How Kobe Bryant And Shaq’s Feud Caused The Lakers To Become ‘Dysfunctional’, According To Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

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The Los Angeles Lakers have one of the most storied histories in the entirety of sports, though it’s not without its share of rough patches. One of the NBA franchise’s most tumultuous times came during the mid-2000s, which marked a feud between Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal. The tension between the duo (who won three championships together) has been chronicled in detail on Legacy: The True Story of the LA Lakers (streamable with a Hulu subscription). Now, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – one of the show’s interview subjects – has shared some further insight into how the Bryant-O’Neal beef caused the team to become “dysfunctional” at that time. 

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar may have stopped playing with the Lakers in 1989, but the legendary center did still hang around during the early 2000s. At that time, Abdul-Jabbar would occasionally sit in on practices, as shown in archive footage presented in Legacy. On the heels of the show’s seventh and eighth episodes, Abdul-Jabbar treated fans to some behind-the-scenes details via his newsletter. When it came to Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal’s feud, the hall of famer asserted that the dysfunction was partially the result of Shaq wanting his teammate to pass more:

Shaq wanted Kobe to pass more and Kobe didn’t care what Shaq thought. When your two most dominant players don’t get along, the team becomes dysfunctional. No one is happy, there’s no team stability, every game feels like a separate battleground rather than part of a flowing season.

 

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