I think we're conflating how the Bulls are potrayed with how they actually functioned.
lessthanjake wrote:I think the issue with Wizards Jordan is mainly that his leadership style is basically “If you play for me and work as hard and want it as much as me (which I’ll be extremely harsh in my criticism of you if I don’t think you’re doing), then I’ll lead you to victory.” That leadership style might actually work very well if you’re as good as Jordan was on the Bulls. But it has the makings of a disaster if you’re only as good as Jordan was on the Wizards.
The biggest gap in this sort of framing is that Jordan in Chicago was not given anywhere near the power and influence he was given in Washington. Jordan's opportunity to impose his "style of leadership" was not nearly as high, and crucially, much of what we're talking about in Washington wasn't actually about "getting his teammates to work hard"(that's' actually entirely absent from the excerpt in question). You might note that Jordan's coach in Washington was the same guy who let him take skip practices, and argue with stat-counters about his slashlines. He was the same guy who let Jordan monopolize offense as much as he wanted as a dramatically less effective Lebron James.
The primary thing Phil Jackson did in a sense was take-away Jordan's ability to do everything he wanted. Crucially, it also involved giving Pippen a bunch of Jordan's primacy. This wasn't just a matter of physical on-court tasks, but also a matter of
leadership. It was
Pippen, not Jordan who told teammates where to go on both ends of the floor. It was Pippen, not Jordan who brought the ball-up against set defenses, and it was Pippen not Jordan telling teammates what to do.
On a team-level, Jordan was a
tertiary decision maker when he found success(which, as has occured with every other title-winning great led to a bunch of praise about his ability to "galvanize" his teams). Fourth if you count the front-office. Jordan did not have the ability to stop a coach from getting fired. Nor did he have the leeway to get a teammate traded or force his teammates to give him a bunch of shots.
Washington was the first time the alpha in the headlines got to be an alpha in reality, and the results were horrific. The Wizards lockeroom didn't just get blown to bits because Jordan was worse. They got blown to bits because Jordan wanted to run the team and didn't actually have the know-how,
or the temperament, to do it. Jordan succeeded as a temperamental Steph to a temperamental Draymond.
Kareem knew his limits and never bothered, letting Magic take control even after Johnson tried to start a lockeroom coup against him because he wanted more control of the offense.
Lebron had the control, but has often been willing to defer to systems/coaches anyway, specifically calling out his teammates for not playing within Blatt's system, and repeatedly playing in unconventional roles on his coaches suggestions even when those requests were quite unfair individually(Lebron has now let two coaches use him as a
5 in the playoffs near his
40's). And of-course, when Lebron actually decides to take over as a coach, having one of the highest IQ's in history, it usually pays off. Whether it's game-winning rotations or play-calling(2015 vs Bulls, 2006 vs Wizards), directing his teammates on both ends, anticipating what opposing teams are running and instructing his teammates to adapt accordingly(we just saw this in game 4 vs the Warriors), or physically having everything run through him, it's difficult to argue that Lebron "running everything" isn't a boon for his teams.
So I wouldn’t necessarily say that the leadership of Wizards Jordan is reflective of the leadership of Bulls Jordan. Jordan being way less good as a player had a materially large impact on the effectiveness of his particular style of leading a team.
The problem is you're overplaying the extent of who this "style" actually applied to. Sure he punched Steve Kerr, but at no point was he making threats to co-stars. And even with role-players...
"Michael is just killing Cartwright all the time," Sam Smith of the Chicago Tribune revealed. "In the locker room, in front of everybody. Cartwright gets Michael aside, and he says, 'Look, if you do anything like that again, you will never play basketball. Because I’m gonna break both your legs.'"
"I told him, 'I'm not as enamored with you as these other guys. I've got some rings too.' At that point he told me, 'I'm going to kick your ass.' I took one step closer and said, 'No, you really aren't.' After that he didn't bother me," recalled Parish.
...that only really got anywhere with the small/unathletic ones.
The other issue with "Jordan bullied his teammates to greatness" is they did exceptionally well with him entirely absent(55-win full-strength srs, 58-win when when you add the playoffs in 94, 53-win srs without Jordan and Grant in 95) despite a metric-ton of ongoing off-court drama. Why were the Bulls able to fully contend without Jordan with Pippen beefing with management, and Grant and Scottie at each other's throats? Why were they able to fully contend without Jordan with Pippen actively beefing with the guy who management repeatedly tried to replace him with? Why were they still good when Grant left and their best player went and filed a trade-request?
Doc has argued that "leadership is not always linear", but that only leaves "Jordan the great galvanizer" as plausible, not probable. As it happens, the Pre-Jackson Bulls never had a team comparable to Jordan-less Chicago.
And even if you want to put their great success(which was mysteriously absent before jackson entered the fray and
limited Jordan's influence)as a byproduct of Jordan, that doesn't really change that Jordan was given far less leeway to "lead" in Chicago than he was in Washington. If "power reveals", does it really make sense to pretend Jordan at his most powerful isn't indicative, but the results when Jordan was at his least powerful were?
Doctor MJ wrote:OhayoKD wrote:A refresher regarding the culture-setting we saw "Outside of enviroments led by coaches famous for their unparalleled ego management
According to one official, Hughes was explicitly told by Jordan to get him the ball if he wanted to play. When Hughes began passing it to Stackhouse as much as to Jordan, he was soon benched. Point guard Tyronn Lue, the official said, obliged and began finding Jordan every time he played. ''He was scared to death of what would happen to him in his career if he didn't,'' the player said of Lue. ''He was always looking at the bench at Michael.''
Late last fall, Richard Hamilton and Jordan got into an ugly shouting match. The two officials said it began when Hamilton told Jordan he was tired of being a ''Jordannaire,'' the term used for Jordan's role players in Chicago. ''Rip was a young, brash guy who threatened the idea of Michael being the guy here,'' the official said. ''He was promptly gotten rid of for Stackhouse.'' A person close to Jordan denied Hamilton was traded because of a personality conflict. He insisted contractual issues led to the Stackhouse deal.
In the season's final weeks, players openly complained about the double standards for Jordan. Promptly dressed and ready to speak with reporters after games, they were forced to wait in the locker room for 15 or 20 minutes while Jordan showered and dressed in a private room.
There’s coach-killing and then there’s Franchise killing. Even if there wasn’t plenty contradicting the former assertion and not much of anything contradicting the latter, Equating Jordan with Kareem and Lebron here is laughable
Whoa! I've long been critical of Jordan in Washington, but wasn't aware of these quotes. Can you provide the source here?
https://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/04/sports/pro-basketball-jordan-s-strained-ties-to-wizards-may-be-cut.htmlYou can find the source for the Cartwright and Parish stuff by just looking up "Jordan beef with Parish" and "jordan beef with Cartwright". Needless to say, "Jordan the alpha" is massively overplayed.
He was more Steph than Lebron, both on and off the court. He may have wanted to be more Lebron than Steph, but Krause(wisely) wouldn't have it.