
Nick Van Exel says Kobe Bryantâs work ethic stood above some of the hardest workers he ever saw in the NBA, including Dirk Nowitzki and Manu Ginobili.
âIâve been around some incredible workers. I played with Manu Ginobili. I played with Dirk Nowitzki. Those guys were among the hardest workers Iâve ever seen in basketball. But Kobe Bryant was on another level. When it came to work ethic, he ran laps around people. It wasnât even close,â Van Exel said on Out The Mud Podcast, via HoopsHype.
The former NBA guard framed the comparison as praise for Bryant rather than criticism of his former teammates. He said Bryantâs commitment, attention to detail and obsession with improvement separated him from everyone else he observed up close.
That view matches the way Bryant entered the league and the way his career developed. He joined the Los Angeles Lakers at 18 years old in 1996-97 and immediately showed the foundation of a player determined to become more than a gifted teenager.
Bryantâs rookie season was modest by his later standards, but the growth came fast. He averaged 7.6 points in 15.5 minutes per game as a rookie, then jumped to 15.4 points in his second season before becoming a full-time star.
By the time he reached his peak, Bryant was producing at an elite level for one of the NBAâs most demanding franchises. He won five championships, made 15 All-Star teams and finished his career with 25.0 points per game over 20 seasons.
Van Exelâs comments also speak to how Bryant separated himself in the details. The Lakers guard was known not just for scoring, but for treating every workout, drill and repetition as part of a larger standard.
