One of the most badass and defining Kobe Bryant moments is when the Los Angeles Lakers great didn’t flinch at all back in the day when Matt Barnes faked throwing the ball at his head.
It’s a historic NBA moment and echoes Bryant’s Mamba Mentality. But sadly, it might all be a complete lie.
It all started when Trey Kerby from The Starters tweeted out not to look at the overhead angle of the incident unless you want the moment ruined.
Don’t watch the overhead angle of the Kobe-Barnes no flinch unless you want it to be totally ruined.
— Taco Trey Kerby (@treykerby) October 2, 2018
Buckets co-host Rob Perez tweeted the angle, showing Barnes’ fake wasn’t a direct shot. Instead, he faked the ball slightly to the side.
https://twitter.com/World_Wide_Wob/status/1047140944892612612
NBA Twitter was shook by the reveal.
https://twitter.com/russbengtson/status/1047152004840271875
https://twitter.com/TribStarAusten/status/1047143348836941827
— Gustyn (@RedfoxJerl) October 2, 2018
https://twitter.com/netw3rk/status/1047152384676257792
It’s still somewhat impressive Kobe managed to not flinch with the ball being faked at him from an angle. However, the fact Barnes wasn’t standing directly in front of him sours one of the most memorable moments in league history.
The moment is forever tainted. A first-ballot Hall of Fame meme has dropped a tier into an entirely questionable entry years after it happened. It’s a sad moment for NBA Twitter and everybody who assumed the fake happened straight on from Kobe.

About Liam McGuire
Social +Staff writer for The Comeback & Awful Announcing. Liammcguirejournalism@gmail.com
Recent Posts
Vikings move on from general manager
“These decisions are never easy."
Baker Mayfield on Mike Evans: ‘more in the tank’
“Mike’s too much of a competitor."
Kevin Stefanski waiting on Falcons to hire GM to name starter
“I think we have to hire a general manager first."
Zac Robinson thrilled to get to work with Baker
"Baker was the number-one pick in the draft for a reason."
Mike Vrabel brushes off disrespect
“It doesn’t matter."
Sean Payton regrets controversial 4th down call
"There's always regrets."