Kobe Bryant followed in Michael Jordanâs footsteps more closely than anyone else.
ESPN is televising a documentary on Jordanâs final season with the Bulls.
Could we get a documentary on Bryantâs final season with the Lakers?
Bryant hired a film crew to track him in 2015-16.
The first two episodes of âThe Last Danceâ didnât reveal much new. But future episodes will include more behind-the-scenes footage of the 1997-98 Bulls.
Likewise, a show about Bryantâs last season would hold a similar selling point.
Bryantâs camera crew, several Lakers staffers from that season said, had unparalleled access in locker rooms both at home and on the road, in the training room, throughout the teamâs practice facility and even on the teamâs charter plane.
âThey had unprecedented and, by far, greater access than anyone else ever,â said John Black, who led the Lakersâ public relations department for 27 years, last serving as vice president. âWe certainly allowed them to do everything we could within what the league would allow, and sometimes, with a wink and look-the-other-way, allowed them even more.â
Would a documentary on Bryantâs last season be interesting? Probably. Bryant was a great player with a large and loyal following, and backstage access of any NBA team can be fascinating.
But Bryant was mostly washed up (save for his magical sendoff) and the Lakers were lousy. This isnât chronicling the Kobe-Shaq years or even Bryantâs second title-winning stage.
The Bulls â with Jordan and fellow Hall of Famers Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman and Phil Jackson â were still chasing a championship in 1997-98. There was far more drama in that season. There is no comparison on the stakes.
The most interesting part of that Lakers season didnât even involve Bryant. If thereâs compelling footage of D'Angelo Russell and Nick Young, though, this would be a must-watch.