Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - In tears, Jordan is known as the "God of Basketball" in all aspects. (Address of text, pictures, videos, etc.)
In tears, Jordan is known as the "God of Basketball" in all aspects. (Address of text, pictures, videos, etc.)
Give you an article that looks at Jordan's greatness from the perspective of the so-called "Jordan Terminator":
Michael Jordan.
This mantra can quickly make many images flash before your eyes: the NIKE logo, the sculpture in front of the United Center in Chicago, red, championship cigars, the smiling person in the middle of the 1992 Dream Team photo of the three aces. The man with the teeth, the free-throw line dunk, the sea of ??reporters in the footage of his return from the 1995 shutdown of all news breaks in America... But, in professional basketball from 1984 to 1998, the name was something else.
Suppose you are sitting in the locker room. You have just put on a jersey and are watching video of the opponent Bulls while arranging your shoelaces. The coach opens the door and comes in and says to you, "You will be on defense today..." What is the name you are most afraid of hearing? When the coach's lips slowly squeeze out the word "Michael", will you feel dizzy?
This is a great problem that persists throughout the times. In the words of Sports News Network columnist John Jackson, guarding against Jordan is like a hurricane disaster preparedness drill:
Pack up your belongings, cover up, and pray that the damage will be a little bit smaller.
For defenders of that era, this process was like standing at the front of the formation and looking at the smoke rushing in the distance. The sound of hoofbeats is getting closer, and you can vaguely see the riding shadow of the legendary god of death. You have no choice but to hold on to your shield and position your horse. However, onlookers are always bored: they will be busy looking for one "Jordan stopper" (official name is Jordan Stopper). The more losers there are, the more valuable the next "Jordan blocker" is: Hey, you can always find one or two.
Well: This is the story of the "Jordan Blocker". Rather than saying that Jordan is overcoming obstacles one after another like leveling up and defeating monsters, it is better to say that the world is looking for suitable partners one after another, putting them on the scale opposite Jordan like a blind date, and then...it depends on your fate.
Sidney Moncrief:
One of the greatest defensive backs in history and the most underrated figure of the 1980s. His Bucks are Larry Bird's biggest pain in the East outside of Dr. J's Philadelphia. Of course, the most surprising thing about him is, "Old Nelson actually led such a great defender?" - Or from another angle: His great defense made Old Nelson feel that it was too difficult to overcome, "I have led such a great defender before." A great defender, let’s experiment with offense in the future..."
Moncrieffe is an outstanding and comprehensive defensive master: tough, quick to move, smart, and good at using small things to win big ones (1979 NCAA Tournament, he successfully defended Larry Bird). In theory, he is the best person to guard Jordan. Unfortunately: he suffered an injury in the 1986-87 season when Jordan was in his third year, and his career almost collapsed. The performance against Jordan since then has been really ugly: in the two encounters in 1987, Jordan scored 37 points and 50 points respectively. A habitual pattern of killing followed. In the 1985-86 season, Jordan missed the well-known 64 games, so we rarely met him. Therefore, only the 1984-85 season was the only time when Jordan really tried his best to fight...
A little secret: Jordan met Moncrief in his second professional game, scoring 21 points in the game . At that time, Jordan was only a No. 3 pick who had played two games, and Moncrief was already a two-time Defensive Player of the Year and one of the most comprehensive offensive and defensive players in the league. Therefore, this game was not included in the history books... Two days later , in Chicago, Jordan shined with the first brilliance of his NBA career: he scored 37 points on Moncrief's head. The world is dazzled. Three weeks later, when Jordan scored 35 points again in Milwaukee, the world was already buzzing with his name. On Jordan's 22nd birthday, the Bulls once again attacked Milwaukee: Jordan was limited to 26 points.
No one has really called Moncrief the "Jordan Blocker", because they really met in their peak years, only this short story, and after 1986-87, it was an increasingly sharp team. The story of a sharp sword cutting through an old and dead tree.
A fact that paparazzi-like data experts will ignore: Jordan's first 20 and first 30 were both obtained by Moncrief.
And...
In April 1985, the Bulls were eliminated 1-3 in the first round. In other words, in Jordan's world-wide NBA career, his first regular season defeat and first playoff defeat both came from Moncrief.
Whether Jordan scored 21 points or 37 points over Moncrief's head, what Moncrief did was actually the same: never losing position, rushing to block Jordan's frontal breakthrough route, forcing him to Make jump shots from both wings or go baseline. His height of 191 centimeters indeed cannot suppress Jordan, but by relying solely on the two points of "lasting" and "not losing position", he can at least make it difficult for Jordan to break through. Regarding Moncrief's defense, the most famous comment came from Jordan himself:
"Playing with him is destined to be an all-round duel all night long. He is like a hound, both offensively and defensively. He will try his best to bite you."
Alvin Robertson:
Moncrief failed to become the "Jordan Blocker", but his hound defense is similar to sacrificing his life. Guo Songyang, who was in charge of Jing Wuming, allowed Li Xunhuan to see Jing Wuming's sword path clearly. After the Jordan storm came, the entire NBA began to summarize his ins and outs and natural enemy habits. Antonio Diaz Miguel, head coach of the Spanish Olympic team, and his disciple Fernando Martins covered their wounds and figured out a pattern, which they expressed in clumsy English as follows.
Master: "He is not a human! He is a rubber man!"
Apprentice: "He keeps jumping. Very fast, very good, and good at jumping!"
The Pacers' Jim Thomas added: "I kept trying to tell if his first step was walking to get that fast, but I couldn't see clearly - it was too fast!"
In fact, this was the proposition against Jordan before 1993: the fastest first step in league history, a jet launch like Elgin Baylor, a silky charm like Earl Monroe, and a flight like Dr. J. . The world's conclusion: control his breakthrough at all costs. Since there is no one in the world who is over 198 centimeters tall who can run so fast, we have to look for short guards. So the media once concluded:
"Alvin Robertson is very suitable!"
Three-time steal king Robertson, 191 centimeters tall, crawls like a snake into grass, and is an acrobat. Balance ability, lightning hands. Agility, aggression, awareness, all seem to be refined. To be fair, in the early matches between Jordan and him, he did pay the price of 6 mistakes in a single game. However, Robertson can only threaten Jordan's dribbling, but there is no way to completely stop him: he is not as steady as Moncrief, so he is like a lightweight boxer against a middleweight, and can occasionally rely on speed. Stab the opponent quickly and avoid the opponent's bombardment with flexible footwork. However, overall, he can only occasionally stab Jordan's surging attack wave and cause a few mistakes. When Jordan began to win the scoring title, Robertson could only watch as Jordan scored 40 points consecutively above his head. In 1990, an iconic shot resolved the duel between him (who was with the Bucks at the time) and Jordan: Jordan took the steals title from him, made a Robertson-style steal, and followed up with a two-handed flip to detonate the ball. The whole audience. So Robertson stayed outside the trapeze era.
Dennis Johnson:
Regarding him and Jordan, the World Conference immediately focused on the legend in the spring of 1986: Jordan scored 63 points in a single game in front of him, forcing him to Lee Bird said "God wore the No. 23 jersey", and he himself also left this sentence: "You see, no one can guard Jordan." This is his sixth No. 1 defense The biggest stain on the lineup defender's career. In this way, he was hailed by Larry Bird as "the best player I have ever played with" and became one of the stepping stones in Jordan's immortal career.
Actually...
In the famous 1986 series, Johnson didn't play against Jordan much. Throughout the game, both sides went back and forth, fighting until the sky was dark and the earth was dark. In the melee, Jordan was elusive and frequently took advantage of the Celtics' unsteady footing to attack during transitions between offense and defense. The person who encountered Jordan the most was poor Danny Ainge. Of course, he didn't know that seven years later, he would wear a Suns jersey and witness the Jordan legend again. At that time, he was just in a hurry, and was passed by Jordan repeatedly with lightning and flint. Bird was teased by Jordan's continuous hip dribbling, and McHale's spider wingspan near the basket was broken by Jordan's air strike. Rather than saying that the Celtics failed to guard Jordan, it is better to say that the Celtics failed to stop his rhythm.
Of course, just like using a bamboo fence to surround a bison against a flying eagle, no one in that era could stop him.
Dennis Johnson inadvertently helped pay for the entire team. He didn't face Jordan very often, and every time he encountered him in the chaos, Jordan would always ask a teammate to cover Johnson and attack by himself. This was also Jordan's secret technique for dealing with fast defenders before 1991: Opponents with height usually lack speed, so go ahead; opponents with speed are usually short and thin, so block them (he did the same against Moncrief). Johnson was confused and pushed repeatedly in the chaos. When he came off the court, he discovered that Jordan had scored 63 points, while reporters from all over the world were watching him happily, and their eyesight couldn't help but darken...
An overlooked case: A year after 1986, in the first round of 1987, the series where Larry Bird was bloody, Jordan encountered Dennis Johnson again, and the Bulls lost in three games. Jordan averaged 35 points per game, but shot only 42 from the field. In that series, Johnson was fully prepared when facing Jordan: expertly judged blocking, accurate movement, timely interference, always focused, not discouraged by Jordan's shots, and sought help from his teammates - this series, It worked.
Although that was limited to Jordan before the age of 24, Dennis Johnson did give Jordan a headache. On January 21, 1985, rookie Jordan's heartfelt words were the most pertinent: when he scored 32 points on the Celtics without Johnson, he said: "I took advantage of his absence."
Johnson and Moncrief are similar in one thing: they are short in stature and rely on experience, anticipation and agile movement to try to stick to Jordan's breakthrough; so when Jordan wants to break through the two of them, he has to rely on cover - he is afraid that the cover will be A common problem for small solo defenders. Before Jordan had a proficient jump shot in his early days, he and Moncrief were the most knowledgeable people in dealing with Jordan. A little more than Moncrief, in the first round of 1987, he knew how to lure Jordan into his own inside group trap. This was the prototype of how Dumars and the Pistons' system later dealt with Jordan.
An interlude: Rolando Blackman:
He is not even famous for his defense. He is more like the shooting guard version of Mark Aquili, proficient in all kinds of singles scoring. conspiracy. Therefore, just as Michael Ray Richardson always has experience in dealing with Isiah Thomas, he can also use the mind-reading skills of a singles player to grasp Jordan's mentality. It is always easy for a killer to imagine the psychological world of another killer.
He is 198 centimeters tall and thin, but has enough dexterity. He could turn every game into a one-on-one situation and play a duel game with Jordan. He would deliberately provoke Jordan, attack Jordan, and force Jordan to consume energy and change his rhythm. He could stick to Jordan for a layup, and then use insidious tricks to sabotage the final shot... At least after 1987, this trick was quite effective. However, in 1989 and 1990, when Jordan began to strengthen his upper body, improve his jump shot, and no longer obsessed with breaking through and killing his opponents time and time again, Blackman's one-on-one agile fighting style also disappeared.
Joe Dumars:
He is one of the two "toughest defenders I've ever faced" that Jordan admitted (the other is Mickey Rich Mongolian). However, there is a little ironic story:
The world-famous "Jordan Rule" was introduced because he couldn't guard Jordan.
Before April 3, 1988, the world was peaceful. That day, Jordan, as usual, humiliated the Pistons in a nationally broadcast game. He scored 59 points and the Bulls won. This is nothing special: he has already scored countless wounds on the Pistons before, 49 points, 47 points, 61 points, 49 points... In 19 games against the Pistons in his career, he averaged 36 points. But this time, Chuck Daly couldn't bear it anymore:
"I made up my mind that Jordan can no longer kill us alone."
So the "Jordan Rules" were released . The result is that in the 17 games the Bulls and Pistons met since then, Jordan averaged 28 points per game and the Pistons won 14 games. In 1989, sometimes Daley would not implement this rule. For example, in the Eastern Conference playoffs, Jordan scored 46 points in the third game. After the game, the Assassin went to Daley and asked for the Jordan rule to be reintroduced. So in the next three games, Jordan got 46 points. 23, 18 and 32 points.
Of course, these credits now belong to Joe Dumas.
In fact, the "Jordan Rules" are a set of outrageous and meticulous routines compiled by Chuck Daley with his famous meticulousness: When Jordan is one-on-one, force him to move to the left in order to Avoid his more terrifying right-side breakthrough; when trying to pick and roll, double-team with big men (Sally or Laimbeer) to maintain physical contact; when playing post-up, double-team with three people; when Jordan runs away without the ball, Lanbeer Bill took a step up to force him away from the basket, and Dumars got close to him; Thomas made illegal defensive side kicks at any time in an attempt to double-team Jordan. Daley’s self-admitted rule: “Keep physical contact.”
Okay, you say: This is the credit of the entire Pistons team... So what did Dumars do?
As early as 1986, Dennis Johnson understood this truth: You can't handle Jordan alone. Therefore, as smart as he is, he figured out early to use his teammates to control Jordan. Dumas, to be fair, is not a perfect one-on-one defender: his lower body is stable but his speed is not outstanding. He is only 191 centimeters tall. Therefore, when he defends Jordan alone, tragedies such as 61 points and 59 points will occur.
However, he is a defender with absolutely perfect consciousness. His predictions, lateral movements, contact with teammates, and detailed adjustments are all as precise as a chess master. The Pistons relied on the entire team to defend Jordan, and he was the rudder of this defense: he was the guide for the muscle monster behind him, playing a game of wits with Jordan. Therefore, when the Pistons' interior group dispersed, Dumars' ability to restrict Jordan gradually disappeared.
A factor that may be overlooked:
The most terrifying thing about Jordan is his hatred and bigotry. Once you anger him, you will be thrown into hell and ravaged by him. However, Dumars and Jordan had a good relationship: he was a true gentleman. Every time before Dumas brought his brothers to slaughter Jordan, the two would greet each other and chat. Jordan also admitted that "in fourteen years of playing, we have never said a harsh word to each other." Even when Jordan was knocked away by the Detroit gangsters, Dumars would come over and ask, "Are you OK?" Maybe Dumars was not Intentional, but keeping Jordan from hating him is one of the secrets of defensive success.
In any case, Joe Dumars set a standard: Although he relied on the entire team system, he was the person who successfully blocked Jordan for the longest time in history, a standard specimen of "Jordan Blocker" : A defender who is short, stable, smart, quick, dedicated and aggressive.
Gerald Wilkins:
As for the biggest victim of Jordan's hatred, he is also the most famous "Jordan blocker". If you Google this English word, you will see the name "Gerald Wilkins" - he is the first person to be publicly given this title by the media.
As the younger brother of Dominic Wilkins, he has participated in two dunk contests and has extraordinary athletic ability. His outstanding defense made him the starting shooting guard in New York until John Starks arrived in 1990.
He was the first person to be officially nicknamed the "Jordan Killer"
In the 1992 Eastern Conference semifinals, Michael Jordan played the first seven-game series in his six-season championship journey— -The other time was in the 1998 Eastern Conference Finals where he ended his feud with Reggie Miller - and averaged "only" 31 points per game and committed 16 turnovers in the last three games.
Of course, the credit should actually go to Pat Riley and the New York Knicks' steel inside group he created. Just like the Pistons' defense against Jordan, it was not Dumars, but Laimbeer. , Sally.
His performance confused the Cleveland Cavaliers. He was recruited by the Cavaliers in the summer of 1992, and met Jordan by fate in the 1993 Eastern Conference semifinals. Clevelanders were looking forward to revenge: before this, they had been promoting Craig Ehlo as the "Jordan killer", and Ehlo became the number one "Jordan victim" in history. The most famous story is Jordan's "THE SHOT".
And this time, tragedy happened again.
In the first game of the 1993 Eastern Conference semifinals, Jordan gave him a 43-point performance. After three games, the Cavaliers were swept out. Jordan sneered after the game and said something that showed his vindictiveness: "Well, I guess the 'Jordan Blocker' had a bad time tonight."
The problem is...
Wilkins has never called himself the "Jordan Blocker." This title advocated by Cleveland people is actually the real murderer of Wilkins. He is also the epitome of a large group of people: Ero, John Starks, all the characters who were placed opposite Jordan in the 1990s, without exception, will encounter brutal revenge. In this way, the term "Jordan blocker" gradually became extinct. Until...
Gary Payton:
In the first three games of the 1996 Finals, the battle between Hersey Hawkins, Schrempf, Askew and Payton Next, Jordan averaged 31 points per game. Especially in the first game in Seattle, with 27 points in the first half and 36 points in the game, the SuperSonics' defensive camp collapsed across the board.
The reason for using Hawkins to defend Jordan is as follows: Jordan in 1996, following the flying monster from 1987 to 1989 and the all-around offensive master at the basket from 1989 to 1993, gradually became lighter and more skillful. Not working. Position inside, catch the ball, light fadeaway jumper, kill without leaving a trace. Therefore, the past method of relying on fast and lean defenders to block the ball is no longer so effective. Hawkins' calm playing was the reason why Karl selected him. However, when Hawkins was turned around and passed by Jordan continuously, Karl found that he still underestimated Jordan's speed.
A past event that has been forgotten by many people: In the second half of Game 3 of the 1993 Finals, the Suns were so ill that they sent Kevin Johnson to guard Jordan. KJ's height of 185 centimeters is indeed not impressive enough, but his league-leading pace bites Jordan. Jordan relied on jump shots to score 44 points, but he took as many as 43 shots.
Hmm...use a point guard to defend Jordan?
Karl did not want Payton to spend too much energy on Jordan because he wanted him to use his post-playing ability. But Harper mocked Karl's strategy with the following words: "Payton is indeed a good player. But he wants to back up me? Good luck to him."
So, in the last three games of the Finals, Karl let Payton goes all out to deal with Jordan.
The outcome of the story has not changed: the Bulls won the championship. However, in the last three games, Jordan's shooting percentage dropped sharply. Payton played the perfect villain: gossiping, provoking, defending with all his strength, attacking the Bulls' backcourt to tire them out, relying on speed to restrict Jordan's breakthrough, and interfering with Jordan's shooting accurately and in a timely manner. Because he has no advantage in flexibility, Jordan needs to rely on post-ups to take advantage of his height. Payton himself is the leading post-up master among point guards, and he is exquisite in the skills of guarding against post-ups.
Of course, the real headache for Jordan was not Payton, but another group of forgotten unsung heroes.
Like the Pistons, Seattle also has a defensive reserve group. The collective forward group of Evan Johnson, Rainman, and Schremf, who are over 208 centimeters tall, ranks first in the Western Conference in terms of double-team rotation.
In the 1996 Western Conference semifinals, relying on this Spider-Man jungle system, Dameng was surrounded and averaged 18 points per game. Once this system started operating, Jordan also began to have headaches.
If Joe Dumars is similar to an iron threshold, Gary Payton is a stumbling block. Behind, left, and right, everywhere. Going around, defending, getting stuck, giving way, diving, everything is possible. Supplemented by the supersonic jungle's wing double-teaming and weak-side replacement, Jordan was finally forced to play the worst finals of his career. The only regret is... In the sixth game of the Finals, Payton and the others still surrounded Jordan, at the cost of a large number of out-of-position rotations and the Bulls' 24 offensive rebounds.
Then...
Similar to all Jordan's past grudge stories: after the 1996 Finals and before retiring in 1998, he played against Payton four more times, splitting him twice. Fall 40. In his later years, Jordan became less excited. After the decisive victory in the first game of the 1997 Finals, he just pursed his lips and clenched his fists, and then became calm and calm. However, even if he faces retirement, he will still slaughter all his old opponents one by one without showing any mercy, although those who must win or lose may not have a major impact on him.
Listing these "Jordan blockers" by time, you can sort out the process of Jordan's killing moves.
In the early years, Moncrief and Dennis Johnson could cause problems for Jordan. Their biggest similarities: short and fast (this is also the biggest similarity among all "Jordan blockers"); sharp awareness; perseverance; never losing position. This is because it is simply impossible for someone of the same height level as Jordan to catch up with his speed. Looking for an undersized guard to deal with Jordan means: clogging up his defense and betting on a day when he doesn't feel good on his jump shot.
When he scored a playoff scoring record of 63 points against the strongest Celtics in history in the 1986 playoffs, Jordan was still a boneless monster, like a snake with extremely low density. Riding on the wind and swaying in the sky, he threw the ball casually after twenty thousand pairs of bloodshot eyes were about to explode. Commentator Al McGwire said straight up that he was the best one-on-one player on the planet. But from 1984 to 1988, his shooting posture was never unified. Most of the time, when he jumps, he stretches his neck forward and leans forward, maintaining a coquettish posture of "I'm taking off... If you dare to come and stop me, I will fly and change my posture."
Beginning in 1988, his upper body became much thicker than in his rookie season, and the most frightening thing was that his shooting posture began to become fixed, and he would also give up the opportunity to fly into the penalty area during fast breaks. And like a child showing off a new toy, "I can also be a shooter," he made a pull-up jump shot. After a year of adjustments, his mid- and long-range shooting posture was determined in 1990 into the classic shape we see now: no longer leaning forward, slightly leaning back, stable, smooth, and concise. He successfully transformed from the best penetrating hand on the planet to the best mid-range shooter on the planet.
So, although his average of 37 points per game in the 1986-87 season was a career high, the real first peak of his personal ability was around 1989. At that time, he was still unstoppable when he broke through the basket, and his mid-to-long-range touch had begun to stabilize.
In fact, since his jump shot became stable in 1989, there are basically no people who can deal with him one-on-one. After 1989, the confrontation with Jordan was basically a one-man defense inside group, Dumars and the Pistons inside, Starks/Wilkins and the New York inside, Payton and the SuperSonics inside, and so on.
Since then, it has been a process of reducing the proportion of breakthroughs and making jump shots more refined. In 1993, his athletic ability was only about 90% of what it was in 1987, but his ability to control the game reached its peak. Of course, there is the occasional annoyance of being disturbed by Kevin Johnson in the 1993 Finals.
But this trick didn’t work in 1996-98.
From 1996-98, Jordan's athletic ability dropped a lot from his peak. Breakthroughs at will when facing the basket are rare. But his strength reached its peak (after his comeback in 1995, when he found an arena for training, he specifically found a place adjacent to the weight room so that he could practice strength at any time). Then the classic back steps and turning back appeared. During this period, his left hand also developed to another peak.
From 1996 to 98, he no longer used the signature reverse breakthrough of the 1980s, but preferred to break through directly from the middle distance on the left side, using his shoulder support to squeeze out space. Therefore, the speedy little defenders who troubled him in the early stage began to fade away due to their strength disadvantage, and they were not as good as Richmond and Byron Russell, who are both tall and physical but not known for their speed.
Finally, Jordan's most underestimated offensive skills:
If you only watch the video highlights, you can easily think that "Jordan's 30 points per game is just breaking through everyone and flying to the basket again and again." , repeat this ten or twenty times”, or “Jordan’s 30 points in each game is a gorgeous back-up step move and finally turn back, repeat this ten or twenty times”.
This is not the case.
In the NBA, we can divide scores into "daily points" and "key points." Daily points are derived from tactics, while key points appear in the stalemate period, at the end of each quarter or during the decisive period. They are basically simple tactics or simply duel. If every round consists of eight people standing apart to watch two people duel, regardless of whether the audience is happy or not, it is true that the main player's physical strength will be unbearable. And veteran head coaches hate this: they like to run the whole team. Simply put, Hamilton's non-stop running is much more attractive than Crawford's gorgeous one-on-one training.
It is easy for the older generation of Jordan fans to criticize today's players for not being concise and trivial because many of Jordan's own scores are "daily points" that are integrated into the team's offense. The most underrated aspect of Jordan is his off-ball offense.
(Insert a sentence here. The characters who came out of North Carolina are really good at off-ball offense and pace. So around 2000, Stackhouse certainly had poor dribbling with his left hand and unstable mid-range shots. However, he is still a powerful and outstanding scorer. The post-up moves of him, Carter and Jordan are the highest quality among shooting guards in their respective eras)
So, in Game 6 of the 1998 Finals, Jordan's repeated breakthroughs with the ball and fouls were actually a compliment to the Jazz's defense. Because for Jordan, most of the work of getting rid of the defense has been done by moving without the ball long before catching the ball.
The moves of off-ball attacks vary with the times. In the 1980s, in addition to cutting in like a rubber man after calling a screen, Jordan also loved to cut from the baseline to 45 degrees on both wings. After receiving a pass, he would roll into the inside and then take off; Cutting out to catch the ball and then swinging into a three-threat stance and then bursting with force, as well as catching the ball from the baseline and cutting in, are both his specialties. During the period from 1996 to 1998, the reason why people often thought that "he turned over as soon as he caught the ball with his back and didn't even try to get rid of it" was because his offensive preparation - stuck position - was done before catching the ball. , squeezing space, adjusting pace – it’s all done.
So, the reason why Jordan knocked down the blockers again and again is because he has been evolving. Just like 1996-98, he was old and no longer had the athletic ability of 1989 or the long stamina of 1993. But his memory, experience and heart remain. He is becoming more and more like Larry Bird and the magicians, relying on chess player-like command to calculate and grasp. From the speed and flying against Moncrief and Johnson in his early years, to the reading, thinking and response in his later years, there are countless different Michael Jordans hidden under the similar average of 30 points per game.
Countless Michael Jordans who are constantly changing between smart, sophisticated, agile, fast, ferocious, cruel, precise and flying, making the "Jordan blockers" dizzy.
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