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Michael Jordan

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MJ'S LIFE

A phenomenal athlete with a unique combination of grace, power, artistry and improvisational ability, Michael Jordan has single-handedly redefined the NBA superstar.

Despite not playing for three seasons from 1998-99 through 2000-01, Jordan was still probably the most recognizable athlete in the world during that time. However, after assuming an ownership and team executive role with the Washington Wizards in 2000, he returned to play the game he loves as a Wizard upon signing a two-year contract on September 25, 2001.

He is not only the top player of his era, but is quite possibly the best player ever to wear the uniform of an NBA team. A legend on the court, Jordan added to his mystique with a totally unexpected retirement just before the 1993-94 season. After a year spent playing minor league baseball, he authored yet another amazing chapter to his story by returning to the Chicago Bulls late in the 1994-95 campaign with his basketball skills intact. By the end of the 1997-98 season, he had won a record 10th scoring title and led the Bulls to their sixth NBA championship of the 1990s.

A summary of Jordan's basketball career inevitably fails to do it justice. The 6-6 Brooklyn native attended high school in Wilmington, North Carolina, where he was cut from the basketball team as a sophomore. He spent his college career at North Carolina, playing for an NCAA Championship team as a freshman and hitting the game-winning shot in the title game. He was named College Player of the Year by The Sporting News in both 1983 and 1984 and won the Naismith and Wooden Awards in 1984. After his junior year he was chosen with the third overall pick in the 1984 NBA Draft by the Chicago Bulls.

Jordan burst into the big time with a fabulous first season, earning the NBA Rookie of the Year Award in 1984-85 after averaging 28.2 points per game. An injured foot sidelined him for 64 games in his second campaign, but he came back late in the year to score an NBA playoff-record 63 points in a first-round game against the Boston Celtics. Starting with the 1986-87 season he began a career-long onslaught on the NBA record book. That year saw him average 37.1 points in the first of seven consecutive seasons in which he led the league in scoring (a feat matched only by Wilt Chamberlain) and topped 30 points per contest. By the time he announced his retirement in 1993, he had earned three league MVP Awards, an NBA Defensive Player of the Year selection, a pair of NBA slam-dunk championship titles, seven berths on the All-NBA First Team and six selections to the NBA All-Defensive First Team. He also led the league in steals three times. A nine-time All-Star Game selection, he earned the game's MVP Award in 1988 after a 40-point performance.

More than just a scoring machine, Jordan also showed that he was a leader and a winner by guiding Chicago to a trio of NBA Championships. As a rookie, he joined a Bulls team that had won only 28 games the previous season. By 1991 the club had topped 60 wins during the regular season while marching to the first of three consecutive titles.

If anything, Jordan was even more spectacular in postseason play. Prior to his retirement he had averaged below 30 points per game in the postseason only once (29.3 ppg in his rookie year). In the 1985-86 postseason he poured in an astounding 43.7 points per contest. He left basketball temporarily in 1993 as a three-time Finals MVP, and he owned a career playoff average of 34.7 points per game, the best in NBA history. He also had two Olympic gold medals to show for his participation on Team USA in 1984 and 1992.

Jordan shocked the NBA by announcing his retirement prior to the 1993-94 season. He spent the year playing minor league baseball for the Class AA Birmingham Barons of the Chicago White Sox organization, for whom he was a competent if unspectacular performer. But Jordan's hopes of reaching the major leagues seemed dim, and with Major League Baseball embroiled in a labor dispute as the 1995 season neared, he focused his competitive fire back on the NBA. Late in the 1994-95 NBA season he came out of retirement and attempted to carry the Bulls to another title. Jordan averaged 26.9 points in 17 regular-season games, then poured in 31.5 points per contest in the playoffs. Despite Jordan's presence in the lineup, the Bulls didn't have quite enough to get past the Orlando Magic in the conference semifinals. Chicago lost to the Magic in six games.

Jordan's championship quest was fulfilled the following season as the team enjoyed one of the most remarkable years ever posted by any club. Jordan led the NBA with 30.4 points per game as the Bulls charged to a record 72 victories during the regular season, then stormed through the playoffs with a 15-3 record. Chicago's combined record of 87-13 for the 1995-96 regular season and playoffs was the best in NBA history. Along the way, Jordan captured the MVP awards for the regular season, All-Star Game and Finals, joining Willis Reed (1970) as the only men to win all three honors in the same season.

Although he relinquished the MVP award to Karl Malone in 1996-97, Jordan again led the Bulls to the NBA Championship with a satisfying six-game victory over Malone's Utah Jazz, and was named the NBA Finals MVP for the fifth time in his remarkable career.

2001-02:

Returned from retirement for the second time in his career, posting 19 points (7-21 FG, 5-6 FT), six assists, five rebounds and four steals in 37 minutes to tip off the regular season at New York on 10/30/01...Led the Wizards with 22.9 points per game...Averaged 5.7 rebounds, 5.2 assists and 1.4 steals...Scored his 30,000th career point vs. Chicago on 1/4/02...Set the MCI Center record when he scored a season-high 51 points vs. Charlotte on 12/29/01...Set the franchise record for most points scored in the first quarter of a game (24) vs. Charlotte on 12/29/01, second quarter of a game (19) vs. Chicago 1/4/02 and points scored in a half (34) vs. Charlotte 12/29/01...Scored 45 points and had 10 rebounds, seven assists and three steals vs. New Jersey (12/31)...Hit a buzzer-beater game-winning jumper at Cleveland on 1/31/02...Scored 41 points and had seven assists vs. Phoenix on 1/26/02...Scored 40 points and had eight rebounds vs. Cleveland 1/24/02...Scored 44 points vs. Utah 11/16/02)...Dished out a season-high 11 assists vs. Houston 2/18/02...Averaged 26 points per agme at MCI Center...Missed 22 games including 12 following arthroscopic knee surgery on 2/27/02.

1997-98:

Named NBA Most Valuable Player for the fifth time in 1997-98 and a unanimous selection to the 1997-98 All-NBA First Team....Named to the NBA All-Defensive First Team for a record

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