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MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
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MJ in 2001:
[indent][I]"If I was playing for the stats, [B]I would never have retired in 93'[/B] and I would probably still be chasing Kareem's scoring record right now"[/I]
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njN5M4rjoRE&t=08m23s[/url][/indent]
So he could've played in 1994, but his unprecedented modern 3-peat and subsequent goat status gave him the luxury of retiring to mourn his father.. Essentially, any notion that he was too burnt out to play is false - people act like he was physically incapable of playing, when he obviously could've played if he wanted to.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
He said he was coming back and wanted to win a 4th championship during the post-game press conference after the Bulls beat the Suns in Finals.
It's always been obvious he retired because to grieve the death of his father, that's all the retirement was and that's what the baseball thing was about.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
He said he was coming back and wanted to win a 4th championship during the post-game press conference after the Bulls beat the Suns in Finals.
It's always been obvious he retired as a way to grieve the death of his father, that's all the retirement was and that's what the baseball thing was about.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
I get the whole nobility and sanctity route we take with Mj, but lets be real. If he wasn't playing for stats he wouldn't have cared about whether or not he was winning scoring titles or how many assists he needed for triple doubles. He wouldn't check back into games that are out of hand to get closer to his averages. Theres always more to the story than what we get to know.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022257]I get the whole nobility and sanctity route we take with Mj, but lets be real. If he wasn't playing for stats he wouldn't have cared about whether or not he was winning scoring titles or how many assists he needed for triple doubles. He wouldn't check back into games that are out of hand to get closer to his averages. Theres always more to the story than what we get to know.[/QUOTE]
He's talking specifically about Kareem's scoring record - he pointed out that it was never considered something worth chasing..... And he said that if it HAD been considered something worth chasing, he would've never retired in 93'
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=3ba11;15022262]He's talking specifically about Kareem's scoring record - he pointed out that it was never considered something worth chasing..... And he said that if it HAD been considered something worth chasing, he would've never retired in 93'[/QUOTE]
Yeah because once upon a time, Kareem's record was deemed untouchable. Especially to a guy who'd already considered retiring before his 1st chip. It was decidedly out of reach, so why even try?
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022285]Yeah because once upon a time, Kareem's record was deemed untouchable. Especially to a guy who'd already considered retiring before his 1st chip. It was decidedly out of reach, so why even try?[/QUOTE]
Thanks to quotes from Mike over the years, new fans like yourself can learn what 90's kids already know - that Jordan retired suddenly on a whim, and didn't NEED to retire - no one thought he was injured and couldn't play - everyone knew that he could obviously keep playing and went to play baseball for other reasons (like 3-peating, aka already reaching GOAT... and also family murder),
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=3ba11;15022296]Thanks to quotes from Mike over the years, new fans like yourself can learn what 90's kids already know - that Jordan retired suddenly on a whim, and didn't NEED to retire - no one thought he was injured and couldn't play - everyone knew that he could obviously keep playing and went to play baseball for other reasons (like 3-peating, aka already reaching GOAT... and also family murder),[/QUOTE]
Far from a new fan, and enough of a fan to know Mike floated the idea of retirement before he ever won a chip and a fan long enough to know how insurmountable Kareem's record was billed to be. There was never talk of Mike or anyone else becoming the all time leading scorer, just talk of how unbreakable a record it truly was. And honestly, no matter what the truth of the matter is behind his 1st retirement.....it still happened and its time to recognize it as such. A missed opportunity to make his case insurmountable like Kareem's record once was.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022257]I get the whole nobility and sanctity route we take with Mj, but lets be real. If he wasn't playing for stats he wouldn't have cared about whether or not he was winning scoring titles or how many assists he needed for triple doubles. He wouldn't check back into games that are out of hand to get closer to his averages. Theres always more to the story than what we get to know.[/QUOTE]
MJ played to dominate his peers not to hoard cumulative career stats. That's pretty obvious. MJ often sat on the bench or took his foot off the pedal when the game was out of reach. Like scoring 35 points in the first half of a Finals game then only 4 more after that.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Soundwave;15022128]He said he was coming back and wanted to win a 4th championship during the post-game press conference after the Bulls beat the Suns in Finals.
It's always been obvious he retired as a way to grieve the death of his father, that's all the retirement was and that's what the baseball thing was about.[/QUOTE]
To be fair, as it’s been pointed out before including in the Last Dance, he did mention to people that he would consider retiring after the 93 season even before his dad was killed.
With that said, you have to be completely delusional to think his father’s murder had absolutely no impact on his decision. It most likely swayed him more in that direction combined with the fact that with good reason he felt he had nothing left to prove.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022285]Yeah because once upon a time, Kareem's record was deemed untouchable. Especially to a guy who'd already considered retiring before his 1st chip. It was decidedly out of reach, so why even try?[/QUOTE]
Jordan retired with most people crowning him the GOAT. Whether that was deserved or not, that was the case. He measured himself against his peers, specifically Magic and Bird and by 3-peating felt like he surpassed them and most people did as well. There wasn’t a Kareem/Jordan comparison really made. I’m sure if he constantly heard he wasn’t as good as Kareem yet and he needed to surpass the record to do that, he may have went for it. But that wasn’t part of his calculation nor was it really anyone’s at the time.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=guy;15022488]Jordan retired with most people crowning him the GOAT. Whether that was deserved or not, that was the case. He measured himself against his peers, specifically Magic and Bird and by 3-peating felt like he surpassed them and most people did as well. There wasn’t a Kareem/Jordan comparison really made. I’m sure if he constantly heard he wasn’t as good as Kareem yet and he needed to surpass the record to do that, he may have went for it. But that wasn’t part of his calculation nor was it really anyone’s at the time.[/QUOTE]
That's because no one cared about cumulative stats. That was just a trivia question. Players were evaluated by how they dominated their competition not what numbers they end up with after a long career. Career numbers have no context or meaning.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022486]MJ played to dominate his peers not to hoard cumulative career stats. That's pretty obvious. MJ often sat on the bench or took his foot off the pedal when the game was out of reach. Like scoring 35 points in the first half of a Finals game then only 4 more after that.[/QUOTE]
Sure he did, and he also went back into games that were out of reach to Jack up a few shots to get his numbers. He also went to the scorers table to find out how far he was from triple doubles, hes famously quoted for breaking down how many buckets he needed a quarter to average 30. When the triangle was being implemented his initial reaction was "he's (phil) not gonna let me win the scoring title" I know the wheaties fairy tale sounds better for TV specials but if you were truly a Jordan fan you remember these things.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=guy;15022488]Jordan retired with most people crowning him the GOAT. Whether that was deserved or not, that was the case. He measured himself against his peers, specifically Magic and Bird and by 3-peating felt like he surpassed them and most people did as well. There wasn’t a Kareem/Jordan comparison really made. I’m sure if he constantly heard he wasn’t as good as Kareem yet and he needed to surpass the record to do that, he may have went for it. But that wasn’t part of his calculation nor was it really anyone’s at the time.[/QUOTE]
Exactly, the reason 6 rings was such a big deal when it happened is becauee it was one more than Magic had. Mj cared about his scoring titles in comparison to Wilt's. He did t care about Kareem's record because nobody thought it was possible to replicate it. If Mj was the all time leading scorer it would be a big part of the taglines we use when we run down his accomplishments. It just happens to be one of the few major things he couldn't pull off, and thats ok. He's still goat, 1a-1b or #2 for me depending on criteria.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022498]Sure he did, and he also went back into games that were out of reach to Jack up a few shots to get his numbers. He also went to the scorers table to find out how far he was from triple doubles, hes famously quoted for breaking down how many buckets he needed a quarter to average 30. When the triangle was being implemented his initial reaction was "he's (phil) not gonna let me win the scoring title" I know the wheaties fairy tale sounds better for TV specials but if you were truly a Jordan fan you remember these things.[/QUOTE]
You can stop with the petty insults. We know you're bitter. Anyway, you can leave 1989 now with the triple doubles. Even that was because he was trying to prove he was an all around player, not accumulate career numbers...or he would have kept going the rest of his career.
And yes, he wanted to win the scoring title. To prove he could lead the league in scoring while winning. To prove he was good enough to do it, and he was, doing it 6 times.
But that's still not the same as being focused on accumulating career numbers. If he was hyper focused on it, he would have never retired, which is what he said.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022500]Exactly, the reason 6 rings was such a big deal when it happened is becauee it was one more than Magic had. Mj cared about his scoring titles in comparison to Wilt's. He did t care about Kareem's record because nobody thought it was possible to replicate it. If Mj was the all time leading scorer it would be a big part of the taglines we use when we run down his accomplishments. It just happens to be one of the few major things he couldn't pull off, and thats ok. He's still goat, 1a-1b or #2 for me depending on criteria.[/QUOTE]
I could be wrong but I’ve never heard him reference Wilt when it came to him wanting to win scoring titles. In fact, he retired the first time with 7, tied with Wilt. That kind of proves the point that he didn’t care about records whether it was far out of reach or not cause he could’ve easily have gotten to 8 the very next year and was just more concerned about how he measured against his peers.
And 6 rings and surpassing Magic in rings was not a big deal. That was not a narrative throughout the year or anything like that. Sure it was pointed out once it happened, but there wasn’t really a debate between the two regardless of rings.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
What do you mean he didn't NEED to retire??
You've already set the precent that because something happened in a certain way means that it NEEDED to. That was you.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=guy;15022524]I could be wrong but I’ve never heard him reference Wilt when it came to him wanting to win scoring titles. In fact, he retired the first time with 7, tied with Wilt. That kind of proves the point that he didn’t care about records whether it was far out of reach or not cause he could’ve easily have gotten to 8 the very next year and was just more concerned about how he measured against his peers.
And 6 rings and surpassing Magic in rings was not a big deal. That was not a narrative throughout the year or anything like that. Sure it was pointed out once it happened, but there wasn’t really a debate between the two regardless of rings.[/QUOTE]
Great points about Wilt and Magic. MJ could have easily won 8 straight scoring titles but retired instead. And as for the rings... he just wanted to carve out his own lane. He wasn't focused on Magic's 5 titles like everyone today is focused on MJ's 6. He wanted to do something unique that neither Magic or Bird did (threepeat). When he set himself apart, he retired. His retirement was one part grief over his father and one part grief over losing his measuring sticks (Bird and Magic). He was not concerned about career numbers.
After a year and a half of playing baseball, MJ felt motivation again when he saw new stars take over the league so he came back to prove he could win against them too. But he wasn't specifically targeting Magic's rings to overcome.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
This may be a deep cut, and I'm gonna have hell trying to even find out if it exists anywhere, but I remember a 60 minutes special on Jordan in the early 90s, I want to say this was after the first title, where he kind of hinted that he wasn't going to stick around for much longer. Does anyone here remember that? But beyond that, I do specifically recall this interview bit in 'Michael Jordan Jordan Above and beyond' at the 8:37 mark:
[video=youtube;jo8XY-bNcPs]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jo8XY-bNcPs&ab_channel=ELPinata[/video]
So taking his comments at face value here, after 7 scoring titles, a threepeat and 3 of the prior 5 MVPs, it didn't seem as though he was necessarily interested in breaking any established markers, Kareems scoring record or MVP count, Russells 11 titles which would be impossible to chase. The conversations were different back then because I don't recall anyone saying he had to pass Magic's 5 rings, or pass Kareem in scoring in order to be considered the GOAT. By 93 it was kind of already viewed that this was largely the case at that point based on his body of work and just how he played in general.
Going for a 4th straight or another MVP or more counting numbers didn't seem to be motivating factors coming off the 93 season. But if something in any way sparked a desire to come back in 94, his fathers death took that away. I mean, things just kind of happened the way it did at that point in time. He was also being killed in the media that year with all the gambling side stories, nights in Atlantic City right before a playoff game against the Knicks, stuff like that. Seemed like a number of things that led to that choice to retire in 93. I figured without the tragic father murder, coming back for a 4th title would have been enough of a motivating factor (but I won't claim to be in his head knowing what drove him). That 94 team with a 31 year old MJ, 28 year old Pippen/Grant, Kukoc coming onboard and other roster upgrades would have been special, very likely the best version of that Bulls dynasty if it had played out that way. But generally speaking, that way that year played out leading through the summer, as shocked as we all were that MJ walked away at that point, being in the moment it also made sense. Talking about it now in hindsight doesn't really capture what was happening in real-time.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022536]Great points about Wilt and Magic. MJ could have easily won 8 straight scoring titles but retired instead. And as for the rings... he just wanted to carve out his own lane. He wasn't focused on Magic's 5 titles like everyone today is focused on MJ's 6. He wanted to do something unique that neither Magic or Bird did (threepeat). When he set himself apart, he retired. His retirement was one part grief over his father and one part grief over losing his measuring sticks (Bird and Magic). He was not concerned about career numbers.
[b]After a year and a half of playing baseball, MJ felt motivation again when he saw new stars take over the league so he came back to prove he could win against them too[/b]. But he wasn't specifically targeting Magic's rings to overcome.[/QUOTE]
More like the MLB was going on strike and MJ was still under his 8yr Bulls deal so Reinsdorf wasn't going to let him do nothing and still collect pay checks. He basically had no choice but to comeback to the Bulls if he wanted paid and we both know Mike liked having gambling money.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022519]You can stop with the petty insults. We know you're bitter. Anyway, you can leave 1989 now with the triple doubles. Even that was because he was trying to prove he was an all around player, not accumulate career numbers...or he would have kept going the rest of his career.
And yes, he wanted to win the scoring title. To prove he could lead the league in scoring while winning. To prove he was good enough to do it, and he was, doing it 6 times.
But that's still not the same as being focused on accumulating career numbers. If he was hyper focused on it, he would have never retired, which is what he said.[/QUOTE]
Petty insults? Boy you got some thin skin to be posting here then lol. So what youre telling me is its ok to want to accumulate per game numbers because you supposedly know his reasons, but its bad to want to accumulate career numbers? Wtf make it make sense. When you gotta start jumping through hoops to avoid the truth youre probably better off with just the truth bro.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Phoenix;15022538]
So taking his comments at face value here, after 7 scoring titles, a threepeat and 3 of the prior 5 MVPs, it didn't seem as though he was necessarily interested in breaking any established markers, Kareems scoring record or MVP count, Russells 11 titles which would be impossible to chase. The conversations were different back then because I [B]don't recall anyone saying he had to pass Magic's 5 rings, or [SIZE=4]pass Kareem in scoring[/SIZE][/B] in order to be considered the GOAT. By 93 it was kind of already viewed that this was largely the case at that point based on his body of work and just how he played in general.
[/QUOTE]
Nobody ever thought total career points meant anything as far as the GOAT conversation goes. It wasn't until it started looking like Lebron was going to break Kareem's record that all of a sudden Bronie fluffers started trying to push this narrative that total points was some huge GOAT benchmark. They really had no choice though, since Lebron had already fallen woefully short in the criteria that actually mattered.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022542]Petty insults? Boy you got some thin skin to be posting here then lol. So what youre telling me is its ok to want to accumulate per game numbers because you supposedly know his reasons, but its bad to want to accumulate career numbers? Wtf make it make sense. When you gotta start jumping through hoops to avoid the truth youre probably better off with just the truth bro.[/QUOTE]
Career numbers mean nothing. They're without context. You can score 30 million points but never actually dominate. Just play a long time. Look at LeBron. Career leader in points but led the league in scoring only once. No one thinks Mark Jackson is a better floor general than Magic Johnson but he has more career assists. Because he played longer. Career numbers don't indicate dominance. Per-game numbers is much indicative of how good a guy is for a season.
That's why guys, until recently, were more interested in their per-game numbers than career totals. Every award is based on what a guy does for season, not a career.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Hey Yo;15022540]More like the MLB was going on strike and MJ was still under his 8yr Bulls deal so Reinsdorf wasn't going to let him do nothing and still collect pay checks. He basically had no choice but to comeback to the Bulls if he wanted paid and we both know Mike liked having gambling money.[/QUOTE]
:oldlol: You really think the $4M he was getting paid in 96 was what he came back for?
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=guy;15022524]I could be wrong but I’ve never heard him reference Wilt when it came to him wanting to win scoring titles. In fact, he retired the first time with 7, tied with Wilt. That kind of proves the point that he didn’t care about records whether it was far out of reach or not cause he could’ve easily have gotten to 8 the very next year and was just more concerned about how he measured against his peers.
And 6 rings and surpassing Magic in rings was not a big deal. That was not a narrative throughout the year or anything like that. Sure it was pointed out once it happened, but there wasn’t really a debate between the two regardless of rings.[/QUOTE]
Yeah you could be wrong for sure, he and Wilt went back an forth in the media. And at the 50th anniversary at all star weekend they sat in a corner arguing pretty hard about who was the goat. Doesn't really sound like a guy who didn't care to me. Wilt was the guy any scorer wanted to be, to have anything over him asna scorer is a huge flex. They gave MJ a trophy when he made 30k points, but yeah career stats arent a big deal. And about Magic im not talking about the media dialog im talking about the one Magic and Mj had between the 2 of them. The ive got t and you got less trash talk. That's the earliest instance of rangz talk I can recall. Oh and Wilt saying Mjs 4 dont mean much becuase he knows a guy with 11.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022551]Career numbers mean nothing. They're without context. You can score 30 million points but never actually dominate. Just play a long time. Look at LeBron. Career leader in points but led the league in scoring only once. No one thinks Mark Jackson is a better floor general than Magic Johnson but he has more career assists. Because he played longer. Career numbers don't indicate dominance. Per-game numbers is much indicative of how good a guy is for a season.
That's why guys, until recently, were more interested in their per-game numbers than career totals. Every award is based on what a guy does for season, not a career.[/QUOTE]
If career numbers mean(t) nothing, explain to me why Mj was given a trophy for accumulating 30k points? Kinda weird for something irrelevant dont ya think? You really believe Mark Jackson is a decent comparison to what Lebron has done? Lebrons career numbers didn't just come because he played long, thats pretty silly. He made those numbers because he dominated for more years than anyone else. Whether or not you think he outplayed Mj, he played at a comparable level for way longer. Thats the big deal.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022556]If career numbers mean(t) nothing, explain to me why Mj was given a trophy for accumulating 30k points? Kinda weird for something irrelevant dont ya think? You really believe Mark Jackson is a decent comparison to what Lebron has done? Lebrons career numbers didn't just come because he played long, thats pretty silly. He made those numbers because he dominated for more years than anyone else. Whether or not you think he outplayed Mj, he played at a comparable level for way longer. Thats the big deal.[/QUOTE]
Jordan had 10 scoring titles to Lebron's 1. THAT's dominance. The other stat is longevity. Jordan's dominance is on a whole other level from LeShrivel's.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Full Court;15022558]Jordan had 10 scoring titles to Lebron's 1. THAT's dominance. The other stat is longevity. Jordan's dominance is on a whole other level from LeShrivel's.[/QUOTE]
Who made scoring titles the only measure of dominance? Whenever you try to play the weak longevity card youre sonning yourself. If we're talking vince carter, kevin willis type of longevity then youve got a point, most guys who have longevity watch it play out as a role player not a star, and certainly not as the face of the league. In that sense Lebron's longevity is one of a kind, hes given [B]elite[/B] longevity thats the difference and why your statement doesn't move the needle.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022573][B][SIZE=5]Who made scoring titles the only measure of dominance?[/SIZE][/B] Whenever you try to play the weak longevity card youre sonning yourself. If we're talking vince carter, kevin willis type of longevity then youve got a point, most guys who have longevity watch it play out as a role player not a star, and certainly not as the face of the league. In that sense Lebron's longevity is one of a kind, hes given [B]elite[/B] longevity thats the difference and why your statement doesn't move the needle.[/QUOTE]
Hmmmm. How about we make winning the measure of dominance then. Jordan three-peated TWICE. Remind me, how many times did LeShrivel three-peat?
Yep, you've got nothing. "Bu-bu-bu-but total points!!!"
[img]https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia1.tenor.com%2Fm%2FH8akeoCjEZsAAAAC%2Fincredulous-cormier.gif&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=9c23bebb1ac03fd53c5697a2b71a3e295b96608ec86ba804f1f2bf4386073bde[/img]
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Full Court;15022574]Hmmmm. How about we make winning the measure of dominance then. Jordan three-peated TWICE. Remind me, how many times did LeShrivel three-peat?
Yep, you've got nothing. "Bu-bu-bu-but total points!!!"
[img]https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia1.tenor.com%2Fm%2FH8akeoCjEZsAAAAC%2Fincredulous-cormier.gif&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=9c23bebb1ac03fd53c5697a2b71a3e295b96608ec86ba804f1f2bf4386073bde[/img][/QUOTE]
Who made 3peats the measure of dominance when there's a guy with an 8peat?
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022581]Who made 3peats the measure of dominance when there's a guy with an 8peat?[/QUOTE]
That's exactly why Bill Russell is ranked higher than Lebron.
Again, you've got nothing.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022556]If career numbers mean(t) nothing, explain to me why Mj was given a trophy for accumulating 30k points? Kinda weird for something irrelevant dont ya think? You really believe Mark Jackson is a decent comparison to what Lebron has done? Lebrons career numbers didn't just come because he played long, thats pretty silly. He made those numbers because he dominated for more years than anyone else. Whether or not you think he outplayed Mj, he played at a comparable level for way longer. Thats the big deal.[/QUOTE]
The NBA also hands out sportsmanship awards no one cares about. Actually, I didn't even realize he got a 30K trophy and I doubt most people who don't dig for it remembers it either. No one ever talks about it because it doesn't matter. Great example.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022587]The NBA also hands out sportsmanship awards no one cares about. Actually, I didn't even realize he got a 30K trophy and I doubt most people who don't dig for it remembers it either. No one ever talks about it because it doesn't matter. Great example.[/QUOTE]
Exactly. 30k was a mildly interesting stat that nobody really cared about. But when Lebron hit 40k, since that's all they had left to desperately cling to, the Bronie fluffers all started soiling their panties. It really was a bizarre psychological phenomenon, albeit predictable if you understand how their little brains work.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022581]Who made 3peats the measure of dominance when there's a guy with an 8peat?[/QUOTE]
It is a measure of dominance precisely because it has so rarely been done since the 60's, when the NBA was way different. Even if we accept the 8-peat as the highest accomplishment, you still need to get a three-peat first.
Greats raise the stakes. For the longest time after the NBA and ABA merged then expanded to what it looks like now, good teams would win one and fall back. Great teams would win one here and one there. All time greats would win one here, there and there. But then Magic's Lakers raised the stakes. They repeated. Something not done since the 60's. Isiah's Pistons matched it. MJ's Bulls raised the stakes again by winning three in a row. Then did it again. Shaq and Kobe's Lakers matched it. So now that's the standard for the modern era. When a team wins four straight, that will be the new standard of the highest excellence in the modern era until it is surpassed.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Full Court;15022591]Exactly. 30k was a mildly interesting stat that nobody really cared about.[/QUOTE]
This isn't the case at all. 30k points is looked at as the 3k career hits in baseball. You are just making up shit now. Whenever a player has hit 30k career points, a big deal was made out of it.
And Russell is the GOAT if 3peats are the measure of dominance. :lol
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022587]The NBA also hands out sportsmanship awards no one cares about. Actually, I didn't even realize he got a 30K trophy and I doubt most people who don't dig for it remembers it either. No one ever talks about it because it doesn't matter. Great example.[/QUOTE]
I guess this is the part where you get old enough to see shit twisted into weird territory. The 20k club had always been a notable milestone for star players and the 30k club was for the upper echelon. Its so damn strange being told now that it supposedly didn't mean much then , yet a scoring title is the end, all be all accolade to be listed in the same breath as mvps and finals mvps.......not fishy at all:oldlol:
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022613]It is a measure of dominance precisely because it has so rarely been done since the 60's, when the NBA was way different. Even if we accept the 8-peat as the highest accomplishment, you still need to get a three-peat first.
Greats raise the stakes. For the longest time after the NBA and ABA merged then expanded to what it looks like now, good teams would win one and fall back. Great teams would win one here and one there. All time greats would win one here, there and there. But then Magic's Lakers raised the stakes. They repeated. Something not done since the 60's. Isiah's Pistons matched it. MJ's Bulls raised the stakes again by winning three in a row. Then did it again. Shaq and Kobe's Lakers matched it. So now that's the standard for the modern era. When a team wins four straight, that will be the new standard of the highest excellence in the modern era until it is surpassed.[/QUOTE]
Bro, i love these debates for a completely different reason than when I used to have my nose in record books looking at wilts numbers. I get to see all the hypocrisy yall use in these arguments. If an 8 peat existed, magic , Mj, etc didn't raise any effing stakes lol. They didn't 8peat. You say the 60s was way different, time to wake up and smell the coffee. The "modern" NBA isnt the 90s anymore, that was 30 plus years ago. We're further from the 90s than the 90s were from the 60s. And yes tbe game is way different now too, we compare and complain daily about how it used to be. I loved the 90s, hell ive loved every NBA era ive got to see live in its own way, but the 60s cant be the stone age anymore when we're 30 plus years from the 90s. Time to start discussing reality instead of romanticizing your childhood era.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022722]I guess this is the part where you get old enough to see shit twisted into weird territory. The 20k club had always been a notable milestone for star players and the 30k club was for the upper echelon. Its so damn strange being told now that it supposedly didn't mean much then , yet a scoring title is the end, all be all accolade to be listed in the same breath as mvps and finals mvps.......not fishy at all:oldlol:
Bro, i love these debates for a completely different reason than when I used to have my nose in record books looking at wilts numbers. I get to see all the hypocrisy yall use in these arguments. If an 8 peat existed, magic , Mj, etc didn't raise any effing stakes lol. They didn't 8peat. You say the 60s was way different, time to wake up and smell the coffee. The "modern" NBA isnt the 90s anymore, that was 30 plus years ago. We're further from the 90s than the 90s were from the 60s. And yes tbe game is way different now too, we compare and complain daily about how it used to be. I loved the 90s, hell ive loved every NBA era ive got to see live in its own way, but the 60s cant be the stone age anymore when we're 30 plus years from the 90s. Time to start discussing reality instead of romanticizing your childhood era.[/QUOTE]
It's a notable milestone on one night when the announcers say something and the crowd claps for a few minutes. That's it.
Sorry bro. No one cares about your hero's 40k stat padded points on 7 different teams. No one cares about whatever plaque he got for it. No one cared about whatever plaque Kareem may or may not have received for his points. No one has ever cared beyond some tepid acknowledgement by the announcers for the night of the game. No one ever brought it up until your hero needed to stuff it down everyone's throats hoping we'd like it. MJ retired in his prime not caring about it. He retired again not caring about it. And retired again. Kobe passed him up but no one cared after two days. Karl Malone passed him up at some point. We don't even know when or what shot did it because no one cared. He's top 5 all time scoring yet no one cares about Karl Malone because no one cares about his total points. No one has ever cared about total points until your hero and his media fanboys needed to use that for his fake GOAT case. Now you're on here pretending everyone gives a damn about it. We don't. And never have.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=sdot_thadon;15022555]Yeah you could be wrong for sure, he and Wilt went back an forth in the media. And at the 50th anniversary at all star weekend they sat in a corner arguing pretty hard about who was the goat. Doesn't really sound like a guy who didn't care to me. Wilt was the guy any scorer wanted to be, to have anything over him asna scorer is a huge flex. They gave MJ a trophy when he made 30k points, but yeah career stats arent a big deal. And about Magic im not talking about the media dialog im talking about the one Magic and Mj had between the 2 of them. The ive got t and you got less trash talk. That's the earliest instance of rangz talk I can recall. Oh and Wilt saying Mjs 4 dont mean much becuase he knows a guy with 11.[/QUOTE]
Am I wrong? I was expecting you to actually show me where I was and that Jordan actually cared about that stuff. At the 50th anniversary Jordan already had 8 scoring titles :oldlol:
Harmless trash talk when these guys see each other is not the equivalent of the constant narratives of today.
It’s revisionist history to say that players cared and strived for certain accomplishments which they clearly didn’t and there’s no evidence that they did and that they were talking points at the time. What’s considered important today doesn’t equate to back then.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
Yeah, there's definitely a bit of trolling going on.
I remember Kobe becoming one of the youngest to climb up the all-time points board and then eventually passing guys like Wilt... It definitely was talked about although the discussion and "celebration" were pretty brief. When Kobe led the league in scoring in 2006 and 2007, though, [I]everyone[/I] was buzzing. And it was the topic of discussion for YEARS (he was quite literally considered the games best scorer because of that).
Personally? I wont dismiss longevity feats like the all-time points record. Not going to pretend it isn't an accomplishment. But to the degree of what a player produces in real time? THAT YEAR? I mean obviously not, but that's just common sense. Per game metrics give us a clearer picture on how players measure up against their peers.
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Re: MJ says "I would never would've retired in 93", so he didn't NEED to retire
[QUOTE=Da_Realist;15022732]It's a notable milestone on one night when the announcers say something and the crowd claps for a few minutes. That's it.
Sorry bro. No one cares about your hero's 40k stat padded points on 7 different teams. No one cares about whatever plaque he got for it. No one cared about whatever plaque Kareem may or may not have received for his points. No one has ever cared beyond some tepid acknowledgement by the announcers for the night of the game. No one ever brought it up until your hero needed to stuff it down everyone's throats hoping we'd like it. MJ retired in his prime not caring about it. He retired again not caring about it. And retired again. Kobe passed him up but no one cared after two days. Karl Malone passed him up at some point. We don't even know when or what shot did it because no one cared. He's top 5 all time scoring yet no one cares about Karl Malone because no one cares about his total points. No one has ever cared about total points until your hero and his media fanboys needed to use that for his fake GOAT case. Now you're on here pretending everyone gives a damn about it. We don't. And never have.[/QUOTE]
So then tell me what amazing things happen in contrast when someone wins the scoting title? I'll wait this should be good. Milestones have always been notable in any sport, thats why this seems so silly to me. When you have to disregard the accomplishments of others because it wasnt something specific to Jordan, it kinda brings MJ's case into question without saying a word. Also a weird part of this discussion is the examples like Malone to try to downplay Lebrons accolades. Malone never won a thing, so no shit his totals dont put him in a room he doesn't belong in.
When Kobe passed Mike on the all-time scoring list? You bet your ass it was a big deal, these are things that illustrate your caliber as a player if not a specific aspect of basketball. You guys never cared about it before becuase nobody comparable to Mj in your eyes ever reached those plateaus.