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Black Mamba no more

NBA legend, Los Angeles Lakers’ icon Kobe Bryant, daughter, 7 others killed in helicopter crash

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Los Angeles, January 27

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NBA legend Kobe Bryant died on Sunday when a helicopter he was riding in crashed and burst into flames in thick fog, killing all nine people on board including his teenage daughter and plunging legions of fans around the world into mourning.

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Bryant, 41, was travelling with his 13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven other passengers and crew when their Sikorsky S-76 helicopter slammed into a rugged hillside in Calabasas, west of Los Angeles. There were no survivors.

Iconic figure

A fan lights a candle in front of a Kobe Bryant mural in downtown Los Angeles. AFP

Bryant, a five-time NBA champion and two-time Olympics gold medallist, is widely regarded as one of the greatest basketball players in history, an iconic figure who became one of the faces of his sport during a glittering two-decade career with the Los Angeles Lakers.

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Dozens of firefighters and paramedics battled across steep terrain to reach the flaming wreckage at the crash site but found no survivors. Bryant’s death sent shockwaves throughout the world, with basketball stars stunned by the news.

Bryant’s parents named him after the famous beef of Kobe, Japan, which they saw on a restaurant menu.

Tributes to Bryant flooded in from former US presidents, pop stars and athletes from different sports, a sign of how the man known as the “Black Mamba” had transcended basketball.

Brazilian soccer star Neymar paid tribute to Bryant after scoring for his French club side Paris Saint-Germain, making the No. 24 —Bryant’s old shirt number — with his fingers.

At the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, crowds of shocked fans gathered to pay tribute as the venue which witnessed many of Bryant’s career highlights hosted the music industry’s Grammy Awards.

Purple and gold honour

Los Angeles City Hall was lit up in purple and gold to honor Bryant and the Grammys got under way with a somber tribute from singer Alicia Keys. Across the NBA, tributes were held at several of the eight games on Sunday.

The crash came only hours after Bryant (33,643 points) was passed by current Lakers star LeBron James for third on the all-time NBA scoring list in at Philadelphia. Bryant’s final post on social media had been a tweet congratulating James on surpassing him. Bryant was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 straight out of a high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016. He also was a two-time Olympics gold medallist, helping spark the US squad of NBA stars to titles in 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London.

Bryant bowed out of the NBA in 2016, scoring 60 points in his final appearance before his adoring fans at the Staples Center. It was a fairytale farewell to a sporting career which had begun two decades earlier. The son of former NBA player Joe “Jellybean” Bryant, the Lakers legend was born in Philadelphia in 1978 while his father played for the 76ers. The elder Bryant played from 1984 to 1991 in Italy, giving young Kobe a global worldview as he grew up dreaming of following his dad into the NBA. He would eventually join the ranks of professionals at the age of 17, jumping directly into the NBA, only the sixth player and first guard to make such a leap.

Youngest starter in an NBA game

At 18, Bryant became, at the time, the youngest player or starter in an NBA game and the youngest winner of the NBA Slam Dunk Contest. With Bryant paired alongside Shaquille O’Neal, the Lakers captured three NBA crowns in a row in 2000-2002, returning the team to glory days unseen since 1988. — AFP


Career highlights

“I never met Kobe but basketball’s practically my life, I watch it every day and I’ve been following it for as long as I remember… it’s tough, it’s horrible news. If anything, it motivated me (during the game). If you look at the things he stood for and what he wanted to be remembered by, I felt like if anything it helped me tonight. When I was down a break in the fourth set I was definitely thinking about it and I fought back” —Nick Kyrgios

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