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Mr. Friscus
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I have no idea why this NBA GOAT debate has become so polarizing, but it has. It's largely a foolish endeavor, as different generations have different factors, and trying to compare directly is pretty much impossible. But, we do it, and while I try to generally avoid it, I'll do it here.
My only ask is that for anyone who replies to make any counterpoints in a debate style format. If your response is "OMG if u don't think Jordan is the GOAT u don't know basketball"... just stay out of it. I'll make specific points, and those are what need to be addressed. Also, let me just say that I can can make cases for and against MJ, just as I can with Lebron, Kareem, Russell, Wilt, etc. All contenders have weaknesses, this is not an NHL-Gretzky dynamic where there's one undeniable GOAT.
So, Here's my reasons why MJ isn't the GOAT. I welcome any respectful, thoughtful rebuttals, because like I said, I can make a case for Jordan as well.
1. He didn't lead his team to a winning record until his 4th year in the league, and his early playoff appearances were filled with being dominated and swept out of the playoffs.
2. While he scored a lot, he shot a lot, more than anyone in NBA history. He would routinely shoot 30 plus shots a game, especially in his early years. He wasn't an efficient scorer much of the time, and while he had springs like noone else, he had no long jumper or 3 point presence (not that the 3 was used as a threat then anyways)
3. The entire league went through the 80's, not just MJ. I get tired of hearing about the over-hyped "Jordan rules", and how the Pistons were just so mean to him, and only him. No. The Pistons laid everyone out.. Bird, Barkley, Magic, Isaiah, etc. ... and Jordan lost to the Pistons again, and again, and again. Throughout the 80's, Jordan had his absolutely spurts of greatness (look at any Cavs vs Bulls series in the 80's), but also had plenty of duds and chokes in pivotal games. The whole "Michael would have made it" mantra is a mythology created by Gen X ESPN fan boys who bought the Nike/NBA/ESPN dogma.
4. Jordan was given a head start as far as traveling and fouls once he was crowned as the golden boy by the league, Nike, and sports media. He was the first guy who was allowed extra steps, and the first to play Harden-style ball who relied on getting the call from the ref.
5. Jordan didn't win when other 80's golden-era superstars were in their prime. Bird, Magic, and Isaiah all dominated MJ and the Bulls. The 90's bulls flourished as the league's greatest teams aged. Back then, being over 30 was old, as modern training techniques weren't being implemented. The 1990 Bulls faced a washed up Magic Lakers team that had cobwebs.
6. Jordan's Bulls didn't reach the next level until Scottie Pippen elevated and Phil Jackson (The coaching GOAT) joined him. MJ needed them to become dominant as a team. Phil Jackson is the pivotal piece. Not only did he bring the bulls from a minimal playoff team to a 3-peat champion in Chicago (twice), but then he did it again in LA.. and realize, Shaq and Kobe were bounced out of the playoffs early multiple times in the late 90's before Phil Jackson arrived and suddenly the Lakers were unstoppable. That's a check against Jordan.
7. Jordan didn't face intense all-time competition at the shooting guard position. I admit, you can say that's a testament to Jordan, but you can also at the same time admit that the other Superstars in the league were either PG's (Magic, Stockton, Isaiah), forwards (Barkley, Malone, Dominique, Bird) or Centers (Hakeem, David Robinson, Ewing). The list of Shooting guards that guarded or were guarded by Jordan involves perhaps Drexler and Reggie Miller (who often owned MJ), but beyond that you have Joe Dumars, Byron Scott, Jeff Hornacek, Ron Harper, Dan Majarle, Rickey Pierce, John Starks, Steve Smith... let's be real, it was the position that had the least amount of greatness around an all-time great player.
8. Jordan's Bulls finals opponents were generally weak all time. The 1990 Lakers were ancient, the 91 Blazers had reached a finals previously.. but while they had a very solid lineup (Terry Porter, Drexler, Jerome Kersey, Buck Williams, Kevin Duckworth).. nobody is calling them much. The best team the bulls beat was probably the Suns in 92-93, but that was just a prime MVP Charles Barkley with smaller factors like Kevin Johnson, Dan Majarle, etc. The 96 Sonics with Kemp and Payton weren't anything all-time (Payton guarded Jordan well), and the Jazz had Stockton Malone, but beyond that were completely outmatched by a superior supporting Bulls cast (Kukoc, Rodman, Harper, etc.)
9. PIVOTAL POINT: After MJ retired for the first time after their 57-25 1992-93 Season, Jackson, Pippen, and others stayed... and the next season without MJ they went 55-27. That's a mic drop. Right there, that proves that while the Bulls likely needed MJ to put them over the top, MJ did not account for high level success of the Chicago Bulls. Jordan was a finisher, but many other players in the GOAT conversation accounted for far more wins than MJ did for his team.
10. While the MJ Establishment likes to forget this, it's true Jordan had an amazing comeback at the end of the 1994-95 season, but he gagged away the series by carelessly choking up the basketball in the final seconds as the bulls lost to the Magic. Many people don't even know that happened, because so many Jordan fans pretend Jordan's career was 6 years long plus the 63 point double OT loss to the Celtics.
11. Even in major NBA Finals moments, Jordan had plenty of moments where he gagged away last second shots. It's only the mythology that makes you think he "would have made" any clutch shot. Here's a few Just in the finals, not the whole playoffs:
- 1990 Game 1 the Lakers are up 92-91 with 9 seconds left, Chicago inbounds to Jordan who pulls up at 18 feet and misses/chokes. Loss.
- 1992 Game 2 the Blazers tied with 12 seconds left, Jordan walks the ball up and shoots with 2 sec left and bricks it, choking.
- 1997 Game 4 The Jazz are up 76-73 with 10 sec left, Jordan shoots a fadeaway 3 and chokes, jazz win.
- 1998 Game 5 The Jazz are up with 0.8 sec left, Jordan gets a good look on a catch and shoot and misses, another "choke".
12. And finally, Jordan won a 3-peat and.. retired? I don't get that. If he's such a hungry, working-man's man.. he quit? MJ fans like to applaud him for his dedication, but I'm sorry.. a guy who ups and quits in his prime isn't some model of dedication. He quit on his team. He can have his reasons, but I'm not expected to respect them when we're talking GOAT. The kitchen got too hot for MJ, and he left. I call that soft. Jordan was soft for leaving. No other GOAT candidates ran away to play baseball. There's no running from this.
From my experience, there are MJ fans (disciples) who take such critique very seriously. Let me again say, I could lay out an argument FOR MJ being the GOAT, you just have to accept that I could do the same for 4-5 other players. But while my argument is towards MJ here, if you want to bring up a comparison to another GOAT candidate, I'll gladly welcome it and we can see if Jordan bests them in that area or not. Jordan bests most NBA players in a few categories. I'm no hater. I just like to analyze without emotion. Let's analyze this discussion, and leave the emotion out of it.
So, what is your beef?
My only ask is that for anyone who replies to make any counterpoints in a debate style format. If your response is "OMG if u don't think Jordan is the GOAT u don't know basketball"... just stay out of it. I'll make specific points, and those are what need to be addressed. Also, let me just say that I can can make cases for and against MJ, just as I can with Lebron, Kareem, Russell, Wilt, etc. All contenders have weaknesses, this is not an NHL-Gretzky dynamic where there's one undeniable GOAT.
So, Here's my reasons why MJ isn't the GOAT. I welcome any respectful, thoughtful rebuttals, because like I said, I can make a case for Jordan as well.
1. He didn't lead his team to a winning record until his 4th year in the league, and his early playoff appearances were filled with being dominated and swept out of the playoffs.
2. While he scored a lot, he shot a lot, more than anyone in NBA history. He would routinely shoot 30 plus shots a game, especially in his early years. He wasn't an efficient scorer much of the time, and while he had springs like noone else, he had no long jumper or 3 point presence (not that the 3 was used as a threat then anyways)
3. The entire league went through the 80's, not just MJ. I get tired of hearing about the over-hyped "Jordan rules", and how the Pistons were just so mean to him, and only him. No. The Pistons laid everyone out.. Bird, Barkley, Magic, Isaiah, etc. ... and Jordan lost to the Pistons again, and again, and again. Throughout the 80's, Jordan had his absolutely spurts of greatness (look at any Cavs vs Bulls series in the 80's), but also had plenty of duds and chokes in pivotal games. The whole "Michael would have made it" mantra is a mythology created by Gen X ESPN fan boys who bought the Nike/NBA/ESPN dogma.
4. Jordan was given a head start as far as traveling and fouls once he was crowned as the golden boy by the league, Nike, and sports media. He was the first guy who was allowed extra steps, and the first to play Harden-style ball who relied on getting the call from the ref.
5. Jordan didn't win when other 80's golden-era superstars were in their prime. Bird, Magic, and Isaiah all dominated MJ and the Bulls. The 90's bulls flourished as the league's greatest teams aged. Back then, being over 30 was old, as modern training techniques weren't being implemented. The 1990 Bulls faced a washed up Magic Lakers team that had cobwebs.
6. Jordan's Bulls didn't reach the next level until Scottie Pippen elevated and Phil Jackson (The coaching GOAT) joined him. MJ needed them to become dominant as a team. Phil Jackson is the pivotal piece. Not only did he bring the bulls from a minimal playoff team to a 3-peat champion in Chicago (twice), but then he did it again in LA.. and realize, Shaq and Kobe were bounced out of the playoffs early multiple times in the late 90's before Phil Jackson arrived and suddenly the Lakers were unstoppable. That's a check against Jordan.
7. Jordan didn't face intense all-time competition at the shooting guard position. I admit, you can say that's a testament to Jordan, but you can also at the same time admit that the other Superstars in the league were either PG's (Magic, Stockton, Isaiah), forwards (Barkley, Malone, Dominique, Bird) or Centers (Hakeem, David Robinson, Ewing). The list of Shooting guards that guarded or were guarded by Jordan involves perhaps Drexler and Reggie Miller (who often owned MJ), but beyond that you have Joe Dumars, Byron Scott, Jeff Hornacek, Ron Harper, Dan Majarle, Rickey Pierce, John Starks, Steve Smith... let's be real, it was the position that had the least amount of greatness around an all-time great player.
8. Jordan's Bulls finals opponents were generally weak all time. The 1990 Lakers were ancient, the 91 Blazers had reached a finals previously.. but while they had a very solid lineup (Terry Porter, Drexler, Jerome Kersey, Buck Williams, Kevin Duckworth).. nobody is calling them much. The best team the bulls beat was probably the Suns in 92-93, but that was just a prime MVP Charles Barkley with smaller factors like Kevin Johnson, Dan Majarle, etc. The 96 Sonics with Kemp and Payton weren't anything all-time (Payton guarded Jordan well), and the Jazz had Stockton Malone, but beyond that were completely outmatched by a superior supporting Bulls cast (Kukoc, Rodman, Harper, etc.)
9. PIVOTAL POINT: After MJ retired for the first time after their 57-25 1992-93 Season, Jackson, Pippen, and others stayed... and the next season without MJ they went 55-27. That's a mic drop. Right there, that proves that while the Bulls likely needed MJ to put them over the top, MJ did not account for high level success of the Chicago Bulls. Jordan was a finisher, but many other players in the GOAT conversation accounted for far more wins than MJ did for his team.
10. While the MJ Establishment likes to forget this, it's true Jordan had an amazing comeback at the end of the 1994-95 season, but he gagged away the series by carelessly choking up the basketball in the final seconds as the bulls lost to the Magic. Many people don't even know that happened, because so many Jordan fans pretend Jordan's career was 6 years long plus the 63 point double OT loss to the Celtics.
11. Even in major NBA Finals moments, Jordan had plenty of moments where he gagged away last second shots. It's only the mythology that makes you think he "would have made" any clutch shot. Here's a few Just in the finals, not the whole playoffs:
- 1990 Game 1 the Lakers are up 92-91 with 9 seconds left, Chicago inbounds to Jordan who pulls up at 18 feet and misses/chokes. Loss.
- 1992 Game 2 the Blazers tied with 12 seconds left, Jordan walks the ball up and shoots with 2 sec left and bricks it, choking.
- 1997 Game 4 The Jazz are up 76-73 with 10 sec left, Jordan shoots a fadeaway 3 and chokes, jazz win.
- 1998 Game 5 The Jazz are up with 0.8 sec left, Jordan gets a good look on a catch and shoot and misses, another "choke".
12. And finally, Jordan won a 3-peat and.. retired? I don't get that. If he's such a hungry, working-man's man.. he quit? MJ fans like to applaud him for his dedication, but I'm sorry.. a guy who ups and quits in his prime isn't some model of dedication. He quit on his team. He can have his reasons, but I'm not expected to respect them when we're talking GOAT. The kitchen got too hot for MJ, and he left. I call that soft. Jordan was soft for leaving. No other GOAT candidates ran away to play baseball. There's no running from this.
From my experience, there are MJ fans (disciples) who take such critique very seriously. Let me again say, I could lay out an argument FOR MJ being the GOAT, you just have to accept that I could do the same for 4-5 other players. But while my argument is towards MJ here, if you want to bring up a comparison to another GOAT candidate, I'll gladly welcome it and we can see if Jordan bests them in that area or not. Jordan bests most NBA players in a few categories. I'm no hater. I just like to analyze without emotion. Let's analyze this discussion, and leave the emotion out of it.
So, what is your beef?
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