Canada’s basketball community mourns Kobe Bryant after helicopter crash
In his 40 years in basketball, nothing Chuck Swirksy has seen compared to Kobe Bryant’s performance against the Toronto Raptors.
The broadcaster reminisced about Bryant’s 81-point game against the Raptors on Sunday, shortly after the news broke that the Los Angeles Lakers great had died in a helicopter crash at the age of 41. Bryant’s scoring against visiting Toronto on Jan. 22, 2006 stands as the second most in NBA history, second only to Wilt Chamberlain’s 100 on March 2, 1962.
“It was really the most remarkable event I’ve ever called, to see one man take on five players,” said Swirsky, who was the play-by-play announcer for the Raptors at the time. “That’s exactly what it was on that Sunday night at Staples Centre in Los Angeles. Kobe Bryant was a one-man wrecking crew.
“He did it at the foul line, he did it on three-point shots, he did it on drives to the rim. He was on a mission.”