OdomFan wrote:So what was MJ supposed to do about that? Leave the Bulls to go play some where else, or ask for a new coach and second best player? that has never been the way team sports works when a star was part of something successful.. No one has ever just decided that their legacy might take a hit if they only win with this teammate and this coach...like what? The whole point of building a winning roster is to stick with it once you get something that works.
The Bulls did that when they brought in Pippen via trade during the draft and developed him into a star next to MJ. They did that when they took that chance on hiring Phil Jackson as their head coach and he along with his coaching staff used that triangle offense system to maximize Michael Jordans full potential in leading the team as well as the rest of the roster to play well around him.
I'm sorry but what is the problem about any of that again? You're being absolutely unrealistic (and ridiculous) with such a question all because you dislike that MJ and those Bulls succeeded.
Great stuff, further highlighting my point on why MJ couldn't do anything without Pippen and Phil.
Sure, let's hate on LeBron for leaving Cleveland and making super teams. I get it.
But don't meander around the real question being asked, answer it.
I've told you this before, MJ is the GOAT for me, cause he is the one I grew up watching as a Kid.
But he wasn't without flaws, like all MJ delusionals like to say.
OdomFan wrote:Moving on to your other point. "Pippen almost came back from 3-1 vs prime Shaq* and baby Kobe in 2000 WCF.
He was older than when he lost with Hakeem and Charles. "
Firstly "Scottie" didn't almost come back vs anybody, the team did. Scottie Pippen wasn't even the best player on the 2000 Portland Trailblazers. That was Rasheed Wallace's team. Sheed had that same Portland squad in the Western Conference Finals 1 year before that while Pippen was trying to win with Hakeem and Barkley in Houston. Ironically losing to the Lakers in the first round then. So I get why he left but its silly to act like he did all the work, and then turn around and act like it's so historic that those Blazers did as well as they did against the Lakers. Like I said before, they were already a very good team. So all Pippen had to do was be the veteran voice that they needed, and then it worked. It also didn't hurt that Pippen was very familar with the triangle offense that those Lakers were using seeing as though its the exact same system that the Bulls were using when he played for Phil in the 90s... common sense man.
We've had many arguments before, and you have proven many times that you are on the MJ did everything side, diminishing how good Scottie or Dennis or the entire team he had through out their dynasties.
So bringing up
the Team did it is kind of hypocritical on your point no?
OdomFan wrote:Reality is Lebron left teams behind as soon as the going got tough on 3 different occasions. That is why he gets the hate he gets for that. When the going got tough for MJ he stuck around, worked with who he had to work with. Pippen came along. Developed into a star next to him. The triangle offense was brought in with Phil and Tex and they never looked back. It would have made 0 sense for anyone to walk away from that so that years later some fans out there wouldn't question their legacies over not winning else where. Especially compared to someone (Lebron) who kept leaving as soon as things were starting to fall apart.
We can hate on LeBron for leaving Cavs the way he did, but leaving Miami Heat squad after going to 4 straight finals to join Kyrie and Love who hasn't done is pretty far reach, only LeBron haters would say that.
And who did the Lakers have when he got there?
So when MJ knew no one was coming back after 98, did he stick around?