legs strong.”

Bryant, recovering from offseason knee and shoulder surgeries, didn’t welcome the suggestion, saying: “I definitely don’t need advice on how to play my game.”

Not even advice from O’Neal?

“Definitely not,” Bryant continued. “I know how to play my guard spot. He can worry about the low post, and I’ll worry about the [perimeter].”

When apprised of Bryant’s reaction, O’Neal lashed out harder.

“As we start this new season, we want [expletive] done right,” Shaq said. “If you don’t like it, then you can opt out next year. As long as it’s my team, then I’ll voice my opinion. If you don’t like it, then opt out.”

That was a reference to Bryant’s plan to exercise an option in his contract at season’s end and test the free-agent market next summer, a stance Bryant has said he won’t change in the wake of his felony sexual assault charge in Colorado.

Asked to clarify his “my team” remark, O’Neal added: “Everybody knows that. You [media] guys may give it to [Bryant] like you’ve given him everything else his whole lifetime, but this is the Diesel’s ship. So … if you ain’t right [physically], don’t be trying to go out there and get right on our expense. Use the people out there, then when you get right you [can] do what you do.”

Throughout this first month back to work, however, there have been thinly veiled hints from O’Neal that problems have resurfaced, starting from the veterans’ first day of training camp in Hawaii. Bryant did not fly on the Lakers’ team charter and reported to camp a day late. O’Neal said at the time that “the full team is here,” leading some to speculate that he preferred to play this season without the distractions attached to Bryant’s court case.

Days later, explaining why he was sitting out an exhibition game with a sore left heel, O’Neal said: “I want to be right [in the regular season] for Derek, Karl and Gary.” He was referring to Derek Fisher and new teammates Karl Malone and Gary Payton — and O’Neal ommitted Bryant’s name from the conversation more than once.

Malone and Payton, by contrast, have publicly supported Bryant as strongly as anyone in Lakers circles. But even Payton has urged Bryant to ease his way back into the team flow, after Bryant fatigued quickly and shot poorly in the second half of the Lakers’ final two exhibition games.

Said O’Neal: “Just ask Karl and Gary why they came here. One person, not two. One. Period. … I’m not telling [Bryant] how to play his position. I’m telling him how to play team ball.”

D’oh! Trouble in paradise.

I was real surprised the other day to hear Kobe say he was still going to exercise his option. I think he’s in a bit of denial. His stock is not nearly as high as it once was. I think he’d be better off sticking with the Lakers for a couple more years. Anyway, this sure adds a lot more drama to the Laker’s season.

3 comments

  1. I think everybody needs to stop getting on shaq and kobe back. Kobe needs to face the fact that the lakers is shaq’s team. kobe dont need to become an free agent. I think phil needs to step up and settle the score between shaq and kobe

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