Born: February 17,
1963
Brooklyn, New York
African American
basketball player
Basketball superstar
Michael Jordan is one of the most successful, popular, and wealthy athletes in
college, Olympic, and professional sports history.
Early life
Michael Jordan was
born on February 17, 1963, in Brooklyn, New York, one of James and Deloris
Jordan's five children. The family moved to Wilmington, North Carolina, when
Michael was very young. His father worked as a General Electric plant
supervisor, and his mother worked at a bank. His father taught him to work hard
and not to be tempted by street life. His mother taught him to sew, clean, and
do laundry. Jordan loved sports but failed to make his high school basketball
team as a sophomore. He continued to practice and made the team the next year.
After high school he accepted a basketball scholarship to the University of
North Carolina, where he played under head coach Dean Smith.
In Jordan's first
season at North Carolina he was named Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Rookie of
the Year for 1982. The team won the ACC championship, and Jordan made the
clutch jump shot that beat Georgetown University for the championship of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Jordan led the ACC in scoring
as a sophomore and as a junior. The Sporting News named him college player of
the year for both years. He left North Carolina after his junior year and was selected
by the Chicago Bulls of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as the third
pick of the 1984 draft. Before joining the Bulls, Jordan was a member of the
Summer 1984 United States Olympic basketball team that won the gold medal in
Los Angeles, California.
Early pro
years
When Jordan was
drafted by the Chicago Bulls they were a losing team, drawing only around six
thousand fans to home games. Jordan quickly turned that around. His style of
play and fierce spirit of competition reminded sportswriters and fans of Julius
Erving (1950–), who had been a superstar player during the 1970s. Jordan's
incredible leaping ability and hang time thrilled fans in arenas around the
league. In his first season he was named to the All-Star team and was later
honored as the league's Rookie of the Year.
A broken foot
sidelined Jordan for 64 games during the 1985–86 season, but he returned to
score 49 points against the Boston Celtics in the first game of the playoffs
and 63 in the second game—an NBA playoff record. The 1986–87 season was again
one of individual successes, and Jordan started in the All-Star game after
receiving a record 1.5 million votes. He became the first player since Wilt
Chamberlain (1936–1999) to score 3,000 points in a single season. Jordan
enjoyed personal success, but Chicago did not advance beyond the first round of
the playoffs until 1988. Jordan concentrated on improving his other basketball
skills, and in 1988 he was named Defensive Player of the Year. He was also
named the league's Most Valuable Player (MVP) and became the first player to
lead the league in both scoring and steals. He was again named MVP in that
year's All-Star game.
By adding such
players as Scottie Pippen, Bill Cartwright, Horace Grant, and John Paxson
around Jordan, the Bulls' management created a strong team that won the 1991
NBA title by defeating the Los Angeles Lakers. The next year, the Bulls
repeated as NBA champions by beating the Portland Trail Blazers. In 1992 Jordan
also played on the "Dream Team," which participated in the Summer
Olympic Games in Barcelona, Spain. The Olympic Committee had voted to lift the
ban on professional athletes participating in the games. The team easily won
the gold medal, winning their eight games by an average margin of 43.7 points.
Unexpected
retirement
In 1993, after a
tough playoff series with the New York Knicks, the Bulls met the Phoenix Suns
for the NBA championship. When it was over, Jordan was again playoff MVP, and
Chicago had won a third straight title. That summer Jordan's father, James, was
murdered by two men during a robbery attempt. Jordan was grief stricken, and
his father's death, combined with media reports about his gambling, led him to
announce his retirement from professional basketball in October. Jordan had won
three straight NBA titles, three regular season MVP awards, three playoff MVP
titles, seven consecutive scoring titles, and he was a member of the All-Star
team every year that he was in the league. In just nine seasons he had become
the Bulls all-time leading scorer.
In 1994–95 Jordan
played for the Birmingham Barons, a minor league baseball team in the Chicago
White Sox system. Although the seventeen-month experiment showed that he was
not a major league baseball player, the experience and time away from
basketball provided a much-needed rest and opportunity to regain his love of
basketball.
Return to
glory
When Jordan returned
to the Chicago Bulls during the 1994–95 regular season, people wondered,
"Could he do it again?" He played well, but he was obviously rusty.
The Bulls were defeated in the playoffs by the Orlando Magic. After a summer of
playing basketball during breaks from filming the live-action cartoon movie
Space Jam, Jordan returned with a fierce determination to prove that he had the
ability to get back on top. The 1995–96 Bulls finished the regular season
72–10, an NBA record for most wins in a season, and Jordan, with his shooting rhythm
back, earned his eighth scoring title. He also became the tenth NBA player to
score 25,000 career points and second fastest after Chamberlain to reach that
mark. The Bulls went on to win their fourth NBA championship, overpowering the
Seattle Supersonics in six games. Few who watched will ever forget how Jordan
sank to his knees, head bent over the winning ball, in a moment of bittersweet
victory and deep sadness. The game had been played on Father's Day, three years
after his father's murder.
The defending
champions had a tougher time during the 1996–97 season but entered the playoffs
as expected. Sheer determination took the Bulls to their fifth NBA
championship. Illness, injury, and at times a lack of concentration hurt the
team. In the fifth game of the finals Jordan carried the team to victory
despite suffering from a stomach virus. In the 1997–98 season the Bulls were
again in the playoffs, and again they faced tough competition. As before, they
were able to clinch the NBA championship, and Jordan claimed his sixth NBA
finals MVP award.
Jordan's other
professional life as a businessman was never off track. Profitable endorsements
(ads in which he voiced his support for certain products) for companies such as
Nike and Wheaties, as well as his own golf company and products such as Michael
Jordan cologne (which reportedly sold 1.5 million bottles in its first two
months), made Jordan a multimillionaire. In 1997 he was ranked the world's
highest paid athlete, with a $30 million contract—the largest one-year salary
in sports history—and approximately $40 million a year in endorsement fees.
Retired again
Jordan retired for a
second time in 1999, ending his career on a high note just after the official
end of a labor dispute between NBA players and team owners. Many people saw him
as the greatest basketball player ever, and his retirement was called the end
of an era. In 2000 Jordan became part-owner and president of basketball
operations of the Washington Wizards. This made him only the third African American
owner in the NBA. He also gained an ownership stake in the Washington Capitals
hockey team. Also in 2000, Jordan celebrated the first year of his $1 million
grant program to help teachers make a difference in their schools.
In September 2001,
after months of rumors, Jordan announced that he was ending his three-year
retirement to play for the Wizards at age thirty-eight. At a news conference to
discuss his comeback, he said, "Physically, I know I'm not twenty-five
years old, but I feel I can play the game of basketball on the highest
level." The Wizards, who had won only nineteen games the season before,
improved with the addition of Jordan. After being voted to play in his
thirteenth All-Star game (during which he missed a slam dunk), Jordan had the Wizards
in the race for the playoffs until suffering a knee injury and missing the last
part of the season. He was also distracted in January 2002 when his wife
Juanita, whom he married in 1989, filed for divorce. (They have three
children.) The next month the divorce was called off. Jordan said he planned to
play one more season for the Wizards.
For More
Information
Greene, Bob. Hang
Time. New York: Doubleday, 1992.
Gutman, Bill.
Michael Jordan: A Biography. New York: Pocket Books, 1991.
Halberstam, David.
Playing for Keeps: Michael Jordan and the World He Made. New York: Random
House, 1999.
Jordan, Michael. For
the Love of the Game: My Story. New York: Crown Publishers, 1998.
Naughton, Jim.
Taking to the Air: The Rise of Michael Jordan. New York: Warner Books, 1992.
Smith, Sam. The
Jordan Rules. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1992.
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