Brother honors memory of baseball coach killed in Kobe Bryant helicopter crash

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Brother honors memory of baseball coach killed in Kobe Bryant helicopter crash

“Kobe Bryant is a great guy and he’s a world class athlete and a tremendous person, but so was my brother. He deserves all the press and he was a tremendous person. So was my brother. Different sport, different kind of person, but same kind of personality. Just a great giver. I want people to know that about him,” his brother said.

The college baseball coach killed in the helicopter crash with Kobe Bryant comes from a baseball family whose roots run deep in Texas.

John Altobelli played and coached at the University of Houston and many coaches and players around the state know him, his brothers and his father.

Jim Altobelli, who lives in Aubrey, learned about Kobe Bryant’s helicopter crash like everyone else. But then, he got a call from his younger brother saying that their middle brother, his wife and his daughter were also on board.

“Kobe Bryant is a great guy and he’s a world class athlete and a tremendous person, but so was my brother. He deserves all the press and he was a tremendous person. So was my brother. Different sport, different kind of person, but same kind of personality. Just a great giver. I want people to know that about him,” Jim said.

He admitted he’s still numb from the news that his 57-year-old brother, John Altobelli, his brother’s wife, Keri Altobelli, and their 13-year-old daughter, Alyssa Altobelli, were among the nine people killed in the helicopter crash.

Jim Altobelli now lives in Aubrey, north of Dallas, but used to live in Orange County, California, where John Altobelli coached baseball at Orange Coast College for 27 seasons, leading the team to four state junior college titles.

John Altobelli started coaching at the University of Houston after playing there as an outfielder. The school honored him with a scoreboard tribute Monday. Just last year, he was named a 2019 National Coach of the Year.

John was being remembered Monday as the “Kobe of the junior college baseball world.”

But his older brother says his greatest accomplishment was being a family man.

“People will always remember him as being a great coach. I’ll always remember him as just being a great father,” Jim said, adding that’s how his brother became friends with Bryant.

“They had the same morals and the same thoughts on coaching and family and they just kind of I think made a bond and became friends. They lived fairly close to each other. Kobe had a gigantic multi-million dollar home and my brother had a $1.2 million shack in California, but they had a lot of common goals for their kids and I think that’s how the bond started,” Jim said.

Bryant’s daughter, 13-year-old Gianna Bryant, played basketball with Alyssa Altobelli.

“She was a dynamic little athlete that was really getting very good at basketball,” Jim said.

They were all heading to the girls’ basketball tournament when they crashed.

“Doing what dads do. Going to watch their kids. Going to support them playing,” Jim said.

He said he’s now most concerned for the 16-year-old daughter the family leaves behind, as well as their 29-year-old son, who is also a baseball coach and soon to be married.

“I can’t even imagine what that poor girl is feeling right now,” Jim said. “Like I say, it comes in waves. When we start talking about it, it hits hard. We’ll miss him.”

Jim Altobelli and his family expects to travel to California next week for the funerals.