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Bryant, Odom may sit a spell

Jackson plans to reduce his 30-year-old MVP's minutes this season, and suggests his small forward could end up coming off the bench.

September 27, 2008|Mike Bresnahan, Times Staff Writer

Phil Jackson looked loose and relaxed, having let the sting of last season's championship failure roll off his back and disappear into the waters of the Flathead River during an off-season spent at his Montana home.

The Lakers' coach, who turned 63 last week, met with reporters for almost half an hour Friday, touching on Andrew Bynum's health, possible reductions in Kobe Bryant's playing time and a front court that might or might not include Lamar Odom as a starter.


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Bryant also spoke briefly with a handful of reporters in the players' parking lot at the team training facility. He smiled a lot and seemed upbeat while detailing why he skipped surgery that would have required a 12-week recovery period for a torn ligament in his right pinkie.

"That was too long," he said, splaying out his fingers and saying that enough scar tissue had built up in the pinkie to make it less dicey to play with this season. "It was riskier last season than it is now."

Between Bryant's pinkie and Bynum's left knee, the Lakers weren't fully healthy when last season ended with a 131-92 loss to Boston in Game 6 of the NBA Finals.

Jackson, however, hopes for a fresh beginning when training camp opens Tuesday in El Segundo. Of greatest interest, the Lakers' 20-year-old 7-footer appeared to be in good physical shape, Jackson said, though Bynum's absence in the team's last 57 games might have stalled his development.

"He's lost the edge of how to play continual basketball from A to Z," Jackson said. "He's still just in the playground kind of stage here, but we'll see if he can get to that level where you compete every moment you're on the floor. That's something Andrew was just getting ahold of when he was injured last year and we need to get him back to that space sometime hopefully this [next] month."

Jackson mentioned Bynum again when asked to list the question marks facing the team in training camp. The regular season opener is Oct. 28 against Portland.

"Obviously, a big question is Andrew's ability to get up and down the floor," Jackson said. "Will he be able to run the court, have the stamina that he needs to have again to compete? That's important."

There were other talking points Friday, some more important than others.

Jackson referred to Bryant and Derek Fisher as the "senior citizens" of the team and said Bryant's minutes would be shortened this season "without a doubt." Bryant, who turned 30 last month, averaged 38.9 minutes a game last season on the way to his first MVP award. Jackson suggested Bryant would log closer to 36 or 37 minutes a game this season.

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