April 16, 2003
MICHAEL Jordan’s two-year basketball encore is over, reminding the world that even the most magnificent songs do not end with a crescendo.
While his latest performance was not virtuoso, it was also far from failure.
Jordan plays his final National Basketball Association game Wednesday in Philadelphia. The 40-year-old superstar who led the Chicago Bulls to six NBA titles could not guide the Washington Wizards into the playoffs.
Finally, Jordan leaves the court after a 15-year career on his own terms with no unfinished business.
“I’m 100 percent sure,” Jordan said. “This is my last year. No 99.9 — 100 percent.”
Jordan led Chicago to three titles in a row but retired in 1993 at age 30 after the murder of his father James and made an ill-fated bid to play professional baseball, which led to a comeback in 1995.
Stung by a playoff defeat, Jordan trained during the making of his movie “Space Jam” and sparked the Bulls to three more crowns, the last coming on what could have been his final shot, a title-winning jumper against Utah in 1998.
It was the last shot for “Air” Jordan, the legend who rewrote the record book, who led the NBA in scoring for 10 seasons, seven in a row, and the one who departs with an all-time record career average of 30.2 points a game.
But the goodbye was tainted. Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf and general manager Jerry Krause pushed out coach Phil Jackson, sparking a break-up of a champion team that never got to see how long it would have taken before being conquered.
“I always got the sense that Michael was consumed with the game, consumed with winning and competing,” former Bulls guard Steve Kerr said. “Every day was a war in practice and in games. That was the focus.
“He could put on a show every single night. It just never ceased. Every arena was sold out. Every fan was there to see him. And no matter how tired he was, he never disappointed.”
Jordan bid farewell to Chicago in January of 1999 after the end of a labor dispute, but joined the Wizards as president of basketball operations a year later and returned to the court in September of 2001.
The gravity-defying aerobatics that defined his youth were gone, but his tongue would still stick out at age 40 and his skill and experience eased the pain of being grounded and loss of what Father Time had taken from his game.
Jordan took a team that was 19-63 before he suited up and rebuilt respect, even if he finished a few games shy of leading the Wizards into the playoffs.
“I don’t think he tarnished his legacy whatsoever,” New York coach Don Chaney said. “What he did just reinforced in everyone’s mind how great a player he truly is. To come back at that age with a team that’s not a championship team and almost get that team to the playoffs, that says a lot.”
Jordan in a Wizards’ uniform was the encore a rock star returns to play when applauding fans demand more, the epilogue of a great book, the final lines of a Shakespearean work after the main character’s fate has been decided.
“He’s the greatest to ever put on a pair of basketball shoes,” Toronto’s Vince Carter said.
In the twilight of his career, he sparked epic standing ovations in Chicago, where a statue of him in mid-leap remains, mute testimony to the arena Jordan built with his fame and an appeal that had millions wanting to be “like Mike”.
“Every player in the NBA has been influenced by him,” Seattle’s Ray Allen said. “This whole generation is a reflection of wanting to be like him.”
What he did for the NBA likely will never be fully measured.
Since Jordan joined the NBA in 1984 after leading the US Olympic team to gold in Los Angeles, NBA attendance has doubled to more than 20 million people a season.
US television viewership of the NBA more than doubled to more than 100 million people. Throw in another 2.5 billion watching in the rest of the world and one begins to comprehend the scope of Jordan’s feat.
The number of international players in the NBA has grown from eight when Jordan began to 68 as he departs, Jordan becoming the game’s global ambassador since leading the US Olympic “Dream Team” to 1992 Barcelona gold.
In many ways, Jordan helped open the NBA to China’s Yao Ming, Germany’s Dirk Nowitzki, Australia’s Andrew Gaze, Africa’s Dikembe Mutombo and dozens more.
The average player salary has skyrocketed from 325,000 dollars to four million dollars. From landmark endorsement deals to souvenir sales to likeness rights and record television deals, Jordan has lifted the money to new heights.
“Every player should take some of the money out of his pocket and give it to Michael Jordan,” retired Los Angeles Lakers star Magic Johnson said. “He is the reason they are making it.”
Agence France-Presse