The Case Against Michael Jordan aka. my favorite thread
mvblair
09-29-2004, 09:12 AM
This topic is based on the Top 10 Favorite Basketball Players (http://www.interbasket.net/talk/show...?threadid=2786) thread that Stuart created (if you haven't posted your favorites there, do it!!).
I decided to put this topic in the International Discussion Forum because Michael Jordan has had a huge impact on the world of basketball. Jordan is skilled, but he is not the best ever.
Jordan is the product of Gatorade and Nike commercials. His arrogance and ball-hogging are very well known. He lacks political conscience. He refused to say that sweat-shops were wrong. He married a woman after she threatened a paternity suit. The NBA let him disobey the rules of basketball consistently. He punched team-mates. He fired coaches.
I will get further in-depth in a moment, as soon as I switch computers.
Matt
09-29-2004, 09:12 AM
This topic is based on the Top 10 Favorite Basketball Players (http://www.interbasket.net/talk/show...?threadid=2786) thread that Stuart created (if you haven't posted your favorites there, do it!!).
I decided to put this topic in the International Discussion Forum because Michael Jordan has had a huge impact on the world of basketball. Jordan is skilled, but he is not the best ever.
Jordan is the product of Gatorade and Nike commercials. His arrogance and ball-hogging are very well known. He lacks political conscience. He refused to say that sweat-shops were wrong. He married a woman after she threatened a paternity suit. The NBA let him disobey the rules of basketball consistently. He punched team-mates. He fired coaches.
I will get further in-depth in a moment, as soon as I switch computers.
Matt
mvblair
09-29-2004, 09:57 AM
Jordan is the product of Gatorade and Nike commercials. His arrogance and ball-hogging are very well known. He lacks political conscience. He refused to say that sweat-shops were wrong. He gambled money away without abandon. He married a woman after she threatened a paternity suit. The NBA let him disobey the rules of basketball consistently. He punched team-mates. He fired coaches.
Jordan is the product of Gatorade and Nike commercials
Gatorade and Nike and Oscar Meyer Hot-Dogs and Armani and McDonald's created Jordan's image. Before he was in commercials, he was another good player. After the commercials, he became untouchable. "Be Like Mike" they told us, and somehow, kids wanted his shoes, because these commercials told them they could jump higher, and that "it must be the shoes." How such a thoughtful and intelligent man like Spike Lee could associate himself with such drivel is beyond me.
His arrogance and ball-hogging are well known
In "Jordan Rules: The Inside Story of a Turbulent Season with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls" his ball-hogging tendencies are discussed (and that was written after his first championship). During his first comeback, Jordan actually called his team-mates "my supporting cast." He yelled at Scottie Pippen on the court after the game when Pippen took the last shot and won the game in the '98 Finals, game 2, because Jordan wanted the ball. His arrogance goes so far that he calls himself "Michael Jordan," using the third-person.
He lacks political conscience
When the Chicago Bulls won their first NBA championship, Jordan didn't bother to visit with the president of the US. One of his team-mates (Craig Hodges or Bill Cartwright) brought a list of policies that President Bush should change.
He refused to say that sweat-shops were wrong
It's true. His company, Nike, was manufacturing products on the backs of slave-labor in Asia. The Indonesians who made his shoes were 10-years-old and 88% of them were malnurished. Jordan knew about this, was asked about, said that he would visit the factories and look into the situation. He didn't. Later, he said "I don't know the complete situation. Why should I? I'm trying to do my job. Hopefully, Nike will do the right thing." Chris Webber started a public fued with Nike over the same situation, not afraid of hurting his own "brand name."
He punched team-mates
Well, he punched team-mates Scottie Pippen and Steve Kerr on seperate occasions.
He married a woman after she threatened a paternity suit
Jordan paid women to keep quiet after he was married to Juanita in a Las Vegas shotgun wedding. Juanita had already given birth to Jordan's 10-month-old child and was threatening Jordan with a paternity suit.
The NBA let him disobey the rules of basketball consistently
I repeat this annecdote a lot: at the end of the final game in 1998, Michael Jordan pushed Byron Russell with his left arm, and then took the shot to win the game. He cheated. It was obvious. The NBA let him get away with it. That was his signature move. After a game in the middle of the 1992 season, Jordan never fouled out. Never. He seemed to always have 5 fouls, but he never fouled out. Only 10 times before 1992 did he foul out. Even Steve Kerr, Jordan's team-mate for years, admitted that Jordan got the advantages from the officials and the NBA.
Given all of this, why do we still love Jordan? Why do we think he is the best ever?
Michael Jordan represents the greedy corruption that is so prevelant in US American society. He is a member of the super-wealthy class of individuals who are superior than others in so many ways. Jordan holds no values, he holds a brand name.
Matt
09-29-2004, 09:57 AM
Jordan is the product of Gatorade and Nike commercials. His arrogance and ball-hogging are very well known. He lacks political conscience. He refused to say that sweat-shops were wrong. He gambled money away without abandon. He married a woman after she threatened a paternity suit. The NBA let him disobey the rules of basketball consistently. He punched team-mates. He fired coaches.
Jordan is the product of Gatorade and Nike commercials
Gatorade and Nike and Oscar Meyer Hot-Dogs and Armani and McDonald's created Jordan's image. Before he was in commercials, he was another good player. After the commercials, he became untouchable. "Be Like Mike" they told us, and somehow, kids wanted his shoes, because these commercials told them they could jump higher, and that "it must be the shoes." How such a thoughtful and intelligent man like Spike Lee could associate himself with such drivel is beyond me.
His arrogance and ball-hogging are well known
In "Jordan Rules: The Inside Story of a Turbulent Season with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls" his ball-hogging tendencies are discussed (and that was written after his first championship). During his first comeback, Jordan actually called his team-mates "my supporting cast." He yelled at Scottie Pippen on the court after the game when Pippen took the last shot and won the game in the '98 Finals, game 2, because Jordan wanted the ball. His arrogance goes so far that he calls himself "Michael Jordan," using the third-person.
He lacks political conscience
When the Chicago Bulls won their first NBA championship, Jordan didn't bother to visit with the president of the US. One of his team-mates (Craig Hodges or Bill Cartwright) brought a list of policies that President Bush should change.
He refused to say that sweat-shops were wrong
It's true. His company, Nike, was manufacturing products on the backs of slave-labor in Asia. The Indonesians who made his shoes were 10-years-old and 88% of them were malnurished. Jordan knew about this, was asked about, said that he would visit the factories and look into the situation. He didn't. Later, he said "I don't know the complete situation. Why should I? I'm trying to do my job. Hopefully, Nike will do the right thing." Chris Webber started a public fued with Nike over the same situation, not afraid of hurting his own "brand name."
He punched team-mates
Well, he punched team-mates Scottie Pippen and Steve Kerr on seperate occasions.
He married a woman after she threatened a paternity suit
Jordan paid women to keep quiet after he was married to Juanita in a Las Vegas shotgun wedding. Juanita had already given birth to Jordan's 10-month-old child and was threatening Jordan with a paternity suit.
The NBA let him disobey the rules of basketball consistently
I repeat this annecdote a lot: at the end of the final game in 1998, Michael Jordan pushed Byron Russell with his left arm, and then took the shot to win the game. He cheated. It was obvious. The NBA let him get away with it. That was his signature move. After a game in the middle of the 1992 season, Jordan never fouled out. Never. He seemed to always have 5 fouls, but he never fouled out. Only 10 times before 1992 did he foul out. Even Steve Kerr, Jordan's team-mate for years, admitted that Jordan got the advantages from the officials and the NBA.
Given all of this, why do we still love Jordan? Why do we think he is the best ever?
Michael Jordan represents the greedy corruption that is so prevelant in US American society. He is a member of the super-wealthy class of individuals who are superior than others in so many ways. Jordan holds no values, he holds a brand name.
Matt
K-2 Young
09-29-2004, 10:39 AM
at the same time, he helped makes basketball more popular. If it was not for him and my dad watching a bulls game when I was 4 years old, maybe I would have never become a basketball fan.
I dont think you should blame him for being succesful, everyone of us would love to be in a Gatorade commercial, like MJ, Arroyo, and other b-ball players.
There is a lot of arrogant people in thew world, one more would not be a harm, Dejan Bodiroga once threated to punch a puertorrican waterboy, Piculin Ortiz had some troubles with fans, Tito Trinidad had a babygirl out of his marriage. No one is perfect, I never expected MJ to be perfect.
I would not want to visit the president of the US neither.
You got a point on the childrens from Asia.
I have punched teammates.
Perssonal error. COME ON!!!
If you are the scorer of your team, u will see a lot of pushing and shoving, so Jordan saw someone pushing him, he will push him back. He crossed over Bryon, he pushed him, so what?? He was going to shoot it over him anyway. Yes, he had the favor of the league, but he also was an awesome player, you cant blame his success cuz he was protected by the league, there are a lot of things in basketball the league cant control.
09-29-2004, 10:39 AM
at the same time, he helped makes basketball more popular. If it was not for him and my dad watching a bulls game when I was 4 years old, maybe I would have never become a basketball fan.
I dont think you should blame him for being succesful, everyone of us would love to be in a Gatorade commercial, like MJ, Arroyo, and other b-ball players.
There is a lot of arrogant people in thew world, one more would not be a harm, Dejan Bodiroga once threated to punch a puertorrican waterboy, Piculin Ortiz had some troubles with fans, Tito Trinidad had a babygirl out of his marriage. No one is perfect, I never expected MJ to be perfect.
I would not want to visit the president of the US neither.
You got a point on the childrens from Asia.
I have punched teammates.
Perssonal error. COME ON!!!
If you are the scorer of your team, u will see a lot of pushing and shoving, so Jordan saw someone pushing him, he will push him back. He crossed over Bryon, he pushed him, so what?? He was going to shoot it over him anyway. Yes, he had the favor of the league, but he also was an awesome player, you cant blame his success cuz he was protected by the league, there are a lot of things in basketball the league cant control.
BallStorm
09-29-2004, 10:53 AM
Is it really Jordan himself who is to blame , or the system . I mean , had it not been jordan , it would have been another player and the same speech . As you pointed out , Jordan was a great player who was turned into a sort of god thanks to nike or Gatorade. Now , everybody is allowed to have his own opinion on what a man is supposed to do or not. Is it right to play money? Is it right to cheat is wife? Those question depend on moral , and , IMO , should not be mixed with the main issue , which is that the system need some people to keep growing. In this perspective , Jordan is/was a simple screw in an immense machine that nobody control anymore.
09-29-2004, 10:53 AM
Is it really Jordan himself who is to blame , or the system . I mean , had it not been jordan , it would have been another player and the same speech . As you pointed out , Jordan was a great player who was turned into a sort of god thanks to nike or Gatorade. Now , everybody is allowed to have his own opinion on what a man is supposed to do or not. Is it right to play money? Is it right to cheat is wife? Those question depend on moral , and , IMO , should not be mixed with the main issue , which is that the system need some people to keep growing. In this perspective , Jordan is/was a simple screw in an immense machine that nobody control anymore.
K-2 Young
09-29-2004, 11:03 AM
Originally posted by BallStorm
In this perspective , Jordan is/was a simple screw in an immense machine that nobody control anymore.
that avatar looks like an intelligent guy, dont change it, it fits you.
Nice quote
09-29-2004, 11:03 AM
Originally posted by BallStorm
In this perspective , Jordan is/was a simple screw in an immense machine that nobody control anymore.
that avatar looks like an intelligent guy, dont change it, it fits you.
Nice quote
mvblair
09-30-2004, 07:25 AM
Originally posted by BallStorm
Is it really Jordan himself who is to blame , or the system .... Those question depend on moral , and , IMO , should not be mixed with the main issue , which is that the system need some people to keep growing. In this perspective , Jordan is/was a simple screw in an immense machine that nobody control anymore.
Good point, good point. The system, David Stern's system, set Jordan up to be a great player.
Josean, yes Jordan was a fantastic player. But I'm trying to say that he was not the best ever. Jordan didn't change the game like Bill Russell, the game changed for Jordan.
Part of the problem is that we, as basketball fans, annointed him King, Queen, and Court of basketball before his career was finished.
You're both right that his personal life shouldn't effect how we view his game. But it should effect how we view him as a person. He's not a god. He's mortal and has the same flaws as the rest of the rich aristocracy.
But other basketball players were better than Jordan off the court, players like Olden Polynice (who did a hunger strike to protest US policy in Haiti while playing with Detroit), Chris Webber (who bit Nike, his own sponsor, for violating international labor laws), the Chicago Bull (who gave President George HW Bush an agenda), David Robinson (who spent years building his own school for low-income children), Dikembe Mutombo (who built an entire hospital in Congo), Adonal Foyle (who spends millions for Democracy Matters), etc, etc, etc.
Yet Jordan is still "the best ever," even given all those flaws in his character and his game (that the system gave him).
It's like, at best Kobe Bryant is an adulterer who lied to police and his family to protect his own sexual indescretions. But people still go to his games waving signs of support. I hate that.
Matt
09-30-2004, 07:25 AM
Originally posted by BallStorm
Is it really Jordan himself who is to blame , or the system .... Those question depend on moral , and , IMO , should not be mixed with the main issue , which is that the system need some people to keep growing. In this perspective , Jordan is/was a simple screw in an immense machine that nobody control anymore.
Good point, good point. The system, David Stern's system, set Jordan up to be a great player.
Josean, yes Jordan was a fantastic player. But I'm trying to say that he was not the best ever. Jordan didn't change the game like Bill Russell, the game changed for Jordan.
Part of the problem is that we, as basketball fans, annointed him King, Queen, and Court of basketball before his career was finished.
You're both right that his personal life shouldn't effect how we view his game. But it should effect how we view him as a person. He's not a god. He's mortal and has the same flaws as the rest of the rich aristocracy.
But other basketball players were better than Jordan off the court, players like Olden Polynice (who did a hunger strike to protest US policy in Haiti while playing with Detroit), Chris Webber (who bit Nike, his own sponsor, for violating international labor laws), the Chicago Bull (who gave President George HW Bush an agenda), David Robinson (who spent years building his own school for low-income children), Dikembe Mutombo (who built an entire hospital in Congo), Adonal Foyle (who spends millions for Democracy Matters), etc, etc, etc.
Yet Jordan is still "the best ever," even given all those flaws in his character and his game (that the system gave him).
It's like, at best Kobe Bryant is an adulterer who lied to police and his family to protect his own sexual indescretions. But people still go to his games waving signs of support. I hate that.
Matt
K-2 Young
09-30-2004, 07:48 AM
well, I dont consider Jordan a god, much less my god, and yes, there are better persons in the NBA besides Jordan ( Ostertag donated a kidney to his sister ). But, when we go to basketball, Jordan was the best player of his generation. I am not saying he was the best ever, just the best while he played.
The system, David Stern's system, set Jordan up to be a great player.
He was a great player by himself, the system made him a popular great player. Dont blame Jordan, blame the NBA.
09-30-2004, 07:48 AM
well, I dont consider Jordan a god, much less my god, and yes, there are better persons in the NBA besides Jordan ( Ostertag donated a kidney to his sister ). But, when we go to basketball, Jordan was the best player of his generation. I am not saying he was the best ever, just the best while he played.
The system, David Stern's system, set Jordan up to be a great player.
He was a great player by himself, the system made him a popular great player. Dont blame Jordan, blame the NBA.
Kenzuke_Nakanomachi
09-30-2004, 12:20 PM
I used to hate Michael Jordan and his annoying fame.
Yes, he was turned into a sort of god by Nike and Gatorade.
But, COME ON, guys, he IS the best player ever.
Gatorade didn´t score that points. Jordan did.
Nike didn´t fly towards the basket. Jordan did.
Did Gatorade exist in 1986? Michael averaged 37.1 points per game that season.
He was a bad person indeed. But it doesn´t change the fact that he was the greatest basketball player of all time.
09-30-2004, 12:20 PM
I used to hate Michael Jordan and his annoying fame.
Yes, he was turned into a sort of god by Nike and Gatorade.
But, COME ON, guys, he IS the best player ever.
Gatorade didn´t score that points. Jordan did.
Nike didn´t fly towards the basket. Jordan did.
Did Gatorade exist in 1986? Michael averaged 37.1 points per game that season.
He was a bad person indeed. But it doesn´t change the fact that he was the greatest basketball player of all time.
mvblair
09-30-2004, 12:42 PM
Originally posted by Kenzuke_Nakanomachi
But, COME ON, guys, he IS the best player ever.
I disagree. Here are a few examples:
Gatorade didn´t score that points. Jordan did.
In the NBA alone, here are the top three All-Time scorers:
1 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 38387
2 Karl Malone, 36928
3 Michael Jordan, 32292
Jordan had nearly 4,000 fewer points than Karl Malone and 6,000 fewer than Abdul-Jabbar. Oscar Schmidt scored 46,725 points in his career.
Nike didn´t fly towards the basket. Jordan did.
Well, Michael Jordan couldn't jump 12 feet like Michael Wilson, but Wilson certainly isn't the best basketball player ever.
Did Gatorade exist in 1986? Michael averaged 37.1 points per game that season.
Yes, Gatorade was invented in 1965.
Wilt Chamberlain averaged 50.4 points per game one year.
However, Jordan is ranked 14th for the most turnovers in the NBA with 2932 over his career.
Matt
09-30-2004, 12:42 PM
Originally posted by Kenzuke_Nakanomachi
But, COME ON, guys, he IS the best player ever.
I disagree. Here are a few examples:
Gatorade didn´t score that points. Jordan did.
In the NBA alone, here are the top three All-Time scorers:
1 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 38387
2 Karl Malone, 36928
3 Michael Jordan, 32292
Jordan had nearly 4,000 fewer points than Karl Malone and 6,000 fewer than Abdul-Jabbar. Oscar Schmidt scored 46,725 points in his career.
Nike didn´t fly towards the basket. Jordan did.
Well, Michael Jordan couldn't jump 12 feet like Michael Wilson, but Wilson certainly isn't the best basketball player ever.
Did Gatorade exist in 1986? Michael averaged 37.1 points per game that season.
Yes, Gatorade was invented in 1965.
Wilt Chamberlain averaged 50.4 points per game one year.
However, Jordan is ranked 14th for the most turnovers in the NBA with 2932 over his career.
Matt
stuart
09-30-2004, 01:43 PM
Aw.
Cmon MV
I don't think you even believe what you are saying, that, or you are just bitter from all the times Mike sent your Cavs home.
I mean that in the nicest of ways.
He has less than 4000 pts than Karl, but he also has played 3-5 less seasons...
Trust me, as much as I like international players, Jordan would have scored 56,000 pts in Brazil. I think people in Brazil would even agree.
I also think if you took any great player in the NBA (ok, most all) you would find just as many, if not more, skeletons in their closets. They're basketball players, not saints.
Stuart
09-30-2004, 01:43 PM
Aw.
Cmon MV
I don't think you even believe what you are saying, that, or you are just bitter from all the times Mike sent your Cavs home.
I mean that in the nicest of ways.
He has less than 4000 pts than Karl, but he also has played 3-5 less seasons...
Trust me, as much as I like international players, Jordan would have scored 56,000 pts in Brazil. I think people in Brazil would even agree.
I also think if you took any great player in the NBA (ok, most all) you would find just as many, if not more, skeletons in their closets. They're basketball players, not saints.
Stuart
Kenzuke_Nakanomachi
09-30-2004, 02:02 PM
Michael has a career average of 30.1 ppg. The best ever. Kareem, K.Malone and W.Chamberlain are not at the same level of scoring.
Anyway, they are all great players. Scoring less points than Kareem Abdul Jabbar isn´t a dishonor, is it?
More than just a scoring machine, Jordan also showed that he was a leader and a winner by guiding Chicago to a trio of NBA Championships. As a rookie, he joined a Bulls team that had won only 28 games the previous season. By 1991 the club had topped 60 wins during the regular season while marching to the first of three consecutive titles.
If anything, Jordan was even more spectacular in postseason play. Prior to his retirement he had averaged below 30 points per game in the postseason only once (29.3 ppg in his rookie year). In the 1985-86 postseason he poured in an astounding 43.7 points per contest. He left basketball temporarily in 1993 as a three-time Finals MVP, and he owned a career playoff average of 34.7 points per game, the best in NBA history. He also had two Olympic gold medals to show for his participation on Team USA in 1984 and 1992. (come on, you knew all that. You can read the rest of his bio in NBA.com, but we know you don´t need it.
He is the best player ever. You don´t like him. I don´t like him. But we can´t change that.
09-30-2004, 02:02 PM
Michael has a career average of 30.1 ppg. The best ever. Kareem, K.Malone and W.Chamberlain are not at the same level of scoring.
Anyway, they are all great players. Scoring less points than Kareem Abdul Jabbar isn´t a dishonor, is it?
More than just a scoring machine, Jordan also showed that he was a leader and a winner by guiding Chicago to a trio of NBA Championships. As a rookie, he joined a Bulls team that had won only 28 games the previous season. By 1991 the club had topped 60 wins during the regular season while marching to the first of three consecutive titles.
If anything, Jordan was even more spectacular in postseason play. Prior to his retirement he had averaged below 30 points per game in the postseason only once (29.3 ppg in his rookie year). In the 1985-86 postseason he poured in an astounding 43.7 points per contest. He left basketball temporarily in 1993 as a three-time Finals MVP, and he owned a career playoff average of 34.7 points per game, the best in NBA history. He also had two Olympic gold medals to show for his participation on Team USA in 1984 and 1992. (come on, you knew all that. You can read the rest of his bio in NBA.com, but we know you don´t need it.
He is the best player ever. You don´t like him. I don´t like him. But we can´t change that.
steph
09-30-2004, 03:57 PM
im going to end it all
MICHEAL JORDAN IS THE BEST PLAYER EVER!!!!!!! NO MATTER WHAT!!!!
nope dont want to hear it
talk all u want but your wrong
no no not listening
steph
p.s. we love MJ
09-30-2004, 03:57 PM
im going to end it all
MICHEAL JORDAN IS THE BEST PLAYER EVER!!!!!!! NO MATTER WHAT!!!!
nope dont want to hear it
talk all u want but your wrong
no no not listening
steph
p.s. we love MJ
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