More on Michael Jordan
Michael Jordan (born February 17, 1963, in Brooklyn, NY) is a former National Basketball Association player, by many accounts the best in history.
An unstoppable force at both ends of the floor, Michael Jordan ended a career of 15 full seasons with a regular-season scoring average of 30.12 points per game, the highest in NBA history (fractionally ahead of Wilt Chamberlain's 30.06). Michael Jordan won six championships, notched 10 scoring titles, and was league MVP five times. Michael Jordan was named to the All-Defensive First Team more than any other player, and led the league in steals three times. In 1991, Michael Jordan was named Sports Illustrated magazine's "Sportsman of the Year."
Michael Jordan remains the ultimate postseason performer, holding playoff records for most points in a single game (63), most points per game (33.4), most points per game in a Finals series (41.0, against the 1993 Phoenix Suns), and total points scored (541).
Jordan's Personal Life
Michael Jordan was born to Delores and James Jordan in Brooklyn, New York but spent his childhood in Wilmington, North Carolina. He was educated at Emsley A. Laney High School and later at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he was a geography major.
Michael Jordan has two older brothers (Larry and James), one older sister (Delores) and one younger sister (Roslyn). James R. Jordan is a Sergeant Major in the 35th Signal Brigade of the XVIII Airborne Corps in the U.S. Army. James R. gained certain celebrity himself when he announced, at the age of 47, that he intended to stay in Iraq until the Iraqi invasion ends.
Michael Jordan currently lives in Highland Park, Illinois.
University of North Carolina
As a UNC freshman, Michael Jordan was an exciting, but not dominant, player. Michael Jordan ended the 1982 year in grand style, hitting the winning shot in the 1982 NCAA championship game. By his sophomore year, Michael Jordan was clearly the team's biggest star; as a junior, he was named the national player of the year. He was selected by the Chicago Bulls in the first round of the 1984 NBA Draft as the third pick overall.
Chicago Bulls
Michael Jordan played 13 seasons for the Bulls, generally as a shooting guard. But his height (6'6", or 1.98 m), skills, and physical conditioning made him a versatile threat who could also play point guard and small forward. He won six NBA Championships (1991-1993 and 1996-1998) and was league MVP five times (1988, 1991, 1992, 1996 and 1998). He was also named Rookie of the Year (1985) and Defensive Player of the Year (1988), and won the Finals MVP award every year the Bulls reached the Finals -- a feat not likely to ever be duplicated. Michael Jordan also earned the elusive MVP triple crown (league, finals, all-star game) twice when he won All-Star MVP in both 1996 and 1998 (he also won in 1988). Only Willis Reed (1970) and Shaquille O'Neal (2000) have won all three MVP awards in the same season. In 1997, he also recorded the All-Star Game's only triple-double.
Jordan's #23 jersey was retired by the Bulls upon his retirement, and when Michael Jordan made his return in 1995, he did so wearing #45, the number he wore for the Birmingham Barons minor league baseball team. But he broke out his old #23 jersey during a second-round playoff series against the Orlando Magic, and continued to wear #23 for the remainder of his NBA career.
Family tragedy
Jordan's father, James, was murdered in August 1993. While returning from the funeral of a friend, he decided to pull over onto the side of an interstate highway in North Carolina for a nap. While he was sleeping, two local criminals killed him and stole his Lexus (a gift from Michael), but the perpetrators were quickly found because they had made several calls from his cell phone. Michael and family did not immediately file a missing persons report, because the elder Jordan frequently took long trips by himself. By the time a report was filed, James' body, found bloated and floating in a river, had been cremated per local health laws as a John Doe. Media outlets initially tried connecting James' murder to Michael's alleged gambling habit, which had been widely publicized when Michael Jordan admitted to losing tens of thousands of dollars betting on his golf games.
Michael Jordan retired from basketball two days before the 1993-94 NBA season to pursue an unspectacular professional baseball career for the Birmingham Barons, a Chicago White Sox farm team. Many interpreted this pursuit of another childhood dream as a way to grieve. He batted .202 with 3 HR, 51 RBI, 30 SB (tied-5th in Southern League), 11 errors and 6 outfield assists. He led the club with 11 bases-loaded RBI and 25 RBI with runners in scoring position and two outs. He was never called up to the majors.
Michael Jordan ended his basketball retirement on March 19, 1995 by rejoining the Bulls. After three more consecutive NBA titles between 1996 and 1998, Michael Jordan decided to retire again on January 13, 1999.
Washington Wizards
In 2001, Michael Jordan came out of retirement a second time to play for the Washington Wizards, though his skills were noticeably diminished by age. Yet despite an injury-plagued 2001-02 season, Michael Jordan still averaged nearly 23 points per game. Michael Jordan returned for the 2002-03 season and averaged 20 points. Playing in his 13th and final NBA All-Star Game, he embarrassingly missed an uncontested slam dunk -- formerly the hallmark of his career -- in front of a stunned national television audience. The 2002-03 season was heralded from the beginning as Jordan's final goodbye to his fans and, true to his word, Michael Jordan retired for the third and final time at the season's conclusion.
Out of respect for Jordan's legacy, the Miami Heat retired his #23 jersey on April 11, 2003, despite the fact that he never played for the Heat. It was the first jersey the Heat retired in their then-15-year history, and it was half Wizards blue, half Bulls red.
The Olympics
Michael Jordan played on two Olympic gold medal-winning American basketball teams: as a college player in the 1984 Summer Olympics, and in the 1992 Summer Olympics as a member of the original "Dream Team," with other legends such as Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. It is also well known that Jordan kept guard Isiah Thomas off the roster. During Jordan's first All-Star game, Thomas is said to have orchestrated a "freeze-out" of Jordan in other words, he convinced other veteran All-Stars to not pass the ball to this cocky rookie. Some allege Thomas' plan even extended to players on the opposing Western Conference team, although it's admittedly hard to see how; Johnson is generally believed to have been a party to the freeze-out. However, by the time of the 1992 Olympics, Johnson had worked to heal the breach between him and Jordan, unlike Thomas.
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