"After I retired, I thought he didn't like me" - Allen Iverson says realizing Kobe Bryant admired him was one of the most eye-opening moments of his life
There was never a handshake during the battle. Never a wink, never a pat on the back.
It was a straight war between Allen Iverson and Kobe Bryant, two avatars of a basketball era driven by ego, edge and expression.
They stood on opposite poles of style and temperament: Iverson, the rebellious genius from the streets of Hampton, Va., who turned swagger, braids and baggy shorts into symbols of NBA authenticity; Bryant, the meticulous assassin from Lower Merion, Pa., who patterned his approach on Michael Jordan's cold-blooded precision.
Appreciation from Kobe
On the court, it felt personal with every jab step, every bucket, every stare. And for Iverson, that intensity lingered long after the buzzer.
"After I retired, I thought he didn't like me because of how he was on the basketball court," Iverson said. "We would speak before the game and after the game whatever. But during the game, it was like, 'Damn, this dude got a problem with me.'"
Iverson wasn't being paranoid. That was just Bryant — clinical, focused and unforgiving. But under that glare was something else, respect. A deep, almost obsessive admiration. It just took years for Iverson to find out.
They both famously met in the 2001 NBA Finals with Iverson leading the Philadelphia 76ers to battle against the Los Angeles Lakers.
He dropped 48 points in Game 1 and notoriously stepped over Tyronn Lue. The Sixers' lone win in that series came at the expense of one of the most dominant duos in NBA history, Shaquille O'Neal and Bryant. The Lakers would go on to win the series in five, but for a moment, Iverson had the stage and he made it unforgettable.
Bryant, only 22 at the time, was already known for studying the greats. He would rewatch games in the middle of the night, dissect old footage and chase greatness with the relentlessness of a man on borrowed time. But Iverson, unlike Jordan or Magic Johnson, was Bryant's peer. He wasn't a finished product to admire from afar, he was a real-time rival. That made the admiration complex and competitive.Silent respect
Iverson never heard Bryant say he respected him. So when the game was done and the lights dimmed, he assumed the silence was intentional. It made sense. In their 14 matchups, Bryant often played Iverson harder than anyone. He bodied him. Shadowed him and took it personally. And in that space, respect looked like resistance.
But the truth unraveled slowly, years later, in the wake of tragedy. The Laker icon passed away in January 2020 and the basketball world mourned in disbelief. Among the many players who paid tribute, Iverson's pain stood out. That was when the stories started to come in, from Bryant's inner circle who saw what the public never did.
"But hearing the stories, the people that loved him, the people in his family tell me stories about how he admired me and how he talked about how much I pushed him," Iverson said.
It wasn't a moment, but a collage of them. Bryant admired Iverson's fearlessness in going at the trees in the paint; he pushed himself in practice, because he didn't want to be outdone by the Sixers icon. That admiration had always been there, it just came wrapped in silence, masked by the mentality he had.
For Iverson, hearing those things brought clarity. The cold game face, the refusal to dap up mid-game, the fiery trash talk, it wasn't hate. It was reverence, Bryant-style.
Their bond makes perfect sense. Both are undersized for their positions and accused of being too selfish, too stubborn, too much of something. Both vilified and adored in equal measure. And both, in very different ways, changed the NBA.This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jun 24, 2025, where it first appeared.
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