Kobe: Europe’s Players More Skillful
The philosophy of Lakeland Xpress founder, Troy Wells, has been recently echoed by NBA superstar Kobe Bryant. (see article below) Lakeland Xpress organization agrees with Bryant’s assessment that today’s players lack basic basketball fundamentals. However, in our opinion the true failure is not necessarily the greed of AAU, USSSA, YBOA, Big Shots, or any other governing body– but the lack of qualified, selfless volunteers, dedicated to the growth of the sport and motivated solely by the passion for the game not personal agendas. It is our belief that the failure to train these young athletes in a constructive and disciplined environment has lead to undertrained, high maintenance, egotistical players that become showmen and uncoachable. Which leads to the question “Why Xpress?”. The Xpress organization is committed to training young athletes in a knowledgeable, disciplined & Christian environment. Lakeland Xpress is the only travel basketball program in our surrounding area offering professional skill training, collegiate workouts and clinics with current college coaches and NBA trainers. This unique infusion demonstrates Lakeland Xpress is committed to the training and development of all in its program, focusing its instruction and program on the fundamentals of the game.
Kobe: Europe’s Players More Skillful
By Arash Markazi | ESPN.com
LOS ANGELES — Kobe Bryant believes European basketball players are more skillful than American basketball players, and says it’s a growing trend that can be blamed on the greed and coaching at the AAU level.
“I just think European players are just way more skillful,” Bryant said Friday night after the Los Angeles Lakers‘ 109-106 loss to the Memphis Grizzlies. “They are just taught the game the right way at an early age. … They’re more skillful. It’s something we really have to fix. We really have to address that. We have to teach our kids to play the right way.”
Bryant was quick to point the finger for the decline of skilled players in the United States.
“AAU basketball,” Bryant said. “Horrible, terrible AAU basketball. It’s stupid. It doesn’t teach our kids how to play the game at all so you wind up having players that are big and they bring it up and they do all this fancy crap and they don’t know how to post. They don’t know the fundamentals of the game. It’s stupid.”
Bryant was born in Philadelphia, but when he was 6, his father, former NBA player Joe Bryant, moved the family to Italy to continue his playing career. Kobe spent his childhood in Europe until Joe retired in 1991 and moved the family back to the United States.
“When you have limitations and you understand your limitations and you stay within yourself, you can be great,” Kobe Bryant said. “You know what you can do and what you can’t do. In America, it’s a big problem for us because we’re not teaching players how to play all-around basketball. That’s why you have Pau and Marc [Gasol], and that’s the reason why 90 percent of the Spurs’ roster is European players, because they have more skill.”
Bryant smiled when asked what type of player he would have become if his family had never moved to Italy and he hadn’t learned how to play the game in Europe.
“Horrible, terrible AAU basketball. It’s stupid. It doesn’t teach our kids how to play the game at all so you wind up having players that are big and they bring it up and they do all this fancy crap and they don’t know how to post. They don’t know the fundamentals of the game.
”– Kobe Bryant
“I probably wouldn’t be able to dribble with my left and shoot with my left and have good footwork,” Bryant said. “I was kind of fortunate because when I was growing up in Italy, the Red Auerbachs and the Tex Winters and all those great coaches were doing clinics and camps in Europe. They were teaching all the club coaches, and the club coaches were following their advice and their fundamentals like the bible, and they were teaching all of us kids that type of stuff. Me, Manu [Ginobili] and all these guys that grew up around that same time, we’re a product of that. It’s a big difference.”
Bryant had a simple solution to the problem.
“Teach players the game at an early age and stop treating them like cash cows for everyone to profit off of,” he said. “That’s how you do that. You have to teach them the game. Give them instruction.”
But Bryant, who holds an annual summer basketball camp, also was quick to point out that any solution involving changing the current culture of AAU basketball won’t happen overnight.
“That’s a deep well because then you start cutting into people’s pockets,” Bryant said. “People get really upset when you start cutting into their pockets because all they do is try to profit off these poor kids. There’s no quick answer.”
“I just think European players are just way more skillful,” Kobe Bryant said Friday. “They are just taught the game the right way at an early age.”
CLICK HERE FOR LINK TO ESPN ARTICLE
Chris Humphreys/USA TODAY Sports
Leave A Comment
Your email address will not be published.