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Michael Jordan
NBA Career(1984-98]
1984-85--Rookie Year
Jordan came into the NBA after
an outstanding three-year career at North Carolina. As a freshman, he hit
the jump shot that gave the Tar Heels the NCAA Championship in 1982. He
was College Player of the Year in 1984. Jordan averaged 17.7 points in
three seasons before declaring himself eligible for the NBA draft after
his junior year. The Chicago Bulls took him with the No. 3 overall pick.
(Hakeem Olajuwon with the first pick, while Portland drafted Sam Bowie
at No. 2.) Between his college and pro careers, he was co-captain and star
of the gold-medal-winning U.S. Olympic basketball team in 1984.
Jordan joined a club that had
finished at 27-55 the previous season . Jordan lifted the team to a 38-44
record and a playoff berth for the first time since 1981. Voted a starter
in the 1985 All-Star Game, he scored 7 points in 22 minutes. On February
12 he set a club single-game rookie record by pouring in 49 points against
the Detroit Pistons. He finished the season with a scoring average of 28.2
points per game (third in the league behind the New York Knicks' Bernard
King and the Boston Celtics' Larry Bird) and set Chicago single-season
records for points (2,313), field goals (837), free throws (630), free-throw
attempts (746), and steals (196). It all added up to an NBA Rookie of the
Year Award, a slot on the NBA All-Rookie Team, and a selection to the All-NBA
Second Team. After finishing fourth in the Central Division, the Bulls
faced the Milwaukee Bucks in the first round of the playoffs and fell in
four games. Jordan averaged 29.3 points in the series
1985-86--Injures to 63
Three games into the 1985-86
season, Jordan went down with a broken bone in his left foot. He was sidelined
for 64 games before returning in mid-March. Without Jordan for most of
the campaign, the Bulls won only 30 games but still managed to snag a playoff
berth. In 18 regular-season games Jordan averaged 22.7 points, 2.9 assists,
and 3.6 rebounds, all career lows. He was voted to the All-Star squad but
was unable to play because of the injury.
With a spectacular three-game
outburst in the Bulls' opening-round playoff loss to Boston, Jordan showed
that he had completely recovered. In Game 2 he scored a playoff-record
63 points in Chicago's double-overtime 135-131 loss to the Celtics. He
averaged an astonishing 43.7 points for the three-game series.
1986-87--Score and Score
In 1986-87 Jordan began a
string of consecutive NBA scoring titles that would last for seven seasons
until his surprise temporary retirement in 1993. He scored a career-high
37.1 points per game and became the first player since Wilt Chamberlain
to top 3,000 points in a season. In November and December he went on a
rampage and rang up 40 points or more in nine straight games. He poured
in 58 points against the New Jersey Nets on February 26, then toasted the
Atlanta Hawks for 61 on April 16 in a game in which he sank an NBA-record
23 points in a row. Jordan also became the first player in league history
to record 200 steals and 100 blocked shots in a season. He played in the
All-Star Game, won the Slam-Dunk Championship, and was named to the All-NBA
First Team. Despite Jordan's all-world performance, the Bulls still couldn't
break above the .500 mark. They slipped a notch in the Central Division,
finishing fifth with a 40-42 record, and drew Boston in the first round
of the playoffs. For the second straight year the Celtics sent the Bulls
home with a three-game sweep. Jordan averaged 35.7 points but shot just
.417 from the field in that series.
1987-88--New Blood
The Bulls added two talented
rookies in 1987-88, drafting Horace Grant and trading for Scottie Pippen.
The new blood helped lift Chicago to a 50-32 record, the team's best result
since the 1974-75 season. Jordan led the club in scoring in 81 of 82 regular-season
games and topped 40 points on 18 occasions. Equally remarkable, he failed
to reach 20 points only three times during the year. He won every major
honor, including Most Valuable Player, Defensive Player of the Year, selection
to the All-NBA First Team, selection to the All-Defensive First Team, an
All-Star Game MVP Award (after scoring 40 points), and the NBA Slam-Dunk
Championship. He led the league in scoring with 35.0 points per game and
in steals with 3.16 per contest.
Chicago advanced past the first
round of the playoffs for the first time in seven seasons, besting the
Cleveland Cavaliers in five games in the first round before falling to
the Detroit Pistons in five games in the conference semifinals. Jordan
set a playoff record for field goals made in a game with 24 against Cleveland
on May 1, and he established another mark in the same game by attempting
25 shots against the Cavs in a single half. In 10 playoff games he averaged
36.3 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 4.7 assists.
1988-89--Best Performance
In 1988-89 Jordan turned in
possibly the best all-around performance of his career. The league's leading
scorer once again at 32.5 points per game, he finished 10th in the NBA
in assists with a career-high 8.0 per outing and also set a career high
by pulling down 8.0 rebounds per contest. He ranked third in the league
in steals at 2.89 per game. On January 25 he scored the 10,000th point
of his career. Named to the East All-Star Team for the fifth straight year,
Jordan scored 28 points in 33 minutes of action. His postseason honors
included membership on the All-NBA First Team and the NBA All-Defensive
First Team and selection as Player of the Year by The Sporting News.
The Bulls slipped a bit in
the regular season, posting a 47-35 record, 3 fewer wins than the season
before. But after squeezing by the Cleveland Cavaliers in five games in
the opening round of the playoffs, the Bulls ousted the New York Knicks
in the conference semifinals and advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals
for only the third time in team history. They fell to the Detroit Pistons
in six games. Jordan averaged 34.8 points in 17 postseason games. In the
pivotal Game 5 of Chicago's first-round series against Cleveland, Jordan
hit a memorable buzzer-beating jumper over Craig Ehlo to bring the Bulls
from a 100-99 deficit to a 101-100 victory.
1989-90--Pistons Again
Phil Jackson took over as
head coach of the Bulls for the 1989-90 season, and everything started
to click for Chicago. The Bulls put together a 55-27 record, the club's
best showing since it had gone 57-24 under Dick Motta in 1971-72. Jordan
was his usual dominating self at both ends of the court, leading the NBA
in scoring (33.6 ppg) and steals (2.77 per game). He set a personal best
when he scored 69 points in a 117-113 overtime win against the Cleveland
Cavaliers. He also emerged as a legitimate threat from beyond the three-point
arc, posting a .376 percentage-100 percentage points above his previous
career high-while hitting 92 long-range shots, compared with 68 in his
first five seasons combined. A member of the All-Star Team once again,
Jordan was also picked for the All-NBA First Team and the NBA All-Defensive
First Team. In the postseason the Bulls got past the Milwaukee Bucks and
the Philadelphia 76ers in the first two rounds but fell to the Detroit
Pistons in seven games in the Eastern Conference Finals. Jordan averaged
36.7 points in 16 playoff games.
1990-91--First Championship
Jordan added the only important
item missing from his basketball resume when he guided the Bulls to an
NBA Championship in 1990-91. During the regular season the Bulls won a
club-record 61 contests to take the Central Division by 11 games. An All-Star
and a member of both the All-NBA First Team and the NBA All-Defensive First
Team, Jordan also won the league MVP Award for the second time in his career.
With a regular-season scoring average of 31.5 points per game, he picked
up his fifth straight scoring title as he topped 40 points in a game 11
times. He averaged 6.0 rebounds and 5.5 assists and ranked third in the
league in steals at 2.72 per game.
The Bulls waltzed through the
postseason, sweeping the New York Knicks in the opening round, cruising
past the Philadelphia 76ers with only one loss in the conference semifinals,
and then sweeping the archrival Detroit Pistons in four games in the Eastern
Conference Finals. After losing Game 1 of the NBA Finals to the Los Angeles
Lakers, the Bulls won the next four contests to claim their first-ever
title. Jordan averaged 31.1 points, 6.4 rebounds, and 8.4 assists during
the team's postseason ride. He also earned the NBA Finals MVP Award.
1991-92--No.1 SG
Chicago waltzed through the
regular season in 1991-92, winning 67 games as Jordan reprised his previous
season's performance. He won a second straight MVP Award, was named to
the All-Star squad for the eighth year in a row, ran his streak of All-NBA
First Team selections to six years and his string of NBA All-Defensive
First Team selections to five, and was once again the league's leading
scorer, at 30.1 points per game. He started the season by scoring 40 or
more points in three of the Bulls' first four games, and he led the club
in scoring in 69 contests during the year.
The Bulls posted the best record
in the NBA by a margin of 10 games but had a tougher time in the postseason
than the previous year. After sweeping the Miami Heat, they fought the
New York Knicks for seven games before taking the semifinals series. The
conference finals matchup with the Cleveland Cavaliers lasted six contests.
The Bulls then faced Portland in the NBA Finals and came away with a second
straight title when they downed the Trail Blazers, 97-93, in Game 6. Jordan
was the Finals MVP once again after averaging 34.5 points in 22 postseason
contests. After the season, he played for the U.S. Dream Team at the Olympic
Games and claimed his second gold medal.
1992-93--Sorry 'Sir 'Charles
The extraordinary had long
since become commonplace for Jordan and the Bulls. Chicago posted its fourth
straight 50-win season and took another division title in 1992-93 as Jordan
averaged 32.6 points to claim his seventh straight scoring title and tie
Wilt Chamberlain for most consecutive scoring crowns. He led the league
in steals for the third time in his career, and he earned a seventh straight
appointment to the All-NBA First Team and a sixth straight appointment
to the NBA All-Defensive First Team. He scored 30 points at the All-Star
Game, giving him a career All-Star Game average of 22.1 points per game,
the highest in NBA history.
Among a slew of fine single-game
performances, Jordan scored 54 points against the Los Angeles Lakers in
November, scorched the Washington Bullets for 57 in December, victimized
the Orlando Magic for 64 in January, and then racked up 52 in March against
the Charlotte Hornets. He also reached a milestone by scoring the 20,000th
point of his NBA career.
Inthe postseason the Bulls
got by the Atlanta Hawks and the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first two rounds
without a loss. After dropping the first two games of the Eastern Conference
Finals to the New York Knicks, Chicago came back to take four straight
and win the series. The Bulls defeated the Phoenix Suns in six games in
the NBA Finals to nail down a third consecutive title. Jordan was named
Finals MVP once again after averaging 41.0 points against the Suns to set
an NBA Finals record.
1993-94--Retire !?
After winning his third straight
NBA title with the Chicago Bulls in 1992-93, Jordan had a tough offseason
that reached its nadir when his father, James Jordan, was murdered in North
Carolina. On October 6, just one day before the start of training camp,
Jordan stunned the basketball world by announcing his retirement. He left
holding the highest career scoring average in NBA history at 32.3 points
per game.
After much speculation about
his plans, Jordan returned to the spotlight in a baseball uniform. He spent
the 1994 baseball season playing for the Birmingham Barons, an affiliate
of the Chicago White Sox in the Class AA Southern League. An adequate outfielder,
he hit .202 in 127 games, striking out 114 times in 436 at bats. Jordan
belted 3 home runs, collected 51 RBIs, and stole 30 bases. He also led
all Southern League outfielders with 11 errors
1994-95--'I'm back'
With baseball on hold because
of a player strike, Jordan began to consider a return to the NBA, and by
late winter rumors were flying that he would rejoin the Bulls in time for
the playoffs. Chicago was puttering along with a 34-31 record when Jordan
took the floor for the club on March 19 against the Indiana Pacers. He
scored 19 points in that game but looked a little rusty. Jordan hit for
27 points three nights later against the Boston Celtics, scored 21 against
the Orlando Magic on March 24, and then popped in 32 against the Atlanta
Hawks the following night. On March 29 he showed that his skills were undiminished
with a memorable 55-point performance against the Knicks in New York. With
Jordan back for the final 17 games of the regular season, the Bulls went
13-4 to finish at 47-35 overall. He led the team in scoring in 11 of those
games, topped the club in assists four times, and led the Bulls in rebounding
on six occasions. He finished with averages of 26.9 points, 5.3 assists,
6.9 rebounds, and 1.76 steals in 39.3 minutes per game. Jordan struggled
from the field, however, shooting just .411. The Bulls drew the Charlotte
Hornets as opponents in the opening round of the postseason. Jordan kicked
off the playoffs by scoring 48 points in Game 1, then followed that up
with a 32-point performance in Game 2. The Bulls eliminated Charlotte in
four games as Jordan averaged 32.3 points per outing in the series. In
Chicago's second-round matchup with the Orlando Magic he scored 38 points
in Game 2, 40 in Game 3, and 39 in Game 5, but the Bulls fell in six games.
In 10 postseason games he averaged 31.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 4.5 assists,
but he also coughed up 4.1 turnovers per contest.
1995-96--72 win
Jordan proved he was all the
way back by winning a record eighth scoring championship, one more than
Wilt Chamberlain, and leading the Bulls to their fourth NBA championship
of the 1990s. He joined Willis Reed (1970) as only the second man to win
Most Valuable Player awards for the regular season, All-Star Game and NBA
Finals in the same season. Jordan started all 100 games for the Bulls-he
was the only player to start all 82 regular season games for Chicago, and
he also started all 18 playoff contests.
Though perhaps he drove to
the hoop a bit less than earlier in his career and lacked a drop of his
previous explosiveness and reckless abandon, Jordan was a far more effective
and controlled jump shooter and three-point scoring threat and remained
an outstanding all-around contributor. Besides his league-leading 30.4
points per game, Jordan averaged 6.6 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 2.20 steals
in 37.7 minutes per game, ranking third in the league in steals. Jordan
scored 40 points or more nine times, pouring in a NBA season-high 53 points
against Detroit on March 7. He also had season highs of 16 rebounds at
New Jersey on March 16 and eight assists against New York on Dec. 6. In
the All-Star Game, he played just 22 minutes but edged out Shaquille O'Neal
for MVP honors by scoring 20 points on 8-for-11 shooting and grabbing four
rebounds.
Jordan led the Bulls in scoring
in 17 of 18 playoff contests with a high of 46 points in Game 3 against
New York. He also had 45 points in Game 4 against Orlando and 44 points
in Game 1 against New York. He averaged 30.7 points, 4.0 rebounds, 4.1
assists and 1.83 steals in 40.7 minutes per game in the playoffs, including
27.3 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 4.2 apg, 1.67 spg and 42.0 mpg in the Finals against
1996-97--Easy Game
Jordan had another great season,
leading the league in scoring for the ninth time at 29.6 ppg, contributing
5.9 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 1.71 steals per game and being voted to his
accustomed spots on the All-NBA and All-NBA Defensive First Teams. Although
the voters elected Karl Malone of Utah as the league's MVP by a slim margin
over Jordan, he gained revenge by leading the Bulls past Malone's Jazz
in the NBA Finals and capturing Finals MVP honors for the fifth time in
five trips to the championship series.
The NBA's Player of the Month
for November, Jordan started all 82 games and climbed past Alex English,
Dominique Wilkins, John Havlicek and Oscar Robertson into fifth place on
the all-time scoring list with 26,920 points. Jordan, who has now scored
in double figures in 758 consecutive games, tallied a season-high 51 points
in an 88-87 win over New York on Jan. 21 and scored 50 points in a 106-100
triumph over Miami on Nov. 6. He scored at least 40 points eight times
and 30 or more on 44 occasions. Jordan, who matched his career high of
18 rebounds in an 89-87 overtime win over Seattle on March 6, became the
first player to post a triple-double in NBA All-Star history when he tallied
14 points, a game-high 11 rebounds and a game-high 11 assists in Cleveland.
During the weekend he also participated in the ceremonies honoring the
"50 Greatest Players in NBA History."
Jordan averaged an NBA-high
31.1 points, 7.9 rebounds, and team-highs of 4.8 assists and 1.58 steals
per game in 19 playoff contests, and averaged 32.3 ppg in the NBA Finals
against the Jazz. Jordan hit a buzzer-beating shot to win Game 1 of the
Finals, had 38 points in Game 2 and came up with another 38 points, this
time despite a stomach virus, in Game 5.
1997-98--The Last Shot
Jordan enjoyed yet another
magical season, sweeping the three MVP honors (regular season, All-Star
Game and NBA Finals) and finishing it off by hitting the game-winning basket
to wrap up the Bulls' sixth championship of the 1990s. Jordan's jumper
with 5.2 seconds left in Game 6 gave Chicago an 87-86 victory and a 4-2
win over the Utah Jazz in the championship series. Jordan averaged 28.7
points per game to capture his 10th scoring title, building upon his NBA
record.
On December 30th at Minnesota,
Jordan scored in double figures for the 788th consecutive game, breaking
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's record of 787 in a row. At season's end, his regular-season
streak stood at 840 games--the last time he did not score in double figures
was on March 22, 1986 at Cleveland when he had eight points. Jordan also
moved past Elvin Hayes and Moses Malone to move into third place on the
NBA's all-time scoring list behind only Abdul-Jabbar and Wilt Chamberlain,
finishing the season with 29,277 points.
Jordan posted season-highs
of 49 points on November 21 at the Los Angeles Clippers, 17 rebounds on
November 5 against Orlando, nine assists on January 3 at Detroit and five
steals on four occasions. He averaged 5.8 rebounds (third on the Bulls),
3.5 assists (third) and 1.72 steals (first, 16th in the NBA) in 38.8 minutes
(first, 17th in the NBA) per game. He scored 40 points or more in 11 games.
In the All-Star Game in New York, Jordan scored 23 points and earned MVP
honors.
In the playoffs, MJ averaged
32.4 points, 5.1 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 1.52 steals per game, while
in the six-game Finals against Utah, he averaged 33.5 points, 4.0 rebounds,
2.3 assists and 1.83 steals per game. Jordan has been the NBA Finals MVP
in each of the Bulls' six championship seasons.
[Infomantion for NBA.com
and CBS sport 1999] |