Michael Jordan
Second Three-peat (1996-98) · 1996–1998
Jordan's elite Scoring (95) and strong Defense (88) define this era.
Trophy Case
1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998
Two three-peats. 6-0 in Finals. Never went to Game 7.
1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998
6-for-6 in the Finals — averaged 33.6 PPG across all six
1988, 1991, 1992, 1996, 1998
5× MVP — tied with Russell for second most. Won in 3 different decades.
1988
Also won MVP and scoring title that year — two-way dominance
1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998
10 titles — most in NBA history, including 7 consecutive
1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003
14 selections — would have been more without the baseball hiatus
1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998
10 selections — would have been more without the baseball hiatus
The Story
The Flu Game
June 11, 1997. Game 5 of the NBA Finals. Jordan could barely stand during warmups, visibly ill with what would become known as the Flu Game. He proceeded to score 38 points, including a decisive three-pointer in the final minute, then collapsed into Scottie Pippen's arms. It wasn't just a performance — it was a declaration that willpower could override the human body.
The Last Shot
With 5.2 seconds left in Game 6 of the 1998 Finals, Jordan stripped Karl Malone, dribbled up court, and buried the most famous jumper in basketball history over Bryon Russell. Six titles. Six Finals MVPs. The perfect ending to the perfect career — at least until he decided otherwise.
63 Points in the Garden
In just his second playoff game after returning from a broken foot, Jordan dropped 63 points on the 1986 Celtics — widely considered the greatest team ever assembled. Larry Bird famously said afterward: "That was God disguised as Michael Jordan."
The Standard
Every great player since 1998 has been measured against Michael Jordan. Not against their contemporaries, not against statistical benchmarks — against him. Six rings, six Finals MVPs, five regular season MVPs, ten scoring titles. The numbers are absurd, but the legacy transcends them. Jordan didn't just win championships — he made winning look inevitable.
Jordan vs. The Bad Boy Pistons
Before the dynasty, there was the wall. The Detroit Pistons' Jordan Rules were designed to physically brutalize him — and they worked, eliminating the Bulls three straight years. Jordan's response? He added 15 pounds of muscle, developed an unstoppable post game, and swept them 4-0 in 1991. The student had graduated.
Brand Jordan
The Air Jordan brand, born from a Nike deal that almost didn't happen, grew into a $5 billion empire. Jordan didn't just endorse products — he became the template for athlete-as-brand. The Jumpman logo is recognized in every corner of the globe, and Jordan Brand athletes span every major sport.
Space Jam and Global Icon
Jordan transcended basketball in a way no athlete had before. Space Jam grossed $250 million. His tongue-out drives became the most imitated move on every playground on earth. He made the number 23 sacred. In the 1990s, Michael Jordan was arguably the most famous human being alive.
The Competitive Fire
Jordan's competitiveness was legendary and borderline pathological — in the best way. He once trash-talked Muggsy Bogues into missing a critical shot. He remembered every slight, real or imagined, and used them as fuel. Teammates called it terrifying. Opponents called it demoralizing. Fans called it greatness.
The Pizza Incident
The famous "Flu Game" has long been whispered about as something else entirely. Some say it was food poisoning from a late-night pizza delivery — possibly ordered by someone who didn't want Jordan at full strength. A fun conspiracy theory that only adds to the mythology. Either way, 38 points while barely standing speaks for itself.
Rumored · Never confirmed
The Secret Baseball Bet
When Jordan retired in 1993 to play baseball, the rumor mill went into overdrive. Some whispered it was a secret arrangement related to his well-known love of competition off the court. The NBA officially found nothing. Jordan came back, won three more rings, and the whispers faded into legend.
Rumored · Never confirmed
In Their Own Words
“That was God disguised as Michael Jordan.”
— Larry Bird, after Game 2 of the 1986 Eastern Conference First Round
Jordan scored 63 points against the 67-win Celtics — the all-time single-game playoff scoring record. The Bulls still lost in double overtime. Bird had never seen anything like it.
The Journey
Cut From JV — Then Unstoppable
Emsley A. Laney High School · Wilmington, NC
Famously cut from the varsity basketball team as a sophomore — a rejection that fueled a legendary competitive drive. Made varsity as a junior and dominated, averaging over 25 PPG as a senior. Selected to the McDonald's All-American Game in 1981. Also excelled in baseball and football.
25
ppg
✓
mcdonalds all american
The Shot That Started It All
University of North Carolina · Chapel Hill, NC
Hit the game-winning shot as a freshman in the 1982 NCAA Championship against Georgetown, giving Dean Smith his first national title. Named ACC Freshman of the Year. Won the Naismith College Player of the Year award in 1984. Averaged 17.7 PPG across three seasons before declaring for the NBA Draft.
17.7
ppg
1
ncaa titles
✓
player of year
His Airness — Six Rings, Zero Doubt
Chicago Bulls · Chicago, IL
Selected 3rd overall in 1984 behind Hakeem Olajuwon and Sam Bowie. Won Rookie of the Year, then transformed the Bulls from a lottery team into a dynasty. Won six NBA Championships in six Finals appearances (1991-93, 1996-98) — never needed a Game 7. Five-time MVP. Ten scoring titles. Defensive Player of the Year. The 1995-96 Bulls went 72-10, the best regular season record at the time.
1
dpoy
5
mvps
6
finals mvps
6
championships
10
scoring titles
The GOAT Debate Starts and Ends Here
Basketball Hall of Fame · Springfield, MA
Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2009. Career averages of 30.1 PPG (highest in NBA history), 6.2 RPG, 5.3 APG. His cultural impact transcended basketball — Air Jordan became a $5 billion brand. Changed the economics of athlete endorsements forever. The standard against which every player is measured.
5.3
career apg
30.1
career ppg
6.2
career rpg
Signature Moments
The Shot — Georgetown
NCAA Championship game. With 15 seconds left and North Carolina trailing Georgetown 62-61, freshman Michael Jordan hit a 16-foot jumper from the left wing to give UNC the national title. It was the shot heard round the basketball world — the moment a legend was born.
Jordan later said this was the shot that gave him the confidence to believe he could always hit the big one.
The Flu Game
Game 5 of the 1997 NBA Finals. Suffering from food poisoning (or the flu — debate rages on), Jordan was barely able to stand during timeouts. He scored 38 points, including a clutch three-pointer with under a minute left, and collapsed into Scottie Pippen's arms at the final buzzer.
The ultimate testament to Jordan's will. The Bulls won 90-88 and took a 3-2 series lead.
The Last Shot
Game 6 of the 1998 Finals. With 5.2 seconds left and the Bulls trailing 86-85, Jordan stripped Karl Malone, dribbled upcourt, and hit a 20-foot jumper over Bryon Russell — his final shot as a Bull. The Bulls won their sixth championship.
The perfect ending. Jordan retired (again) as a six-time champion with six Finals MVPs. The image of the follow-through is iconic.
63 Points in the Garden
First-round playoff game against the 67-win Celtics. A second-year Jordan, returning from a broken foot, scored 63 points — still the most ever scored in an NBA playoff game. Larry Bird said afterward: "That was God disguised as Michael Jordan."
Even in a double-overtime loss, Jordan announced himself as a transcendent force.
The Switch-Hand Layup — 1991 Finals
Game 2 of the 1991 NBA Finals. Jordan drove baseline, elevated for a right-handed layup, then switched the ball mid-air to his left hand and finished past three defenders. Sam Smith called it "the most famous layup in basketball history." The Bulls won their first championship that series.
The moment Jordan went from dominant scorer to artist. This layup is replayed more than most dunks.
The Shrug Game — 1992 Finals
Game 1 of the 1992 Finals. Jordan hit six three-pointers in the first half — a Finals record — finishing with 35 points before halftime. After the sixth three, he turned to the broadcast table and shrugged, as if he couldn't explain it himself. He finished with 39.
Even Jordan couldn't believe what he was doing. The shrug became one of the most iconic gestures in sports history.
The Double Nickel — Return to MSG
Wearing number 45, just his fifth game back from retirement. Jordan dropped 55 points on the Knicks at Madison Square Garden. The city that had tormented him in the playoffs for years watched him announce his return in the most Jordan way possible.
The world thought Jordan might be diminished after 18 months of baseball. He silenced everyone in one night at the world's most famous arena.
Record-Breaking Performances
The games and seasons that rewrote history
63 Points in Playoffs vs Boston Celtics
Larry Bird said after the game: "That was God disguised as Michael Jordan." Jordan was 23 years old, coming back from a broken foot that had kept him out 64 games. The Bulls still lost in double overtime. But the legend of Jordan was born that night.
All-time single-game playoff scoring record. Set against the 67-win Celtics dynasty — arguably the greatest team ever assembled.
Jordan had only played 18 regular season games that year due to injury. The Celtics had Bird, McHale, Parish, Walton, and DJ — a team with four Hall of Famers. Nobody expected Jordan to be the best player on the court. He was.
Greatest Rivalries
Jordan vs LeBron: The GOAT Debate
See LeBron James's profileThe defining argument in sports — who is the greatest basketball player ever?
Head-to-Head
Jordan: 6 championships, 6 Finals MVPs, 5 MVPs, 10 scoring titles, 0 Finals losses. LeBron: 4 championships, 4 Finals MVPs, 4 MVPs, all-time scoring leader, 21+ seasons of elite play.
They never played against each other. The debate is purely about legacy: 6-0 in Finals vs 4-6 in Finals, individual dominance vs longevity, killer instinct vs all-around impact. Jordan retired in 2003; LeBron was drafted that same year. The torch was passed without ever being contested on the court.
Defining Moments
Turning Point
LeBron's 2016 Finals comeback (down 3-1 against the 73-win Warriors) is the closest anyone has come to matching Jordan's 1998 Finals Game 6 "Last Shot." Both moments define their respective legacies.
The Verdict
No verdict. Both have legitimate GOAT claims. Jordan has the perfect Finals record and cultural mythologizing. LeBron has the longevity, the counting records, and the adaptability. The debate will never be settled — and that's what makes it the greatest argument in sports.
The Jordan-LeBron debate has spawned a billion-dollar media industry. It drives television ratings, podcast downloads, and social media engagement. It's the rare sports argument where both sides have legitimate, defensible positions.
Career Numbers
Career PPG
Highest in NBA history
30.1
Career RPG
Also Bird (10.0) — Jordan grabbed boards for a shooting guard
6.2
Career APG
Also LeBron (7.3) — Jordan was a complete player
5.3
Career SPG
3rd all-time
2.3
Career FG%
Also Bird (.496) — Jordan shot efficiently despite volume
49.7%
Career Points
5th all-time
32292
Playoff PPG
Highest in NBA playoff history
33.4
Games Played
15 seasons
1072
$256M vs $94M
Nike vs NBA Salary
Jordan earned $256M from Nike in 2023 alone — 2.7x more than his entire $94M NBA playing career salary combined
66.7%
Scoring Title Rate
Won the scoring title in 10 of 15 full seasons — two-thirds of the time, nobody on Earth scored more
33.4
Career Playoff PPG
Highest career playoff PPG in NBA history — raised his average by 2.6 points when the stakes went up
30
Playoff Series Won
30 of 37 career playoff series won — 81% series win rate, 6-0 in Finals
Season Stats · Second Three-peat (1996-98)
Engine Attributes
Other Eras
Fan Debate
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