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Dr. Richard Lustberg, Ph.D.


On The Couch:
 
The Week In Review
(3/03)



NEW BLOG!

New Regular Posts


Print Media Appearances

NYDailyNews
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Sports Stars and Celebrities dating

Courant.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on office pools

Wave Magazine
Dr. Lustberg speaks on youth sport


ABC News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on ABC News

The Free Press - Mankato, MN
Dr. Lustberg's quotes are pure fiction

The Vail Trail
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
being a sports fan

OrlandoSentinel.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Forgiving Fans

Birkshire Eagle
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Red Sox's Nation

SignOnSanDiego
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
sports fans' emotions

Time
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the fans' reaction to the Mets' collapse

New York Post
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Met Fans lost season

seattlepi.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Mike Hargrove

reviewjournal.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Michael Vick and Dog Fighting

Newsday.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
fan behavior

STL Today
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Barry Bonds and why he's a polarizing figure

Athens News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
fan support

InfoSports
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
youth sport

KansasCity.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Post Traumatic NFL-Football Disorder

FresnoBee.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
focus, concentration, and preparation.

SignOnSanDiego.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
fan's behaviors

BerkshireEagle.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
how the fans relate to the players

Daily Herald:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the psychology of Rex Grossman

Courier News:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
being a sports fan

Examiner:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the Baltimore Ravens and the positive energy fans create

PajamasMedia:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the psychology of autographs

ESPN.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Teammate sabbotage

VC2:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Steroids

Kane County Chronicle:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Superstitions

Christian Science Monitor:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Issues about youth sport

smh.com.au:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
World Famous swimmer: Ian Thorpe

NewsReview.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
the psychological importance of having a sports franchise in your city

Philadelphia Daily News:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Terrell Owens

Winston-Salem Journal:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Athletic Competitiveness

The Boston Globe:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
The Minds of NFL Kickers

USA Today:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Baseball Players' Fatigue

Journal Gazette:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Mental Illness in Athletes

The Associated Press:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Hero Worship

Newsday.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Alex Rodriguez

ReviewJournal.com:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on
Ben Rothlesberger

PJM News:
Phil Mickelsohn Infatuation

Unabated Sports:
A Doctor In The House

Sports Central:
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Trash Talking

PE
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Rituals

Canoe
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Lucky Charms

Coloradoan
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Superstitions

Orlando Sentinel
Dr. Lustberg speaks on The Death of Tony Dungy's Son and Depression

Star Telegram
Dr. Lustberg speaks on fan and owner loyalty

Jacksonville
Dr. Lustberg speaks on losers

Belleville News Democrat
Dr. Lustberg speaks on emotional reaction to games

Star Telegram
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the line between players and spectators

Des Moines Register
Dr. Lustberg speaks on "how young is too young?"

DenverPost.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on perpetual losers in sports

dailypress.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on players and their uniform numbers

SignOnSanDiego.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant

latimes.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant

PE.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on athletes who have returned to their old teams

OCRegister.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks  on athletes and their jersey numbers

Mets Inside Pitch
Dr Lustberg speaks  on the psychological aspects of being employed in the major leagues and having your position reassigned.

post-gazette.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks  on enduring a long string of losing

Hartford Courant
Dr. Lustberg speaks on athlete's sudden illnesses

NorthJersey.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the Yankees/Red Sox epic rivalry

Mercury News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Barrett Robbins and Mental Illness in Athletes

phillyBurbs.com
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the passion of sports fans

York Daily Record
Dr. Lustberg speaks on superstitions in sports

Denver Post
Dr. Lustberg speaks on trash talking in sports

The Duquesne Duke
Dr. Lustberg speaks on fans and sports

Chicago Tribune
Dr. Lustberg speaks on superstitions

Sunday Herald
Dr. Lustberg speaks on Barrett Robbins’ struggle against bipolar disease

New York Daily News
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the impact of the Jets playoff loss

The San Diego Union-Tribune
Dr. Lustberg speaks on the history of player/fan violence

New York Times

USA Today

Dallas Morning News

Denver Post

Chicago Tribune

The Baltimore Sun

Philadelphia Daily News

Daily News Sports

Denver Post

San Francisco Chronicle

Newsday

Orlando Sentinel

San Diego Union Tribune

timesunion.com

WebMDHealth

The Providence Journal

The San Diego Union-Tribune

UK Casino News

CBS NFL Kid Zone

The Kansas City Star

The Dallas Morning News

Star Telegram

San Diego Union Tribune

Forest Grove News Times

Scroll Online

The Daily Free Press

MyrtleBeachOnline.com

Toronto Star

San Francisco Chronicle

Orlando Sentinel

Femmefan.com

Monterey County Herald

Lincoln Journal Star

ChicKnits

Reveries Magazine

The Mercury News

International Network on Personal Meaning

Christian Science Monitor

Preteenagers Today

San Antonio Business Journal

eSports Media Group

The Marion Star

PsychNet-UK

The Record (Hackensack, NJ)

The Plain Dealer

delawareonline.com
The News Journal


iparenting.com

Christian Science Monitor

The Journal News

El Tiempo

The Observer & Eccentric Newspapers

outsports.com

 

 

Jackson, Bryant Have Issues to Discuss

Experts at reconciliation say repairing their relationship won't be easy, but it is possible.

By Sam Farmer
Times Staff Writer

June 15, 2005

Can this marriage be saved?

Can the relationship between Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant, one defined at the end by telltale comments and a tell-all book, be rebuilt for the good of the Lakers?

Experts in the art of reconciliation say it can be, as long as both parties admit to their roles in the breakup and agree to put the past to rest.

"One of the biggest obstacles to reconciliation is living in the past," said Laura Davis, author of "I Thought We'd Never Speak Again: The Road From Estrangement to Reconciliation."

"Reconciliation can only happen in the present. What kind of relationship are we going to have now? What am I going to do now in regards to this person?"

Jackson, who in his book "The Last Season" wrote that Bryant was "addicted to control" and could be "consumed with surprising anger," said the star guard had called him Tuesday morning to congratulate him on his rehiring as Laker coach.

"We have tremendous communication," Jackson said, "and a tremendous ability to work together." But in his book, Jackson wrote: "Kobe will confide only with the people he trusts, and I certainly have never been a card-carrying member of that group."

That was evident near the end of Jackson's first go-round with the Lakers, when the icy relationship between the coach and Bryant was outstripped only by the public power struggle between Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal.

Sports psychologist Richard Lustberg said the Lakers near the end of the first Jackson era mirrored a dysfunctional family and eventually crumbled.

"The family broke up and the offspring weren't getting along," Lustberg said. "The father and the two sons were not able to reconcile. One of the sons was actually challenging the father in an effort to take over the team himself. Phil could not leave under those circumstances. He needed to return.

"The prodigal father is now coming home, and he has no downside risk. Kobe, the son, imploded himself."


Bryant, who in a recent interview said he would "roll with it" if Jackson were rehired by the Lakers, made headlines during the 2004 All-Star break by saying he respected Jackson as a coach but did not like him as a person. Jackson, on the other hand, once suggested to a Chicago reporter that Bryant had sabotaged his own games in high school just so he could win them at the end — a claim Bryant later rejected as "ridiculous."

As the youngest player in NBA history to score 14,000 points, Bryant clearly has separated himself from the pack. But, Jackson wrote, that separation wasn't always a positive thing.

"A part of him wants desperately to be in the group, to enjoy the camaraderie of his teammates, basketball serving as his only true escape," he wrote. "But there is another part of Kobe, which often wins out, a part that wants, perhaps needs, to be isolated from the group. To have it both ways is simply not possible."

The onus is now on Jackson to bring Bryant back into the fold, said Dr. Joyce Brothers.

"It's going to be extremely difficult," Brothers said. "We think of athletes as team players, but they're the least team-minded players in the world. People who are very successful in athletics seem to be loners. That's why coaches are necessary. It's not as much to teach the players the game, but to coach a team feeling so that everybody has a chance to stand in the spotlight."

It isn't necessary for Jackson and Bryant to like each other, Brothers said, only to put the team first.

"They'll have to verbally say, 'We have to put this behind us,' " she said. "When they go home at night they might not be very happy, but they'll get through it."

Even though Jackson was critical of Bryant in his book, that isn't necessarily a bad thing for the future of their relationship, some experts say.

"Nobody does what Phil Jackson did if he doesn't care," said Dr. Judith Sherven, who co-wrote "Be Loved For Who You Really Are" with her husband, Dr. Jim Sniechowski. "You don't bother to do that toward somebody you have no feelings for."

By Sniechowski's thinking, building the most critical Laker relationship will be akin to salvaging a marriage.

"It's the star and the coach," he said. "It's sort of like Mom and Dad. How are they going to pull this off for the sake of the team? That's going to have to be the driving priority of their relationship.

"They are going to have to attain what many of us desire, and what relatively few of us achieve: They're going to have to grow up."

Staff writer Bob Rohwer contributed to this report.

 

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