Saturday, October 9th, 2010 at 9:00 am  |  220 responses

The Blueprint

There will never be another Michael Jordan.

Point blank, Michael Jordan is the greatest player ever.  In our newly released SLAM Presents Jordan 2010, Russ Bengtson breaks down why that is. (If you’re feeling this essay, be sure to pick up a copy of the special issue now). — Ed.

SLAM Presents Jordan: Michael Jordan Essay.

by Russ Bengtson

There will never be another Michael Jordan. Sometimes it’s best to get the obvious out of the way right out front, and this feels like one of those times. So, there. “The Best there Ever Was, The Best there Ever Will Be”? Yep. It’s right there on his statue in front of the United Center, literally carved in literal stone, and thus inarguable. So that’s that. Right?

Maybe. Michael Jordan wasn’t the best at everything, and he didn’t do everything first. Bill Russell finished with double fistfuls of rings, Wilt Chamberlain averaged 50 points a game, Dr. J dunked from the free-throw line. In a sense, Jordan was the ultimate aggregator-he took the best of everyone who came before and rolled it up into a ready-for-prime-time package. He threw down ridiculous dunks, scored bucketloads of points and won championships. Even played defense and practiced. And fortunately for him (and for us), his rise coincided with the NBA’s. They lifted each other to heights never before reached. Jordan was the right player at the right time, and the world conspired to make him a god.

Not to say it was all manufactured. Far from it. Jordan’s unedited NBA career spooled out like the most implausible of movies, from dropping 63 points on the 1986 Celtics (in their house, no less) to that last, hanging jumper over Bryon Russell. Even the Wizards epilogue, jarring in its entirety, provided moments to savor. Scoring 50 as a gimpy 40-year-old? Who does that? Not to mention two more All-Star Games and the priceless gift of allowing countless more fans to say they saw him play live. In the meantime-even while the real Jordan was still in his prime-a fruitless search for the next Jordan went on.

Paradoxically, there has been no next Jordan, there can be no next Jordan, for the simple reason that there was a first Jordan. “If I could be like Mike”? No chance. His career was structured in such a way that it can never be duplicated, only imitated. It wasn’t perfect-after all, his teams did get taken to two Game 7s (which they, um, won)-but it was so close that it may as well have been. The comparisons will always be there, and everyone who strives will always fall short. Fall too short, and you’re Harold Miner. Come too close, and you’re Kobe Bryant. The greatest tragedy of Kobe’s career-if you can find tragedy in a five-times-and-counting NBA Champion and certain first-ballot Hall of Famer-is that it cannot be viewed except through the Jordan filter. (It doesn’t help that his championships were all won playing for Michael’s old coach.) Five rings? Sure, but he’s only been Finals MVP twice. And he was only regular-season MVP once. Better than Jordan? Yeah, right.

Here’s the thing: Jordan built his career on the foundation laid down by those who came before him; Dr. J and David Thompson among them. This is how it always worked. Others who came after were expected to do the same. But Jordan didn’t leave much room for future players to build a legacy of their own. While those he emulated had fallen short or left things unfinished, Jordan didn’t. How do you build on a mansion? The game itself changed, and Jordan was the one who changed it. It’s hard to believe that any one player will ever usher in that sort of change again. Jordan defeated all the archetypes, expanded the game, created an archetype of his own (the basketball Terminator-a relentless cyborg covered in a thin human shell). It’s not even a question of whether anyone can equal his greatness-rather, is his greatness even one that can be equalled?

It might not be possible to follow in his footsteps at all. The fragmentation of the media has taken away the chance of having that mythology built up. The fragmentation of the NBA (and the apparent willingness of even the biggest stars to leave their teams) has taken away the chance to battle and battle before overcoming a particular challenge. And the battles aren’t the same anyway-teams like the Bad Boy Pistons and the Riley Knicks are as much of an anachronism as set shots and underhanded free-throws. Beat a team now, and another rises to take its place. There are no clear-cut heroes, no unmistakable villains, just an ever-changing pool of challengers. It’s hard to be king of the mountain when the mountain itself is gone.

It goes both ways, of course. In a way, Jordan was fortunate to have played when he did. We don’t know what the effect of a 24-hour news cycle would have been on MJ’s career, how he would have been seen filtered through the eyes of hungry bloggers, pop-culture-addled columnists and Rachel Nichols. When Sam Smith wrote The Jordan Rules, it was a radical act-the unmasking of a superhero. Now? Re-reading it 20 years later, what are the shocks? That he was vulgar? That he was competitive? His Hall of Fame speech was more damning. But for the first six years of his career, the public perception of Michael Jordan was shaped by fawning beatwriters, Sports Illustrated profiles, the NBA on NBC, and Nike’s ad agencies. By the time The Jordan Rules went to press, his perceived personality was more or less set in stone.

Compare that to someone like LeBron James, who’s been a highly scrutinized public property since he was in high school. Unlike Jordan, he wasn’t allowed to grow within that protective umbrella, to just play basketball while the rest was taken care of. Now? Controlled access has become a thing of the past, what with the emergence of Flipcams and camera phones and Twitter accounts. No longer do we need to wait on the Curry Kirkpatrick stories and the Walter Iooss photos and the Wieden + Kennedy campaigns to get the filtered truthiness. Like HBO Sports says, nothing is out of bounds.

So what happens? Let’s say LeBron averages a triple-double for a season (although it seems highly unlikely), or 40 points a game, or wins eight NBA titles (forgetting for the moment that just equaling Jordan would require him to win at least one Finals game, then-appropriately enough-23 more). Would he be viewed as Jordan’s better then? Maybe not. Leaving Cleveland and teaming with Dwyane Wade in Miami took him off the One True Path-and all it takes is a single misstep to fall. Not to mention being just like Mike, only better, simply doesn’t cut it. You have to change the game.

But who knows? Maybe things will be viewed differently in the future. Maybe the LeBron/Wade/Chris Bosh Heat team does change the game in some fundamental way. Maybe 100 years from now, when the topic of the greatest is debated by people who never saw Michael or Kobe or LeBron play live, there will be a sense of objectivity that doesn’t-that can’t-exist in our time. After all, historians love to revise. Maybe when emotion is stripped away and careers are judged simply by the numbers, someone else will be viewed as the best there ever was, the best that ever will be.

But probably not.

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  • KB8toSG8

    @smooth…..Wilt demolished every record on the court with his unbelievable play and continues to hold them even after 50 freaking years. I would bet my entire life that his records will NEVER be broken. Never. Magic and Bird saved the NBA when it was spiraling downwards. Jordan expanded the brand value of the NBA and took it to new heights. You decide what you find more important in determining the GOAT.

  • KB8toSG8

    Just forget about my Ritchmond comment…. :P He could definitely slash and shoot. Dribble and penetrate. I’m not so sure. PS. Is there anyway I can combine all my posts into one? I always have like 3-4 posts in a row and would like to know how to do that.

  • Yaboy20

    @ kb8tosg8 The pace of the game was so much faster that’s a huge advantage for wilt if both teams are gettin more then 100 possessions a game of course his stats would be thru the roof just cuz of the pace of play. His stats were inflated man I think kobes 81 was better then wilts 100 jus for the fact that game is so much slower and there aren’t as many possessions and he mostly shot jumpers that whole game. Wilt was a great player but he benefited heavily from the way his era played. If they played the way the NBA is played now there is no way he puts up a 50 25 jus cuz there aren’t as many opportunities to get those points and boards

  • Ali

    G.O.A.T Jordan, hands down! In my eyes the criteria for G.O.A.T is the path taken to the O’ Brien trophy. Bird, MJ, Russell, Kobe, Magic, My TOP 5 Dead or Alive! Question is can Kobe last another 2,3,4 years, and can he lead the Lakers to a few more titles before his exit? What will everyone say when/if the Lakers beat the Heat giving kobe #6 #7? Just trying to get some shi* started up in here, Hahahah!

  • PapaBearATL

    MJ made basketball better, bigger and inspired a world, not just a region or nation. I think that is what makes him the GOAT.

  • http://sdklff.com Jukai

    The Philosopher:
    Very famous story. I think you should read it. Here it is:
    —————
    Of all his memories of Wilt Chamberlain, the one that stood out for Larry Brown happened long after Chamberlain’s professional career was over.
    On a summer day in the early 1980s at the Men’s Gym on the UCLA campus, Chamberlain showed up to take part in one of the high-octane pickup games that the arena constantly attracted. Brown was the coach of the Bruins back then, and Chamberlain often drove to UCLA from his home in Bel Air, Calif.
    “Magic Johnson used to run the games,” Brown recalled Tuesday after hearing that Chamberlain, his friend, had died at the age of 63, “and he called a couple of chintzy fouls and a goaltending on Wilt.
    “So Wilt said: ‘There will be no more layups in this gym,’ and he blocked every shot after that. That’s the truth, I saw it. He didn’t let one (of Johnson’s) shots get to the rim.”
    Chamberlain would have been in his mid-40s at the time, a decade removed from one of the greatest careers any basketball player ever produced. But the advancing years meant little to Chamberlain in terms of physical conditioning.
    —————
    Took that straight from ESPN. I’ll cite it for you if you want (hint hint something you should work on hint hint).
    I don’t think Magic Johnson could make much headway against Wilt. Sorry.

  • The Philosopher

    @KB8toSG8:
    All I’m saying is that Wilt would have to guard Earvin on the perimeter. He can’t just leave Magic. Wilt cannot guard Earvin off the dribble, and in the post, Magic has moves. That junior sky hook was an underrated part of his offense. He has won Championships(1) with that shot.
    He can get it off on Wilt. His passing would be his bread and butter though, like it is, anyway.
    And, even before the rebound comes off of the rim, Magic is already surveying the floor, so…
    Wilt, being a center, is not used to having to sprint up court every time his man (a center) gets a rebound, and we all know that Earvin likes to push. By the time Wilt gets to half court, Magic has either scored, assisted, or set up an assist for another teammate.
    As far as the other guards I mentioned, it was about who would have a good game against Michael, hence having a good game against Kobe.
    Everything of course, is arguable.

  • The Philosopher

    Jukai:
    I read that story.
    And, you’re right.
    I do need to work on that.
    It’s just that I do not lie up here when referencing something that I heard, or about anything up here.
    My credibility is important to me.
    My opinions may not be correct, but I do not mean any harm.

  • The Philosopher

    And, again, Earvin is not going to light up Wilt.
    He’ll get double digits, though.

  • http://nba.com/cavaliers Stephon

    Nice article. Much respect to the Greatest Basketball Player of ALL Time.

  • ryan

    Conversely respect due to Wilt Chamberlain, Isiah Thomas, Elgin Baylor, Bill Russell, Hakeem Olajuwon, Mitch Richmond, Joe Dumars, Dennis Rodman, Oscar Robertson (the greatest guard ever) people need to learn their history before writing ignorant ass articles (and magazines about this clown Jordan).

  • ryan

    F MJ,the Chicago Bulls and Slam for publishing this crap.

  • truthteller

    The only reason why Kobe is hated so much is that he is the closest thing to MJ! And in some many people’s eyes, MJ can do no wrong! he was perfect and made no mistake!

  • Justin

    The one on one comparisons are done. Of course Wilt couldn’t guard Magic on the perimiter, any more than he could guard MJ either. But nobody could guard Wilt because he’s bigger and stronger, and someone else also said it before me. Comparing what would happen one on one in a team sport is just ridiculous. @KB8…Yes, I said simpleton finger roll. When you’re over 7′ tall, can stand under the hoops, and have a better than average vertical leap for a big man, it becomes very easy. Put yourself on a 9′ hoop with much smaller guys and see if you can’t do the same.
    @ Philosopher…Scottie saved MJ’s legacy? Really? Hahahahaha! Magic is 3″ taller than Michael, so naturally it’s a tough check and putting a taller, longer Pippen on Magic was very smart. You should read Magic’s autobiography, if you haven’t already. You might find it interesting when he states himself that Michael Jordan is a better basketball player than himself and is the G.O.A.T. Magic believed he could hang with Jordan until the ’92 Olympics but it was in practice where his mind was changed. You’d be interested to know also, that in their ’91 Finals Michael was actually out-assisting Magic up until the final game. You might want to take into consideration what the actual players say, instead of opinions of fans. I’d say they know best wouldn’t you?

  • The Philosopher

    Justin:
    I do not want to make it sound like Magic can guard Wilt, because of course he cannot.
    I’m glad you brought it back to my original point about Michael not being the Greatest Of All Times.
    And, I’ve watched the 91′ Finals…
    You are right. It was smart to put Scottie on Earvin.
    It saved Michael’s Legacy. It turned out to be the most important coaching move in NBA History, arguably. It was the most important move in Jordan’s career.

  • The Philosopher

    One more thing.
    Do you think Earvin Johnson Jr. would be the billionaire he is now if he ever said publically that he is better than Jordan?
    In basketball, you cannot say anything that may be construed as “anti Jordan.”
    You just can’t.
    No one takes shots at Jordan in basketball.
    Except Isiah…

  • Justin

    Philosopher, you’ve brought up that whole “Do you think he would ever say that publicly” thing before and it doesn’t hold water. That autobiography A) Came out a little while after the Olympics and was being written before during and after and B) Don’t you think saying it in a book about yourself is saying it publicly? What’s he going to do? Hold a press conference? His businesses were not thriving as wildly as they are back then either. And yes, his businesses are successful and got off the ground on the basis of is name but not because people thought he was the greatest basketball player ever.
    You also need to clarify how switching Pippen to guard Magic somehow saved Jordan’s legacy. Jordan having trouble with a bigger, taller, top 5 guard that ever lived is hardly a knock on Jordan the defender. Is his legacy tarnished because he had trouble guarding Iverson too? Nobody looks back and says “Well, Michael had trouble with certain players so maybe he wasn’t as good as everyone says”. Hell, Magic had trouble with EVERYONE he guarded. His legacy is pretty safe I think.
    You do get props for biggest exaggeration line in SLAM history with “most important coaching move in history”.

  • smooth

    @ kb8sg8 how tall was wilt like 7 foot Right well look way back then when he was such a “super star” and tell me who was close to his hieght and micheal jordan didnt change the game by himself there was other players in the league that did so too.

  • smooth

    and mj is realy really good but he didnt do it by himself like some people think but he was some what a really good team player that played on a team that had good players like sp and big d that new there role, “give it to mj”, if the bulls didnt have mj and had the other allstars they would probly make a deep playoff run but never to championship not without mj

  • smooth

    and kobe and lbj is not better than mj so for all yall people who keep coparing them to the great mj quit it, its geting old. mabey in the future but not now because i see no comparison

  • http://www.acb.com Alan

    OK, OK
    So it’s all about the numbers, right? Then 11 makes Russell the best ever, as it it about winning. But then, 50 PPG and 25 RPG in a single season, are those better numbers? Then Wilt is the GOAT. But if it’s about number then a triple-double each game would make it, so The Big O is the best ever. Or it may be by number of MVP’s? Then Kareem is at the top. But if you only care about who wins, then Final’s MVP? So it must be MJ. But then, where’s Mikan, Bird, Magic, Isiah, Hakeem, Shaq…?
    It’s impossible to pick just one… LOL

  • smooth

    true russell is a bad ass

  • KB8toSG8

    @smooth…..I’m not even bother with your comment. Look back on the thread. JoeMaMa posted the height of the players he played against. Seems like you conveniently forgot about Russell. @Justin…..he DIDNOT use the finger roll against puny players. Why can’t you guys see JoeMaMa’s post? Its clearly there written in stone! Wilt also proved that he could put up big numbers even AFTER he was waay past his prime ( see vs Kareem) @ Alan……if blocks were counted in Wilt’s era, he would have about 20 blocks per game. That’s amazing proving that Big O wasn’t the only one who could put up triple doubles (though it was amazing to see HIM do so….)

  • KB8toSG8

    @smooth….I could say the same about MJ. Just remove Pippen and he wouldn’t have even come close to winning in 91 against Lakeshow. Remove Rodman and they wouldn’t win vs Utah. See??? And MJ-less bulls were one bad call away from the Finals.@Justin….what I think Philosopher meant was if Phil didn’t make that move, the Bulls would’ve lost the finals and Magic would always have one up on Jordan. That’s pretty much correct. Also….correct me if I’m wrong but Magic/Bird said that he was the best player as of that moment and never really admitted that MJ was better than Magic/Bird in their prime. I’m 90% sure of that.

  • KB8toSG8

    @Philosopher…..Magic wouldn’t get points on Wilt. If you disagree, fine. Let’s just agree to disagree :D . @PapaATL….I don’t think being at the right place at the right time and being hyped into a basketball God during the 90s just so as to expand the interest and brand value of the NBA coupled with great BBall skills automatically makes you the Greatest……

  • http://www.acb.com A l a n

    @KB8toSG8: not sure if Wilt would have made a triple-double with blocks. But I believe Russell surely would have been very close. Closer than Wilt, in this case. But who knows… a pity that back then blocks were not counted. Although Boston journalist used to count Russell’s blocks. BTW Jordan is the best ever IMO because he didn’t have to be that tall to dominate the League (as opposed to Wilt, Kareem, Shaq,…)

  • The Philosopher

    @Justin:
    My line was the “biggest exaggeration” in SLAM History?
    Bigger than Kobe being superior defender over Jordan??? I wholly beg to differ…
    Anyways, during Michael’s 1st 3peat, Earvin was on TV saying how he does not think the Bulls can 3 peat, and so on. One can argue that those comments affected his brand, for never again after that would Earvin make such comments regarding Michael Jordan.
    KB8toSG8 is on the money. He clarified it for me.
    Phil does not make that move, Magic is unanimously The G.O.A.T.
    Again, Michael cannot deal with Earvin on the blocks. Jordan is not… The G.O.A.T.

  • http://www.acb.com A l a n

    @The Philosopher: I think I don’t understand you, because Magic averaged 0.4 blocks per (Total of 374) and MJ averaged 0.8 (Total of 893)

  • The Philosopher

    Alan:
    “On the blocks” means in the “paint” area, or in the “post”.

  • http://www.acb.com A l a n

    OK, thanks!!

  • http://sdklff.com Jukai

    It’s possible Wilt would have gotten a triple double with blocks one or two years… but saying he’d average 20 blocks a game is entirely fabricated. From what I read, it was closer to 8-10. Remember, the game was a lot more jumpshot oriented.

  • smooth

    what is a GOAT

  • smooth

    G.O.A.T

  • The Philosopher

    Greatest
    Of
    All
    Times

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    On who would win one on one:
    Trainer Tim Grover (ATTACK Athletics in Chicago), who has trained Bryant, James and Michael Jordan: Hard to say. Kobe could back LeBron down, too. He’s that strong. Don’t put me in this spot. I’m not picking.How about Jordan versus either man?Grover: Oh, Michael. No question. From a physical and mental standpoint, he’s the best I’ve ever seen. If he were playing now, with the way the refs call everything, and with all the padding these guys wear, he’d average 40 or 50 a night if he wanted.

  • KB8toSG8

    @nbk…………that doesn’t clarify anything except the fact that Kobe is strong as a bull, MJ was a freakish athlete and guys continue to gush over MJ. Come on! 50 pts? He is MJ……but he ain’t no Wilt. The same could be said about Wilt. Hell, make Wilt man up any guy in the post and boom boom boom. Foul calls. I’d bet that only a few could stay in the game until half-time if Wilt was posting them up. Also, Jordan would’ve gotten ALL the calls. ALL OF THEM. NOT EVEN CLOSE to being fair.@Jukai….during the 50pts,25 rebs thing, a LOT of them believed that he got atleast 20 blocks a night…..including his teammates as he acknowledged in his autobiography. Maybe not 20 but atleast 10-15 min.

  • KB8toSG8

    LOL….now I’m really finding MJ’s statements totally funny. He thinks he could get 100 points if he played his usual game in this era. Come on up MJ defenders, start defending “His Airness”

  • http://slamonline.com Saviour

    GOAT. No question, no ifs, buts or arguements.

  • KB8toSG8

    @Saviour…….You are the perfect example of a guy who has bought into the media hoopla surrounding MJ having no solid argument that totally blows all other competitors out of the waters. So…..care to explain in detail?

  • Justin

    @Philosopher…Yes, it’s a much greater exaggeration than Kobe being a superior defender. I still don’t get how a 6’6″ player not being able to hold down a 6’9″ player on the blocks takes away Jordan being the best ever. Does that mean that because Stockton couldn’t hold Jordan on the blocks that he wasn’t a good defensive player? Dumb. How can one argue that his “Bulls won’t 3Peat” comment affected his brand? Did sales go down? Didn’t he get started with movie theaters in less than desirable neighbourhoods? Did people stop going to those theaters after making those comments? Please support with facts and stats. Also, he stopped making those comments because he turned out to be WRONG. Plain and simple

    @KB8…What Magic said was they all agreed that Michael was the best, just not every night. And I think one can defend that statement about him getting 100 in today’s game with one simple stat. Kobe scored 81. You don’t think Michael could get 19 more, being the better scorer of the two? Look back at game 1 of the ’92 Finals. He scored 35 in the first half after sitting out the first 6 1/2 minutes of the second quarter, and played maybe 5 or 6 minutes of the third quarter, maybe only taking 3 shots. You don’t think he goes off in a monster way if they keep him in the game the whole time? He also scored 37 ppg in a time when handchecking was allowed. I believe that scoring the way he did was MUCH more impressive than the way Wilt did it. He’s a guard, where Wilt was a center, never further than 5 or 6 feet from the hoop. And what does JoeMaMa’s post mean about anything? I’ll take replays over anyone’s comment anytime

  • Justin

    And btw, the Jordan/Magic to Pippen/Magic switch didn’t change the series nearly as much as 3 other factors. Changing the double team to come from the baseline confused Vlade (yeah, I know not that difficult), Byron Scott and James Worthy going down to injury, and John Paxson stepping up and hitting every shot he took

  • The Philosopher

    Justin:
    I will ask you this;
    We recently engaged in a friendly debate about Wilt and Earvin.
    My question is, whom do you think would fair better against Wilt in the post? Magic or Michael?
    And, I never said that Michael was a bad defender. Quite the contrary.
    What I’m saying is (I do not mind repeating myself) Michael cannot guard Earvin in the paint. Magic is a better player than Michael Jordan when regarding all around abilities.

  • The Philosopher

    And, to answer your question about the 6’6″ player as opposed to the 6’9″ player…
    We are discussing Michael and Magic.
    Not two local rec league players.

  • Justin

    It doesn’t matter who we’re discussing, whether it’s between pros or rec league players. We’re talking about one player being bigger than the other. I suppose you’d say that Magic was a better post player than Michael too. What could Magic do better than Michael? Better handle? No. Better shot? No. Better on defense? No. Better passer…this is the only one that might have some merit, but when you get drafted onto a team that’s got a Hall of Fame center and then throughout his career has great finishers, and you are not the focal point of the offense, then yes you will get more assists.

    And as stated earlier, the one on one comparison is so stupid. Wilt was a giant compared to Magic and Michael. It’s just so dumb. Could Wilt handle Michael on the perimiter? No he couldn’t. So, what he sucks back in? Michael shoots the shot. I mean, how ridiculous a conversation. A better one would be how would Wilt handle Shaq in his prime. Debate that instead.

  • The Philosopher

    I’ve already debated that.
    The conclusion ended up being that Shaq is the most dominant center of All Time…
    And, Magic is a better rebounder.
    A better passer.
    A better leader. (Michael has even said so)
    Better handle is arguable, though I’ll give that to Earvin, too.
    Also, Magic WAS the focal point of the offense (SHOWTIME) for a while.
    A long while.
    Not including the year he averaged 24ppg. Things did not flow the same when Earvin did not have the ball.
    No one in NBA History can completely control the tempo and pace of a game better than Magic Johnson. This is fact.
    Better control of a game than Jordan, too.

  • Justin

    Sure, I’ll give you rebounder. Passer is debatable. You’re giving Earvin better handle because you’re a fan. Magic was not the focal point of the offense, especially during Showtime. He had the ball in his hands a lot but was not the focal point. He was probably the third option outside of Kareem and then Worthy. Magic only started scoring more as Kareem reached the end of his career and with Worthy slowing down.
    Sure he can control tempo. HE’S THE POINT GUARD. But Michael didn’t need to control it. Instead he would just take it over whenever he decided to. I’d like to control a game that way.

  • Justin

    I just don’t see why you can’t let it go to be honest. Magic admitted it, in ’92 at the Olympics in a room with him, Larry Bird, and Ahmad Rashad. For the love of God, PLEASE don’t say anything about hurting his businesses that he DID NOT HAVE at that time. You would think if a player can freely admit that someone is better, the fairweather fan would think “OK, fair enough. That’s good enough for me”. You just insist on being stubborn. Now, here’s another question for you. In what way was Shaq more dominating than Wilt?

  • The Philosopher

    Magic was the focal point of the offense.
    It is borderline idiocy to ponder otherwise. How can he not be the focal point of the offense when everything went through him? Earvin decided whom recieved the ball AND when.
    “Magic started scoring more as Kareem aged”… you said.
    So, was he the focal point at one time or another, or not??
    For your information, Michael taking over a game whenever he felt the urge is a form of controlling tempo…

  • The Philosopher

    Now, I have to ask you this one;
    If Magic proclaims his superiority in public like that, do you think that would help him?
    You do not hear Jordan saying he’s better than the next guy. That would not help him, either.
    And, yes, I am Magic Johnson’s #1 fan.
    Only because he is The Greatest Of All Times.
    Better than Michael.

  • Justin

    No it isn’t. You can take over a game in a number of ways, not just scoring. The focal point of any offense is who’s doing the majority of the scoring. The offense didn’t go through Magic, it started with him. Yes, Magic decided who received the ball and when. Again…HE’S THE POINT GUARD!!! On Utah, would you say John Stockton was the focal point or was it Karl Malone? Because Magic started scoring more did not mean he became the focal point of the offense. He still wasn’t the main scorer. Eventually, Worthy was.
    I guess if you took a poll of all NBA players past and present, any fan who has watched basketball in the past 30 years to see which is the greatest, Magic would get that one vote. Yours. Even Magic would vote the other way but not you. Hahaha.
    Magic didn’t proclaim his superiority because HE KNEW OTHERWISE and admitted it! How much more do you need?

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