Kobe Bryant's career yielded some of the most amazing statistics and moments in NBA history.

Nobody can forget when he scored 81 points on January 22, 2006. It was a season where he averaged a career-high 35.4 points per game.

Then, fast forward to the 2007-08 season when Kobe won his only MVP award, eventually losing the Boston Celtics in the NBA finals.

However, sandwiched between those seasons is a ridiculous stretch of play during the 2006-07 season, where Bryant put up some of the greatest numbers the league has ever seen.

It was 10 years ago this week that Bryant put together a week that will go down in history.

The Lakers had lost six straight games. In fact it was their second six-game losing streak of a recent stretch the was sandwiched around a four-game winning streak.

Kobe was trying to lift a team that featured Smush Parker as its starting point guard back to the playoffs after missing the postseason two years prior and being bounced by the Phoenix Suns in the first round the year before.

Coach Phil Jackson's team also featured starters Luke Walton and Lamar Odom, along with second-year center Andrew Bynum and former first overall pick Kwame Brown.

Bryant and the Lakers hosted Portland on March 16 and Kobe went off for 65 points in a 116-111 victory, eclipsing his season high of points, which was 58. In the game, Kobe was 23 of 39 from the field, including 8-of-12 shooting on 3-pointers. He was 11-12 from the free-throw line, and also added seven rebounds, three assists and three steals.

Two nights later, Kobe and the Lakers played host to the Minnesota Timberwolves, winning 109-102. Kobe, who was 28 at the time, scored 50 points on 17 of 35 shooting. He was 4 of 9 on 3-pointers and went 12 of 14 from the line. He added six rebounds, three assists and three steals.

The Lakers hit the road four nights later, topping Memphis 121-119 behind 60 points from Kobe on 20-of-39 shooting. He connected 3 of 7 of his 3-point tries and was 17 of 18 from the line, adding five rebounds and four assists.

In the game, Kobe became the first player in 20 years to score 50 points in three straight games since Michael Jordan last did it.

The four-game stretch closed on March 23 with the Lakers visiting the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets in New Orleans, winning 111-105 against Chris Paul's bunch. Kobe scored 50 points, making 16 of 29 field-goal attempts. He was 2 of 5 on 3-pointers and made all 16 of his free throws. Kobe added seven rebounds.

In the ridiculous four-game stretch, Bryant ended up averaging 56.3 points, 6.3 rebounds and 2.8 assists. It was the second time in league history that someone scored 50 points in four straight games, joining Wilt Chamberlain.

Kobe actually scored 43 points in the next game, and then reached the 50-point plateau three more times in the rest of the regular season. In all, he hit 50 points 10 times that year.

The team would again qualify for the playoffs, falling to the Suns in the first round for the second straight season. The Lakers lost that one in five games, with Kobe scoring 45 points in L.A.'s only win.

But no Lakers fans will forget that week in March when Kobe was in rare form, even for his extremely high standards.