Thats what seperates kobe from the true legends. The BEST finds a way. Magic, Bird and the likes played against tough teams in their own time. Lets not forget the D was much more physical also. But they find a way to win. Kobe doesn't have the refuse to lose in big games mentallity that the media also paint him to have. MJ would not blow a 24 pt lead in the finals. Or he won't shoot 27% in a finals elimination game. Just no way it would happen. The best of an era is suppose to find a way to win.
Those comparisons are suspect; always have been, no matter who was making them. MJ is in a class all his own, but he lost his share of elimination games and he put up subpar numbers in the playoffs on occasion. What we remember is the way he rose to the occasion more often than not; that's what really cements his legacy. Neither Kobe (nor anyone else in the NBA) has what he had, that combination of extreme ability and tenacity. Kobe fakes it, but he's nowhere near where MJ was.
Bird and Magic played on far more talented teams than Kobe did/does, so it's hard to make that comparison. And that Pistons D in 2004 was pretty doggone old school. Gargamel is still complaining about the officiating.
I don't think it's fair or reasonable to throw out all the big shots and big performances that Kobe has had throughout his career because he's come up short a few times. It's a major blight on his career, not just that his team lost the Finals last year, but the way they lost (and that includes the playoff loss a few years ago to the Suns when they blew a 3-1 series lead, even though they didn't have a chance at winning the title that season) makes it that much worse. But it's still not enough to declare him as "not clutch". His record and the way he's defended down the stretch of any big game speak to the contrary of that declaration.Because he didn't come through when it counts the most, thats not really being clutch to me.