Skip to content
Link copied to clipboard
Link copied to clipboard

Lower Merion’s 1996 state champion team inducted into school’s Hall of Fame during Kobe Bryant Classic

The 1996 boys' basketball team, which was led by the late Kobe Bryant, went 18-0 and captured the Central League title. The event returned for the first time since Bryant’s death in 2020.

Lower Merion coach Greg Downer looks at a large photo of Kobe Bryant that folks saw as soon as they arrived at the Kobe Bryant Classic on Saturday.
Lower Merion coach Greg Downer looks at a large photo of Kobe Bryant that folks saw as soon as they arrived at the Kobe Bryant Classic on Saturday.Read moreElizabeth Robertson / Staff Photographer

The legacy of Lower Merion’s 1996 boys’ basketball team is visible around the halls of the high school. On banners, in pictures, and even throwback jerseys in the stands on game nights.

It was cemented even further Saturday night at Kobe Bryant Gymnasium.

The 1996 team, which was led to a state championship by the late NBA star Kobe Bryant, was inducted into the Lower Merion Basketball Hall of Fame during the 15th annual Scholastic Play-By-Play Kobe Bryant Classic. The event returned for the first time since Bryant’s death in 2020.

“We wanted to do something special,” said event director Jeremy Treatman, an assistant coach on the 1996 squad. “‘Let’s honor the ‘96 team’ was the original idea and me, [former Aces teammate] Doug Young, and [coach] Gregg Downer said, ‘Wait a minute, why don’t we do the Hall of Fame now while we have the crowd?’”

The induction ceremony took place after Huntington Prep of West Virginia beat Archbishop Wood, 73-70, in the first game of the event, which was followed by a Lower Merion-Methacton nightcap. The Kobe Bryant Classic concluded Sunday with five games at Widener University.

The 1996 Lower Merion team went 18-0 on the way to the Central League title. The Aces went on to take down Chester for the District 1 championship before knocking off Erie Cathedral Prep in the PIAA Class 4A title game.

“I could talk all night about these kids and the sacrifices they made in order to be here,” said former Aces assistant coach Mike Egan during his induction speech.

Downer and Bryant’s cousin and best friend John Cox, a La Salle men’s basketball assistant, presented Mamba Mentality awards to student-athletes from all four schools. The awards go to players who embody Bryant’s work ethic and competitiveness. The award winners were Wood senior Jalil Bethea, Lower Merion senior John Mobley, Huntington Prep junior Darryn Peterson, and Methacton senior Alex Hermann.

Peterson, a 6-foot-6 wing considered one of the top juniors in the country, scored 31 points in the win over the Vikings and Bethea, who is ranked No. 7 in the class of 2024 and headed to Miami next year, finished with 29 points.

“The hard work thing, it applies to all aspects of life: sports, education, the passion,” said Omar Hatcher, a starter on the 1996 team who is now a teacher and coach living in Overbrook. “Everything has to start with hard work and determination, and Kobe exemplified that.”

» READ MORE: Kobe Bryant rose from Lower Merion superstar to NBA legend with Los Angeles Lakers

Hatcher said the 1996 team continues to stay in touch via Zoom calls and text chains, but Saturday night marked a rare moment for them all to get together.

“[Bryant’s] known for the message that you have to strive for greatness, no mediocrity,” Treatman said. “That’s why people were so upset, because this was a guy who strived for greatness and he got there, and I think he was spewing that message all over the world.”

This story was produced as part of a partnership between The Inquirer and City of Basketball Love, a nonprofit news organization that covers high school and college basketball in the Philadelphia area while also helping mentor the next generation of sportswriters. This collaboration will help boost coverage of the city’s vibrant amateur basketball scene, from the high school ranks up through the Big 5 and beyond.