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Waiting for Kobe?

His arrival would create a new set of problems. But if the Bulls don't start winning soon, they may have no choice but to make a deal for Kobe Bryant

Posted: Tuesday November 13, 2007 10:41AM; Updated: Tuesday November 13, 2007 10:41AM
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Kobe Bryant.
Kobe Bryant.
John W. McDonough/SI
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As the Chicago Bulls, gloom enshrouding them like a cold Lake Michigan fog, pack their bags for an 11-day, six-game road trip that begins on Thursday in Phoenix, coach Scott Skiles should consider bringing a psychiatrist on the team plane. For the Bulls are scheduled to spend Friday through Sunday in Los Angeles, a place that can make anyone crazy in the best of times, never mind anyone subjected to endless mentions of the name Kobe Bryant.

Yes, still another weapon in the astounding arsenal of Bryant has surfaced:He has the power to screw up two teams. Shouts of "Ko-BE!" could be heard last Saturday in the United Center, where the Bulls were wrapping up a disgraceful 101-71 loss to the Toronto Raptors, Chicago's reputation as a scrappy democracy that wins with persistence, defense and a hail of jump shots in ruins after a 1-5 start.

Bryant, who most recently asked out of L.A. last May, has been the subject of multiple trade conversations between general managers John Paxson (Bulls) and Mitch Kupchak (Lakers), and after Saturday's disheartening defeat, it's likely that Paxson has added Kupchak's name to his Five. Any optimism that arose from the Bulls' 97-93 win over the Detroit Pistons two nights earlier evaporated in an evening of clanging jumpers (Chicago made only five of 21 three-pointers), disappointing defense (Toronto shot 75.0% in the third quarter) and a second half of garbage time (Viktor Khryapa, the Bulls' 11th man, played 22 minutes). The season-ticket refund line starts to the left.

Predictably, none of the Bulls would come out and say that the uncertainty about Bryant has anything to do with the malaise afflicting the team. But even before the season's nadir, Skiles had held group and individual meetings about the specter of Bryant. The coach emphasized two things: 1) Yes, it's tough being public trade bait every day, and the organization feels for you, but 2) hug it out and move on. (When Skiles played for the Orlando Magic in 1993-94, rumors were so strong that he was going to be traded to the New York Knicks that the Knicks' trainer had a number 1 jersey made up for him. The deal fell through, but Skiles was presented the jersey -- which he still has -- when New York visited Orlando.)

Some of those Bulls whose names are in heavy rumor rotation concede that, yes, things are bad. "Frustration is at an alltime high since I've been here," point guard Kirk Hinrich, in his fifth year, said after Saturday's loss. "The crowd is frustrated, and we're frustrated as well."

"This is my lowest point," said small forward Luol Deng.

"We can't expect the crowd to be happy with the effort," said shooting guard Ben Gordon. "We're in some kind of funk right now."

Two key questions remain: Will a Bryant trade happen? And should it happen?

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