Cavsfansince84 wrote:VanWest82 wrote:I don’t disagree with you about his chances of winning another title being diminished having to start over again, but just to further my point here, he only came back once Wizards promised him a stake in the team. Acting like money wasn’t the main driver here is nuts. It was surely a big part of the reason he retired the first time too.
I don't think that's how it went. His ownership stake wasn't contingent on him playing for them and I don't think he was allowed to be both part owner and a player. Maybe he was but he decided to play a year after he got the ownership and then his salary was only $1m which he donated to charity. So money was not an important factor at all to him playing.
I double checked and you were right. He had to sell to play, so clearly he just missed it in 01. It was the same in 95. Clearly, he just missed it.
I don't think it was the same in 93 or 98. Obviously, burn out was a big factor, and I don't dismiss that part. But in 93 he was making 3M while carrying teammates that were quiet quitting for most of the season to a third championship all while NBA franchise values climbed through the roof during that period despite NBA also expanding at the same time. I've already made the financial case for 98.
One could argue this is all pure speculation, of course, because Jordan has never publicly discussed money or contracts, etc., but there's just no way imo that him being so dramatically underpaid compared to his true worth didn't impact his decision to keep playing. I also agree with the points others have made over the years about lack of something to chase.