Latest news with #ShowtimeEra
Yahoo
02-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
"I had to go to the hospital for three days. I was just emotionally spent" - West said acquiring Kobe and Shaqal in the same offseason crushed his health
In the years following the Showtime era, the Los Angeles Lakers entered unfamiliar territory — irrelevance. The once-feared juggernaut, anchored by Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and James Worthy, began fading into the background of NBA contention after their retirements. Pat Riley, the architect of the franchise's '80s dominance, had also moved on. By the mid-1990s, the Lakers were merely a shadow of what they once represented: a team struggling to maintain its identity in a league rapidly evolving around it. An exhausting summer For Jerry West, the late Hall of Fame player turned executive, it was a time for risk. In the summer of 1996, "The Logo" orchestrated one of the boldest double-moves in modern sports history, trading for the draft rights to 17-year-old Kobe Bryant and signing All-NBA center Shaquille O'Neal in free agency. Both acquisitions redefined the franchise for the next decade. But behind the scenes, the legendary general manager paid a steep price. Advertisement "After that was done and the draft was done, I had to go to the hospital for three days," West once said. "I was just emotionally spent and exhausted. I don't sleep. One day, I went to see the doctor, and he said the day after that, he said, 'we're going to have to put you in a hospital.' And I was there for three days." The legendary guard turned basketball executive had staked the Lakers' future on a high school prodigy and an unpredictable superstar center. The Charlotte Hornets selected Bryant 13th overall in the 1996 NBA Draft. The teenager from Lower Merion High School in Pennsylvania had never played a second of college basketball. Yet West saw something. He'd spent countless hours evaluating Bryant's footwork, instincts, and innate competitiveness. When he envisioned the 6'6" guard alongside a dominant big man, the next chapter of the Lakers' greatness began to take shape in his mind. To complete the picture, he pursued O'Neal — a three-time All-Star in Orlando, a global sensation, and arguably the most physically dominant center since Wilt Chamberlain. Convincing "Big Diesel" to come to L.A. required navigating a minefield of salary cap intricacies, internal politics and frenzied media speculation. West absorbed it all. Advertisement Related: "You gonna be calling me Mr. Jordan before the night is up" - John Starks recalls how he tried to intimidate Michael Jordan in his Knicks debut Jerry's Lakers blueprint By the time the ink dried on the two deals, the toll on West's body and mind had reached its limit. "The Logo," normally composed and intensely focused, simply couldn't go any further. Months of stress, sleepless nights and high-stakes decisions had culminated in three days of hospitalization. "I have no energy at all and I've always been a high-energy person," West revealed. "But that was the start of another great run for the Lakers and two of the greatest players we ever had." Advertisement The price West paid soon became the foundation for the next Lakers dynasty. From 2000 to 2002, Los Angeles captured three consecutive NBA championships. O'Neal won Finals MVP each time, dominating the paint with a blend of brute strength and underrated finesse. Maturing into a lethal scorer and tireless competitor, Bryant evolved from a precocious rookie to one of the league's most feared guards. Their partnership wasn't always smooth. Egos clashed and philosophical differences festered, but the results were undeniable. During their peak, the Lakers were the NBA's gold standard — winning 67 games in the 1999–2000 season and sweeping through the 2001 playoffs with a 15-1 postseason record, a mark that stood untouched for nearly two decades. Together, Bryant and O'Neal formed the most formidable inside-out duo since Johnson and Abdul-Jabbar. They were transformative. On the court, they forced opponents into submission. Though no longer GM when their championship run peaked, West laid the cornerstone of that success. Advertisement His foresight in gambling on a teenager and pulling the league's most sought-after free agent to Los Angeles changed the NBA's landscape. The league, at the time, had never seen a high school guard drafted that high. But Bryant went on to play 20 seasons for the Lakers, becoming the franchise's all-time leading scorer. Related: "Well, basketball here is different" - Kobe Bryant remembered Italian kids telling him he would never be an NBA player


USA Today
14-03-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
10 years ago, Rafael dos Anjos blew up the brief 'Showtime Era' at UFC 185
In 2015, Anthony Pettis was riding high and had been for years. Pettis came to the UFC as the final WEC champion on the heels of his famed 'Showtime Kick' against Benson Henderson. He was outworked and outsmarted by Clay Guida in his UFC debut in mid-2011, but just four fights later beat Henderson again to win the UFC's lightweight title. Another title defense submission followed, as did a coveted spot on a Wheaties box – a first for an MMA fighter. But at UFC 185 on March 14, 2015, Brazil's Rafael dos Anjos brought the 'Showtime Era' as lightweight champ to a fast halt. He dominated the champ to win a decision in an upset in Dallas. Pettis was 18-2 going into the fight. He's gone 7-12 since the loss, including a 1-4 record in the PFL after he left the UFC. Pettis signed with Global Fight League this past December for an MMA return after going 1-1 in boxing matches since his most recent MMA fight in 2022. Dos Anjos has had rough sledding, too. He's 8-10 since he beat Pettis to win the title. He defended the belt once in 2015, but lost it to Eddie Alvarez 16 months into his reign. Still, to beat 'Showtime,' dos Anjos turned in an all-time performance. Check out some of the highlights from that bout 10 years ago.