MINNEAPOLIS — All these years, Kobe Bryant has been chasing Michael Jordan.
The bar doesn't get any higher than that. And after Bryant passed Jordan for third on the NBA's career scoring list in the Los Angeles Lakers' 100-94 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday night, he offered a glimpse into the relentless mentality it takes to run down a legend.
"I think the competitive nature is something that frightens a lot of people when you peel back truly what's inside of a person to compete and be at that high level," Bryant said. "It scares a lot of people that are just comfortable being average."
Bryant has been compared to Jordan for a long time, in part because he dared to chase him. Where Bryant is every bit Jordan's equal is in the tenacity that has kept him going through a torn Achilles tendon, bone-on-bone friction in his knees and now the painful rebuilding of a proud franchise.
"His competitiveness drives him in the offseason to work to be able to play at the level he plays," Timberwolves coach Flip Saunders said. "His competitiveness during the games to dominate offensively and defensively and then his competitiveness of wanting to win. He'll challenge teammates if need be and will do whatever it takes to try to get that edge."
It's the only way Bryant knows. And he learned by studying the best.
"I think when you look at Michael's (Hall of Fame) speech," Bryant said, referring to a speech in which Jordan cited those who he perceived to have gotten in his way over the years. "People really got a chance to see how he ticks and it scared a lot of people, right? But that's just the reality of it. You can't get to a supreme level without channeling the dark side a little bit."
Bryant's willingness to embrace the darkness has, in his own eyes, cast him as one of the league's villains. It also likely ensures that his farewell tour, whenever that comes, will not be of the warm and fuzzy variety that New York Yankees star Derek Jeter enjoyed last season.