nitetrain8603 wrote:nas27 wrote:I thought the ending of episode 7 was probably the most impactful moment of the entire series thus far. The dichotomy of being a leader and pushing his teammates but yet not being beloved by them due to the way he did it. That was incredibly interesting, especially that it seemed to really affect Jordan. You wouldn't necessarily expect him to care what they thought, but yet he did.
Yeah, it's one of the few times, he breaks the "MJ aura" where nothing else matters, and you're not going to get him off his game. Seems like he was so driven to win and bring his teammates along with him, and they did. What was the cost though? I mean, damn near everyone called him an **** and implied he was awful to be around. I felt bad for him.
There are people like MJ, they are very rare though. I have rare experience working with very similar character (not in basketball though). Super smart and determined, really intimidating to work with, will get in your face to challenge you, will call people out in front of big audience, just a monstrous figure. But at the same time, everybody agrees that we're very thankful we have this person on our side, and many even say they would quit if this person is no longer with us.
I think having Phil as the good cop was the key to Bulls success. And Scottie was such a good complimentary player for MJ. I read that having veteran presence like Cartwright also kept that balance in the locker room. It worked out very nicely in the end, MJ continue being MJ means he kept the team focused and on the edge at all times. But I'm not discounting how good MJ was as an individual player, he's super talented and super smart basketball player who was obsessed of winning and dominating his adversaries. You can plug him in any era, he'll figure out how to dominate. So those arguments on whether MJ can be as successful on today's league, he doesn't have a 3-point shot etc., I think it's irrelevant, MJ is about winning, any kinds of basketball.