Basket SMPN1 Salatiga vs SMPN1 Bancak

23 Oktober 2010...
akhire pertandingan persahabatan antar GRISSA vs BANCAK dilaksanakan..
mangkat sko salatiga jam 2 numpak isuzu.. ning jalan agua ne bocor,
akeh xg nggandul, lungguhe dempet dempetan, keujunan, wes mangkate mantep tnan kae..
wkwkwkkwk
ash mboh, langsung wae deloken fotone::
















iki wedoke GRISSA n BANCAK
















iki pas wedoke maen..















haha! iki pas pemanasan.. (bancak)
















satya deo palit meh free throw :p kwkw *nampang















pelatih kami, KANG PITUN, wkwkwk

hehe sajane fotone akeh, ningan males ngupload e.. hehe



He has many names—“The Closer,” “Black Mamba,” “Lord of the Rings”—but in this City of Angels where he reigns as king, he is simply known as “Kobe.” This year Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers took home yet another NBA championship, but this one in particular—No. 5 for Kobe—may have been the sweetest. After being sent home empty-handed by the Boston Celtics two years ago, Kobe and the Purple and Gold got the revenge they had been waiting for. It’s the stuff of sports fantasy, really: the Celtics vs. the Lakers—one of sports’ greatest rivalries—in a game that came down to the final minutes, seconds even. And it was game seven, no less.

Born In Philadelphia, Kobe’s path was not the typical one for a basketball prodigy. His father, Joe “Jelly Bean” Bryant—a former professional basketball player for the Philadelphia 76ers—moved his family to Italy to play the game abroad when Kobe was just six. Kobe would learn to speak Italian fluently, develop a fondness for soccer and, of course, discover his own incomparable talent on a basketball court. Eventually Kobe would return to Pennsylvania and become a high school basketball star, leading him to forgo college and become the 13th pick in the 1996 NBA Draft. After being chosen by the Charlotte Hornets, he was traded to the Lakers—a team he loved as a child, a team he now carries on his broad shoulders. Last season, Kobe captured his second consecutive finals MVP distinction and the Lakers’ 16th title in franchise history.

We caught up with the married father of two daughters during the off-season to talk about the game, the future and his desire for a sixth championship.