C-40
NEW AGE POSTING
Jerry West, the Los Angeles Lakers and a simmering 20-year feud
IT WAS NEAR midnight on the evening of Feb. 27, 2020, and Jerry West was sitting in his car, parked outside his Bel-Air home. He was contemplating retirement."Sometimes," West told ESPN, "I feel like I just need to work on myself."
"Sometimes, I just think not being involved might be good for me."
As one day turned to the next, he added: "Sometimes, enough is enough."
The subject would come up every year, maybe during the season, or perhaps in the offseason. But it arrived, without fail, for decades, those close to him say. There was a process he'd work through. He'd declare this year was his last, that he really meant it this time, but then a new season would approach, and West would think about the challenge of piecing together a puzzle to win it all, of finding the right pieces that aligned just so. His competitive fire would burn again, and he'd return for another chance. It became something of a running joke, one person close to him said -- here was Jerry West talking about retiring after nearly six decades in the NBA. But West needed the game, those around him said. They believed that the game would restore some balance within him, and that Jerry West would be back -- because Jerry West would always be back.
It was almost one month to the day after Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant, Bryant's daughter Gianna, and seven others died in a helicopter crash. In the spring of 1996, West, then the Lakers' general manager, watched 17-year-old Bryant's predraft workout with the Lakers and, after a few minutes, declared, "To hell with this. I've seen enough." West knew Bryant was special, knew the Lakers had to acquire him by any means necessary and relentlessly pushed to make it happen. The two remained close for decades, forging a relationship in which West considered Bryant to be nothing short of a son. During that tenure, first as a player, then a coach, then an executive, West had helped lift the organization to historic heights before this coldest of wars. In the years since, he had hoped for reconciliation. Then, in 2019, after his family became involved, one of the most famous Lakers in history shared a once-unthinkable sentiment, one he'd repeat privately and publicly in the years ahead
Click Here For Full Story