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Kobe the constant in the ever-changing West

With 52 points, Lakers star shows again why he's the NBA's best player

OPINION
By Michael Ventre
NBCSports.com contributor
updated 11:08 p.m. ET March 2, 2008

Michael Ventre
LOS ANGELES - If the NBA’s trade deadline had been extended one more week, there would have been a good chance that every team in the Western Conference would have added a superstar. The acquisition of a high-salaried, marquee difference-maker became somewhat of a fad, like pet rocks and hula hoops.

When the Lakers purloined Pau Gasol from the Memphis Grizzlies, it caused just about every Western Conference general manager to exhaust his wireless minutes for the entire month in the span of a few days in an effort to keep up. Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, no doubt has a couple of cells and a Blackberry, because it took extra capacity to complete a convoluted deal to bring in Jason Kidd.

It’s early yet. That trade only went down on Feb. 19, and Kidd has only recently begun to feel comfortable in his new team’s high tops. But on Sunday in a network-televised imbroglio, Kobe Bryant reminded everyone that he still exists, that he hasn’t moved and that his team is on the move.

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The Lakers defeated the Mavericks, 108-104, in overtime, and Bryant had the kind of game that will reverberate far beyond this one of 82. He poured in 52 points, 11 rebounds and four assists, and he was there down the stretch with key free throws and clutch rebounds.

“He likes to have fun, he likes to compete and he likes to take on a challenge,” Gasol said afterward.

In this case, Bryant faced the Mavs for the first time this season with Kidd. The first time Kidd donned a Dallas uniform was in the fall of 1994, and he was there until December of ’96 before being traded to Phoenix; Bryant then was only two months into his rookie season when Kidd was traded away the first time and was only averaging about 16 minutes and eight points a game.

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How the mighty have risen. On Sunday, Bryant played a game-high 51 minutes and led everybody in scoring. He also was on a rampage to the hoop, which resulted in 27 free-throw attempts; no one else had more than eight.

“He kinda took over,” Gasol explained.

Ya think?

Kidd, for his part, may have lost the clash-of-the-titans game within the game, but he seems like he’s growing into his new surroundings. Last week he absorbed some minor public humiliation by being benched for the final 34 seconds of what eventually became a three-point loss to the Spurs because he wasn’t looking for his shot. He appears to have gotten the message, although he didn’t suddenly turn into a post-Shaq, pre-Gasol Kobe.

On Sunday, Kidd scored 15 points on 6-of-17 shooting, with 11 assists, six rebounds and four steals. He was almost the Jason Kidd the Mavs hoped he would be, although they surely will hope for even more in the coming weeks.

“He’s tough-minded,” Dallas coach Avery Johnson said of his new point guard. “He’s becoming a better teammate and a better leader.

“We’re finding out more and more about Kidd. We’re finding out more and more about our team as we go forward.”

It would be silly to suggest that the Mavericks – now 4-3 since the deal that brought Kidd to Texas and sent Devin Harris to New Jersey – are ensconced as a second-tier Western Conference club because they failed to foil the Lakers on Sunday and are currently seventh in the West, percentage points behind sixth-place Houston.

But it’s clear they’re a work in progress with some holes, notably a lack of depth on the front line. When they sent DeSagana Diop to Jersey along with Harris, they put an extra burden on center Erick Dampier. When he fouled out with 1:19 left in regulation, the Mavs found themselves struggling to cope with the Lakers’ inside assault.

Lakers point guard Jordan Farmar didn’t exactly question the Kidd trade, but his remarks about the Mavs after Sunday’s clash – and those about the Lakers and Gasol -- were interesting when it comes to making an assessment of those two big deals.

“Pau Gasol opens up a lot of stuff for a lot of us,” he said. “When he’s on his game they have to double him, and he’s a great passer.

“I liked Devin Harris. I thought he was developing really well.” Then he added diplomatically: “Jason Kidd gets the ball to guys who need it. He’s tough. So it definitely helps them.”

History will show that Dirk Nowitzki hit a huge three-pointer at the end of regulation Sunday, tying the game and sending it into overtime. The Mavs’ leading scorer and reigning MVP took some hits for not showing up last year in the playoff series against Golden State, so it’s only right to laud the man when he nails one.

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Yet he also missed another three-pointer in the same situation in overtime. And Kidd drove for a layup to pull to within one with 11 seconds left and was fouled, but he missed the free throw that would have tied it and sent it into double OT.

Meanwhile, while the Mavs continue to try to find their groove with Kidd, Bryant scored 22 points in the fourth quarter and eight more in OT. Despite the flurry of transactions, one thing hasn’t changed: Kobe Bryant is still the best player in the NBA.

“We tried to zone him, we tried to funnel him in the trap for a zone and he went the other way,” Johnson lamented. “He didn’t cooperate on any of our defenses.”

Realigning the stars is one thing. Coping with the intensity of the biggest one that remained in place is something else entirely.

© 2008 NBC Sports.com

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