Air Jordan reaches new heights with place in Hall
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP)—From the coach who cut him to the players who disrespected him, Michael Jordan never forgot a slight.
Not even on the night he was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame.
Jordan’s thank you list went well beyond friends and family, including any doubters who provided him the inspiration to become a better player—perhaps the greatest one ever.
“You guys, I must say thank you very much for giving me that motivation that I definitely needed,” Jordan said.
Jordan recalled all of it Friday night, when he joined David Robinson and John Stockton, a pair of his 1992 Dream Team teammates, and coaches Jerry Sloan and C. Vivian Stringer in a distinguished class.
Jordan insisted during a press conference that the weekend wasn’t just about him, but he was clearly the star before a crowd that included former teammates Scottie Pippen and Dennis Rodman.
“He makes one big shot and everybody thinks he’s kind of cool,” Stockton joked. “I don’t get it.”
Jordan cried before beginning his acceptance speech, then entertained the crowd with memories of any slights that sent him on his way to basketball’s birthplace:
— The coach who cut him from the varsity as a North Carolina schoolboy.
“I wanted to make sure you understood: You made a mistake, dude.”
— Isiah Thomas, who allegedly orchestrated a “freezeout” of Jordan in his first All-Star game.
“I wanted to prove to you, Magic (Johnson), Larry (Bird), George (Gervin), everybody that I deserved (to be there) just as much as anybody else, and I hope over the period of my career I’ve done that without a doubt.”
— Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy—Jordan called him Pat Riley’s “little guy” — who accused Jordan of “conning” players by acting friendly toward them, then attacking them in games.
“I just so happen to be a friendly guy. I get along with everybody, but at the same time, when the light comes on, I’m as competitive as anybody you know.”
— The media who said Jordan, though a great player, would never win like Bird or Johnson.
“I had to listen to all that, and that put so much wood on that fire that it kept me each and every day trying to get better as a basketball player.”
— Lastly, Utah’s Bryon Russell. Jordan recalled meeting Russell while he was retired and playing minor league baseball in 1994—and with Sloan looking on in horror—told of how Russell insisted he could have covered him if Jordan was still playing. Russell later got two cracks at Jordan in the NBA finals, and he was the defender when Jordan hit the clinching shot to win the 1998 title.
“From this day forward, if I ever see him in shorts, I’m coming at him.”
The enshrinement ceremony took place at Springfield’s Symphony Hall, because Jordan was too big for the Hall of Fame. The move to the other building allowed for a crowd of about 2,600, more than double what the Hall can accommodate.
Robinson was enshrined first on Friday before a large San Antonio contingent that included teammates Tim Duncan(notes) and Avery Johnson, and coaches Larry Brown and Gregg Popovich. Stockton told the Spurs that his running mate, Karl Malone, was the best power forward, not Duncan.
Stringer, the first coach to lead three different teams to the Final Four, still couldn’t believe a coal miner’s daughter had made it, calling it the “most unusual, unexpected thing in the world.”
She thanked her players—“basketball daughters”—and praised her 2007 Rutgers team for the class and dignity it showed after the racially insensitive comments made by Don Imus.
“I know that I stand here on the shoulders of so many,” Stringer said.
Sloan also thanked his players, his former coaches from high school to the NBA, and late Utah owner Larry Miller for sticking with him even during the team’s bad years.
“Loyalty is the No. 1 reason I’m still coaching the Jazz,” Sloan said.
Most of the attention was on Jordan, the five-time NBA MVP, but the others in the class are some of the most accomplished in the sport. Stockton is the career leader in assists and steals, Robinson won an MVP trophy and two titles in San Antonio, and Sloan is the only coach to win 1,000 games with one team.
“Unique, unique competitors,” Stockton said during the morning press conference.
Fiery ones, too. Sloan, Stockton’s longtime coach, told two different tales of fights he was in as a hard-nosed player for Chicago.
Jordan remembered scoring around 20 points in a row late in a game to pull out a win, which was followed by a conversation with Bulls assistant Tex Winter.
“Tex reminded me that there’s no ‘I’ in team,” Jordan said. “And I looked back at Tex, I said, ‘There’s ‘I’ in win.’ So whichever way you want it.”
Jordan and Robinson were All-American college players who entered the NBA with high expectations. Sloan acknowledged he wasn’t so sure about Stockton at first—and turns out, neither was Stockton.
“I thought they’d figure me out pretty quickly. I thought the Jazz would figure out that they’d made a mistake, so first paycheck I saved every cent,” Stockton said. “I was pretty sure I was a one-year-and-out guy.”
Not Jordan—who still might not be done.
“One day you might look up and see me playing a game at 50,” he said. “Don’t laugh. Never say never, because limits, like fears, are often just an illusion.”

935 Comments
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Ball handling, Speed, Quickness, Defense (toss-up, but I gave it to Jordan), Shooting, Closer, Work Ethic, Killer Instinct, and Clutch (which is the same category as Closer), then you are looking through your Chicago Rose-colored glasses and probably need to get a new pair yourself. I would concede a tie for being clutch players, probably none better than those 2 ever, same with Killer Instinct. But as great as Mike's work ethic was, it is a consensus (among reasonable people) that Kobe's is greater. No one has ever worked harder.
Like I said before, I knew the MJ lover's wouldn't agree and that's fine with me. My favorite player was Dr. J and I personally think that Magic and Wilt were the best ever. But I also believe that Kobe's skills are better than MJ's. Will he end up with as many titles? Only time will tell, but that's not a measuring stick for me (to many incidentals involved). Kobe gives Mike his props, as he should. If you look at Kobe's first All-Star game, he didn't run from the challenge of playing Mike, though (and the youngster held his own). You can see it on You Tube (along with the rest of his highlights).
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Not Magic, not Russell, not Kobe, not Bird, not MJ, no one.
MJ is a winner in every major basketball venue he has ever been involved in.
He is in the Hall of Fame... and we are not.
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Quotes-"There was Michael Jordan, and then there was the rest of us"-Magic Johnson
"It must be God disguised as Michael Jordan"-Larry Bird
"I'm so sick and tired of all these people comparing Kobe Bryant to Michael Jordan. Kobe Bryant can't compare to Magic Johnson. Michael Jordan was on another planet! It aint even close!"-Charles Barkley
Ball handling-Jordan
Speed-Jordan
Quickness-Jordan
Passing-Jordan
Defense-Jordan
Shooting-Jordan
Range-Bryant
Rebounding-Jordan
Closer-Jordan
Work Ethic-Jordan
Finals MVPS-Jordan
League MVPS-Jordan
Allstar MVPs-Jordan
Career Ave-Jordan
Killer Instinct-Jordan
Clutch-Jordan
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I realized that Jordan was TRYING to be humorous but his monotone voice and expressions didn't allow him to pull it off very well.
I also realized that he was honoring those people who pushed him to be the best - for HIM the motivation was based on those who doubted him and those who beat him.
After understanding this -- It was clear that Jordan didn't give a great speech but his intentions was not to offend.
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He's MJ and he can do whatever he wants.........as if you didn't enjoy watching him play.
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Even when u say that MJ is a stuck up prick, the question is, did he do his best to prove himself?
Stop talking at his negative behaviour, it's not going to make u a better person.
He's done so many great things, that's what i want to learn from MJ.
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shame on you biased @#$% morons for slanting the details of the speech in an attempt to boost readership and television ratings. controversy on top of another controversy. you simply bash jordan because you're envious of him. you know very well that from the moment you were born to the moment you die, you won't be at the same page with the greatest basketball ever.
@#$% you yahoo writers. @#$% you media.
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Sounds like you have some hatred for Kobe, but I, like many others, believe Kobe is "better" than MJ. MJ was great, one of the greatest (Wilt and Magic). But they still had illegal defense calls when MJ played (his 1st 2 times around), which really opened up the court, because no one really knew what they could do without violating the rule (it was pretty complicated). In 2001 (after MJ had come back from his 2nd retirement), the NBA voted to do away with the illegal defense call as it stood and to allow zone defenses (also, coincidentally after Kobe's first title). Which allows Kobe to be double and triple teamed night in and night out. San Antonio sent the whole squad at him on a play in 2008 and he still scored and drew the foul (actually 2 fouls but they could only call one).
Zone defense was a rude awakening for a now older MJ. Limited greatly what he could do from night to night. He could only manage a couple of great performances. If Kobe played most of his career with the illegal defense calls, he would have had seasons averaging 40+, close to 50.
If you look at the 5 basic skills, Kobe definitely has the edge:
ball handling - Kobe
passing - Kobe
rebounding - Jordan
defense - about a toss-up, but give Jordan the edge
shooting - Kobe
Throw in heart, intangibles and work ethic - great as Jordan was, Kobe is greater. I know you won't agree, but that's why everyone has opinions. I just happen to be right...
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