LeBron James is getting candid about his friendship with Kobe Bryant.
On Wednesday, March 26, the NBA legend joined The Pat McAfee Show for a lengthy interview on his career, viral confrontation with Stephen A. Smith and relationships with a few other basketball greats — including his late friend Bryant, who tragically died in a helicopter crash in January 2020 at 41.
As James explained, he and the former Laker “never had a real relationship” until they spent some time on the court together — and their bond grew beyond its competitive origins when they each reached a pair of major milestones in their respective careers.
“Until I became a Laker and he retired, that’s when our relationship became like really, really good,” James, 40, recalled. “He welcomed me. He called me, like, ‘Bro anything you need in L.A., I got you. You a Laker now, you family.’ We would have multiple conversations. Obviously, you saw him coming to a lot of games, things of that nature.”
“And when I passed him in the scoring record in Philly, I think he had a tweet out there like, ‘Keep on going, keep transcending the game…’ That s— meant so much to me,” James added of Bryant’s final tweet in January 2020, when he acknowledged James passing him on the all-time scoring list.
James first signed with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2018 — two years after Bryant retired from the NBA. As he told host Pat McAfee, there were a few other moments that also strengthened his relationship with Bryant — many of which took place on the court.
“We was on the Olympic team, we had a great relationship there,” James said of their experiences teaming up in both 2008 and 2012. “But it was always competitive between us. We were always like, I was on the east coast, he was on the west coast.”
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