Post#22 » by montestewart » Mon Feb 18, 2013 12:18 am
At the start of his 2nd Wizards season, Jordan declared (with his usual humility) that he could help the team most by coming off the bench. After 15 games, they weren't too far off the previous year pace, or that year's final record pace, but he (he said "we" but...) decided he was going to start. I think if he was a politican and Jon Stewart got ahold of the two statements, the juxtaposition would be hilarious. At the end of the year, his ppg stood at exactly 20, as if he realized that he was going to have the only sub-20 ppg season of his career, and played the remainder of the year primarily to avoid that.
I enjoyed watching some of those spectacular offensive games he had, but I saw him play as a Bull, and the Wizards Jordan was a shadow of the GOAT. I remember as well him shooting 1-9 with two points, and rationalizing (in his humble way) that he had eight assists and it was all part of the plan since they got the win. I recall him routinely failing to stay in front of younger guards like Ray Allen and Rip Hamilton, and being too winded to get his on some nights. I recall the other scorers (Stackhouse, Hughes, etc.) basically standing around, bored, waiting to see if he would share the ball. To me, it was sad that such an ephemeral blip, two 37-45 seasons, seemed "relevant," that it was a high point. There was a Harlem Globetrotters feel to the whole thing. Nothing wrong with that, except it's not the NBA.