Kobe Bryant's extraordinary success was fueled by an intense training regimen and meticulous diet. His daily routine involved early morning workouts, weight training (deadlifts, squats, lunges), and regular recovery sessions including massages and physical therapy. Later in his career, he prioritized nutrition, cutting out sugary foods and focusing on lean meats, fish, and vegetables. He also incorporated bone broth into his diet. His dedication was such that he employed a large personal team of trainers and therapists to support his demanding schedule.
While known for initially functioning on minimal sleep (3-4 hours), Bryant later adjusted his approach, prioritizing 6-8 hours to enhance his energy levels and family time. He acknowledged difficulty in switching off his mind, yet recognized the importance of rest.
Even after retiring from the NBA, Bryant maintained an equally demanding routine. He proactively sought advice from top business leaders, built his business empire (Kobe Inc., Granity Studios, Bryant-Stibel, and Mamba Sports Academy), and continued a rigorous fitness schedule, transitioning to a high-weight, low-rep program for muscle building. He emphasized the importance of modeling hard work for his children, sharing his workouts to instill the value of dedication.
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The stories about the late, great Kobe Bryantâs work ethic are endless. If you start reading up on them, youâll soon find yourself going down a wild rabbit hole of countless tales from teammates, rivals, coaches and other associates spanning the Los Angeles Lakersâ 20-year basketball career.
There was that time during the lead-up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics when the US basketball team met up in Las Vegas for a mini-camp to prepare for the games. âWeâre in Las Vegas and we all come down for team breakfast at the start of the whole training camp and Kobe comes in with ice on his knees and with his trainers and stuff,â Chris Bosh said in an interview with ESPN.
âEverybody else just woke up. Weâre still stretching and yawning and looking at [Kobe] like, âWhat the fuck?'â Dwayne Wade added. âWeâre all yawning, and heâs already three hours and a full workout into his day.â
Or that time when Shaquille OâNeal walked in on Bryant practicing without a ball. âYouâd walk in there and heâd be cutting and grunting and motioning like he was dribbling and shooting,â Shaq wrote in his book. âExcept there was no ball. I thought it was weird, but Iâm pretty sure it helped him.â
Or that time when former Lakers coach Byron Scott found an 18-year old Bryant practicing two hours early in the dark. âI came in one time, and we were still playing at the Fabulous Forum, and I heard the ball bouncing. No lights were on,â Scott told Business Insider.
âPractice was at about 11, it was probably about 9, 9:30. And I go out to the court and I look, and thereâs Kobe Bryant. Heâs out there shooting in the dark. And I stood there for probably about ten seconds, and I said, âThis kid is gonna be great.â I knew this kid was gonna be special.â
Or that time when former Lakers player Tony Gaffney recalled Bryant beating him to practice no matter what other commitments he had on that day. âThere was no difference with the Lakers except no matter how early I showed up for practice, it wasnât early enough: Kobe was on the court with three trainers doused in sweat,â Gaffney told Basketball Insiders.
Even if the four-time All-Star Game MVP had to take his daughters to school on practice day, heâd wake up early enough to be at the gym by 6am, train, go drop off the kids, then be back at the gym way before practice officially started at 10:30 am. âNo one would have any idea that heâs been in the gym working for three-to-four hours,â Gaffney added.
Or that time when Michael Jordan remembered Bryant reaching out to him at all hours of the night to get advice on certain moves. âHe used to call me, text me, 11:30, 12:30, 3 in the morning, talking about post-up moves, footwork and sometimes the triangle,â Jordan told The Chicago Tribune. âAt first it was an aggravation, but then it turned into a certain passion.â
The point is, you can read stories about Bryantâs relentless work ethic forever. Itâs what helped him set all those basketball records: all-time leading scorer in Lakers franchise history, first guard in NBA history to play at least 20 seasons, the second most points scored in a single game, with 81, behind Wilt Chamberlainâs 100-point game, and plenty more.
The only other sporting figure who comes close to matching his drive is Floyd Mayweather, whose work ethic Bryant himself called âmaniacal.â
Those times when you get up early and you work hard. Those times you stay up late and you work hard. Those times when you donât feel like working. Youâre too tired. You donât want to push yourself, but you do it anyway. That is actually the dream.
This 1 Quote From Kobe Bryant Is All You Need to Know About His Success | Inc.
For the Black Mamba to maintain his MVP calibre playing over the stretch of two decades, he relied on a combination of intense off-season training, careful diet planning and regular recovery sessions; each varying in degrees as Bryant got older.
In 2015, at 37 years old with an extensive list of injuries and racking up more than 56,000 minutes over his NBA career, Bryantâs days were filled with treatment sessions, stretching, weight training, massages and physical therapy.
âThe kid has got a lot of miles on him,â said former Lakers trainer Gary Vitti, during Bryantâs 2015-2016 season. âAnd theyâre hard miles. Theyâre hard miles. If youâve ever been to Maui, the Road to Hana? Itâs a rough road, man. Itâs beautiful when you get there, but itâs a rough road.â
A typical non-game day had Bryant doing some cardio training on the treadmill, âjust to keep my legs going,â and hitting the weights 3-4 times a week, working on strength-building exercises like deadlifts, squats, lunges, upper-body presses, rows and chin-ups.
âIn terms of massages and more physical therapy, Bryant says he works plenty on off days with Seto, along with a couple of his other physical therapists,â according to an ESPN article. âSessions can last about 30 minutes and might begin around 10 a.m., usually focus on joints from the hips to his right shoulder and more, with the goal being to maximize mobility and stretch brittle ligaments.â
Even though the Lakers regularly employed a large team of physical therapists, trainers and massage therapists, Bryantâs demands were so great that he hired his own neuromuscular therapist, chiropractors, active-release therapist, stretch professionals and strength & conditioning trainer.
Tim Grover, who was the strength & conditioning coach for both Bryant and Jordan, explained how the two legends approached their training. âOne of the biggest differences between the two is Michael always knew when it was enough,â Grover told GQ. âAnd he would listen to you. If you said, âThatâs it,â then thatâs it. With Kobe, to him, âThatâs itâ means thatâs it for that moment, but three hours later, I can start back up again.â
When it comes to Bryantâs diet, the Lakers shooting guard began to take his nutrition much more seriously later in his career. That meant cutting out sugar cookies, Sour Patch Kids and his famous pre-game meal of pepperoni pizza and grape soda, and adding in a lot of lean meat, fish and vegetables. The low-sugar bottle of chocolate milk for his post-game meal stayed though.
During his 2012-2013 season, Bryant also started adding bone broth as a staple to his diet. âEverybody is looking for a magical elixir or some cure-all,â said Tim DiFrancesco, the Lakersâ head strength and conditioning coach, âbut bone broth is where itâs at.â
âWhat Iâve done really is just train really hard and watch my diet,â Kobe told ESPN. âI think thatâs the thing that catches guys most. They donât do self assessing. They feel like they can go out there and do some of the things that they did when they were younger and eat some of the things that theyâve been (eating) and not accept the fact that what you put in has an impact.â
âIâve been able to be honest with myself and have had to cut down on a lot of things and eat very healthy. It sucks, but itâs worth it.â
Diet is always the hardest thing. Weâre accustomed to eating what we want to eat whenever we want to eat it. You become comfortable with that. A change in that is a change in your lifestyle. Thatâs been the most difficult.
Lakers star Kobe Bryant continues to feast, thanks to diet | Los Angeles Daily News
Much has been made about Bryantâs insane sleep schedule, especially when compared to Lebron James who typically gets about 12 hours of sleep a day. During a 2006 interview on Stephen A. Smithâs former ESPN show, Quite Frankly, Bryant famously told the host, âI donât need too many hours of sleep, man. I can go off of three or four hours.â
Later in his career, however, Bryantâs approach to his sleep routine changed, as he began to understand the importance of shutting off and winding down. In a 2014 New York Times interview with the sleep queen herself, Arianna Huffington, Bryant revealed that he was getting much more sleep these days, âI used to get by on three or four hours a night. I have a hard time shutting off my brain. But Iâve evolved. Iâm up to six to eight hours now.â
Bryant also explained that he wanted to get more sleep to have more energy to play with his kids. âYou know the other major thing about sleep? It gives me more energy to spend time with my family and have fun with my kids. As I got more rest, I could work and come home â and become the human jungle gym again.â
Bryantâs work ethic and insatiable desire to be the best in whatever he pursued extended well beyond the basketball court. After setting up Kobe Inc. in 2014, Bryant began cold calling successful business executives and leaders like Nikeâs CEO Mark Parker, former Apple Chief Design Officer Jony Ive and Oprah Winfrey to get their advice.
âIâll just cold call people and pick their brain about stuff,â Bryant said in an interview with Bloomberg. âSome of the questions that Iâll ask will seem really, really simple and stupid, quite honestly, for them. But if I donât know, I donât know. You have to ask. Iâll just do that. Iâll just ask questions and I want to know more about how they build their businesses and how they run their companies and how they see the world.â
After retiring at 37 years old in 2015, Bryant continued to stick with an intense daily routine; juggling 4am wake up calls for gym training sessions and working on his numerous business ventures, including Kobe Inc., production company Granity Studios, venture capital firm, Bryant-Stibel, and Mamba Sports Academy.
For his post-retirement training routine, Bryant finally had the chance to pack some serious muscle mass with his retirement from the NBA. He worked with his personal trainers to focus on a high-weight, low-rep training program, working out four days a week to achieve his bulking goals.
âI donât have to be as agile as I used to,â he told Menâs Journal. âBeing lean was easy, because I was always pretty scrawny growing up. But these days I have been able to really up the weight, and put on some legitimate muscle.â
Part of Bryantâs motivation to continue working hard was to inspire his children. âYour kids canât see how hard you work. You go to the office. I come to the studio. They donât really see the effort. So how can we teach our children what it means to work hard? You do it through training,â he told Lewis Howes on an episode of The School of Greatness.
âWhen I get up in the morning [to exercise], my daughter goes with me,â he said. âShe goes with me before school and it becomes a daddy-daughter thing. Through that process, she understands the value of hard work.â
We are obsessive. We wouldnât want to be doing anything other than what we are doing. Thatâs where obsession comes in â when you care about something 24 hours a day.
Kobe Bryantâs new obsession? Dominating the business world | ESPN
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