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"I was smarter than every player I played against, except Kobe" - Shane Battier details psychological warfare with Kobe Bryant

Shane Battier  and  Kobe Bryant  faced each other 40 times throughout the years of NBA competition. Although Battier admitted to never talking to the Black Mamba outside the basketball court, they seemed to know each other all too well there.

Battier extensively talked about what he called a "basketball relationship" with the  Los Angeles Lakers  legend and explained why Bryant stood above the rest in his individual matchups.

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Kobe was smarter than everyone else

The former Duke Blue Devil gained hoops notoriety when he drew the Kobe assignment in the 2009 Western Conference semifinals series.

Battier, then with the Houston Rockets , literally put a hand on Bryant's face when guarding him. He never tried blocking Kobe's shot because that meant fighting a battle he couldn't have won. Instead, Shane targeted the Mamba's eyes and made a blanket out of his palms and fingers to bother every single one of Kobe's shots.

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In Game 1, it worked. Bryant scored 32 but needed 31 attempts to get there. More importantly, the Purple and Gold dropped the first game of the series at home, giving the Rockets the homecourt advantage.

Unsurprisingly, Kobe recovered, scoring 73 points by himself over the next two games at a solid efficiency. The Lakers eventually took out the Rockets in seven games, with Bryant averaging 27/5/4 with two steals and 1.3 blocks on over 45 percent shooting from the floor.

"There were guys that were faster and stronger and could, you know, fly and more talented than me, but I thought I was smarter than every player I played against except Kobe,"  Battier  said  matter-of-factly in the "Hoopin' N' Hollerin'" podcast.  "Kobe was the one guy, was mentally a guy I couldn't wear down mentally or break. And so I had played Kobe, I don't know, 40 times in my career. And he was a month older than me. His mentality was unlike anybody I played against."

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According to Battier, Bryant just never knew when to stop. This mentality, the 6'8" foward admitted,  gave him anxiety  every time he took on Kobe. Adding to his stress were the little mind games that Bean played.

"One day, he'd be super friendly to me. Hey Shane, what's going on man? How's the family? How you doing? Playing great. Next day, man, stone cold assassin. He wouldn't even look at me. Wouldn't even look at me. You know, I fall, he'd step over me. Do all that bullsh*t right? Next game, hey man, what's going on? So he was always trying to like play this psychological warfare,"  Battier recalled.

As Shane attested, he never knew what he could expect from Kob', unlike the other foes he shared the court with. Ultimately, though, Battier knew he had Kobe's respect after the latter dedicated a couple of pages to him in the book "Mamba Mentality." The late great alluded to Battier's "false humility," always  downplaying his ability  to guard the Mamba to avoid pissing him off.

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"I read that, and I'm like, 'He's right,'"  Battier said, bursting out laughing.  "He's right. He knew me, and I knew him, and we played this mental game within the game that only he and I knew playing. As a competitor, it was the purest form of competition."

Related: Shaquille O'Neal on how he avoided most athletes' financial downfall: "I didn't want to be a part of the horror stories"

Michael Redd agreed

In this day and age, where stats and efficiency are king, Bryant's legacy is often put to the side in favor of accumulated numbers and analytics. Those who never saw Kobe play could never understand the fear he put into the hearts of opponents, similar to what MJ did.

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Battier's "Kobe was smarter than everyone else" claim can never be proven with stats. However, those who shared the court with him know what's up.

"Truth,"  2004 All-Star Michael Redd  said  in agreement with Battier.  "Kobe was one of the only players I circled on my calendar and started preparing for a few nights before we played. Getting my rest right, extra body work, extra film, watching every calorie I consumed."

"You needed to be at 100% to go against him because he was always going to bring 100%,"  added Kobe's 2008 Redeem Team teammate.

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You don't need numbers to explain what Battier and Redd were getting at. Against Bryant, even a pro's pro knew he was dealing with someone different.

Related: Shane Battier reveals the one player he had no answer for defensively: "He just shot over me like I wasn't there"

This story was originally published by Basketball Network on Apr 11, 2026, where it first appeared in the Old School section. Add Basketball Network as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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