How could the Zen Master have gone up a level? What does a guy who has won nine championships have to learn? Apparently, his new approach has paid off. The bench mob, which the Lakers' second unit has coined themselves, is made up of all the guys that normally couldn't stay on the court past their first turnover. Luke Walton, an off and on again starter, is the only player that has earned the respect from his coach that allows him to play through his mistakes, and now that has been extended to the aforementioned Farmar, Vujacic, and Vladimir Radmonovic. It is also worth noting that the same privelige was afforded to the child prodigy, Bynum, when it was evident that the shadow of Shaq was quickly turning to vapor at the Staples Center.
It is safe to say that Kobe's attitude towards his teammates, perhaps as much off the court as on, is a tremendous factor in Coach Jackson and the Lakers success this season. Add to this the addition of Pau Gasol, the power forward scoring threat the team so desperately needed, and an increase in overall team basketball I.Q. that is hard to beat when every player is on the same page, and you have a recipe for the expectations the team is hearing loudly everywhere they travel. What also strikes me as most extraordinary, is the plethora of injuries the team has suffered this season, and yet they still are within striking distance of the best record in the Western Conference with two weeks to go in the season.
I know the calming of a training camp circus is not enough of a reason to honor Jackson with a special award that could easily go to Byron Scott or Greg Popovich or that, just because the Zen Master realized, consciously or not, that he had another level to go before he reached enlightenment, should make him any more worthy. But take a look at what they have done on the court this year, take a look at who is doing it, not just Kobe or Lamar, and take a look at the other coaches and see if they have been as battle tested this season as Mr. Jackson. I think you will come to the same conclusion, the Zen Master deserves to sit on the Lotus Leaf by himself.