Byron Scott Has Not Considered Reducing Kobe Bryant’s Minutes, Role

Dan Duangdao
2 Min Read

14 games into the 2015-16 Los Angeles Lakers season, Kobe Bryant has struggled to regain his form in his 20th season. Although Kobe is averaging 15.2 points, he is shooting a career-worst 31.1 percent from the field and 19.5 percent from three.

In the blowout loss against the Golden State Warriors, Kobe tied a career-low shooting performance by going 1-for 14. While the five-time champion believes there are bigger issues at hand, he has not been efficient and isolation plays have hurt the team’s ball movement.

Despite the struggles, head coach Byron Scott says he has not considered reducing Kobe’s role or minutes according to Baxter Holmes of ESPN:

At the age of 37 and coming off three consecutive season-ending injuries, it was necessary to put a minutes restriction on Kobe heading into the new season. While he is averaging 30.5 minutes through 11 games, Scott recently played him major minutes against the Detroit Pistons (36) and Toronto Raptors (37).

With the goal to keep Kobe relatively healthy for what may be the final season of his career, Scott will eventually have to reduce his role and minutes. For Kobe, he has previously found success as a facilitator, but has reverted back to being a high-volume shooter.

With the Lakers 2-12 to start the season, it will not get any easier for them. Nine of their next 10 games are on the road and if they do not address their issues soon, it will be interesting to see what develops between Scott, Kobe and the team’s young core.

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Dan Duangdao was the managing editor at Lakers Nation (2013-16, 2018-20). He is currently the founder at LA Sports Media, Lake Show, Raiders Nation, Rams Nation, Kings Nation, Galaxy Nation, and MMA Rumors. Born and raised in Southern California and a lifelong Los Angeles sports and mixed martial arts fan, his first NBA game was Kobe Bryant and the Lakers against the Golden State Warriors with Michael Jordan in attendance during the 1998-99 NBA season. He was previously a contributor at HOOPSWORLD (now Basketball Insiders) and an NBA editor at ClutchPoints. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram: @DanDuangdao.