LeBron James cites daughter in choosing Gianna Bryant's No. 2 for All-Star team

ByDave McMenamin ESPN logo
Tuesday, February 4, 2020

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. -- LeBron James said "every game is going to be emotional" as the Los Angeles Lakers play out the season following the helicopter crash that took the lives of Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna and seven others on Jan. 26.

That includes the NBA All-Star Gamelater this month in Chicago.

James, voted an All-Star captain, will lead his team Feb. 16 against the squad selected by Giannis Antetokounmpo of the Milwaukee Bucks, the league's reigning MVP.

James said the league contacted him last week, looping him into plans to have one team wear No. 24 in honor of Bryant and one team wear No. 2 in honor of Gianna, who was a budding basketball star as a 13-year-old.

"They asked me which number did I want to wear, the 24 or 2 for my team, and I picked 2," James said Monday.

Why No. 2, rather than No. 24 for his former Olympic teammate, contemporary competitor and the man from which he has taken the torch as the next great superstar for the Lakers?

"Zhuri," James said.

Zhuri Nova is James' 5-year-old daughter. Before James changed his Instagram profile picture to a photograph of Bryant holding Gianna in his arms after the Lakers' championship win in Orlando, Florida, in 2009, James' profile was a photo of Zhuri with a big smile.

Following the Lakers' game Friday -- their first since Bryant's death -- James spoke about how much joy fatherhood brought to Bryant.

"It felt like these last three years were the happiest I've ever seen him," James said. "I think we all can say that. It was the happiest I've ever seen him, being able to just be with his daughters, be with his family. ...

"To see him these last three years just being ... y'all see 'girldad,' the hashtag. I'm a girl dad. My brother right here [Anthony Davis] is a girl dad."

Bryant's legacy as a father of daughters was celebrated last week after ESPN's Elle Duncan shared a story on air about a one-on-one interaction she had with Bryant when she was pregnant with her daughter. She described his pride in being a "girl dad," which caught on as a social media movement to honor Bryant. Bryant's wife, Vanessa, even referenced the hashtag in her first Instagram post following the tragedy.

The Lakers are walking the delicate line between continuing to mourn Bryant and returning to business as normal this week. The massive public memorial for Bryant located at the L.A. Live plaza across from Staples Center was disassembled Monday morning, and the smaller one outside the Lakers' practice facility was removed Sunday night. The team said it will collect and store the donated items until further directions are provided by the Bryant family.

In the meantime, there continue to be signs of Bryant everywhere, from the KB and Nos. 8 and 24 decals affixed to the Lakers' practice court over the weekend to random bits of numerology, as evidenced in L.A.'s 129-113 victory over the Sacramento Kings on Saturday.

"The fact that we scored 81 points ... in the first 24 minutes, how eerie that was, and then both teams' combined points were 242, was like the 2 and the 2, 2-4," James said. "There was, like, some weird stuff going on."

Strange might be the best way to describe the transition Lakers vice president of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka has to make this week with the NBA trade deadline looming Thursday.

"I think it's just part of this time of year, it just comes with the territory of being an NBA player, NBA coach, NBA front office -- we're going to do our job," Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. "If there's ways to improve our team, like every other team in the NBA, if there's a way to improve your team, you're going to do it. If not, I know our team, we feel really good about what we have in uniform, on this roster.

"We'll see how the next few days play out."

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