I tracked every Michael Jordan playoff game for a decade

  Рет қаралды 1,456,783

Thinking Basketball

Thinking Basketball

Жыл бұрын

We tracked 129 Michael Jordan playoff games to help compare him to some of the all-time greats that have played since. How good were the Bulls when Jordan was on the court? How good were they when he went to the bench? What happened to his supporting cast during the Phil Jackson years? And how does MJ compare to to LeBron, Shaq, Curry and others in plus-minus stats that we've had since 1997?
Support at Patreon: / thinkingbasketball
Book: www.amazon.com/Thinking-Baske...
Podcast: player.fm/series/thinking-bas... or at www.stitcher.com/podcast/ben-...
Website: www.backpicks.com
Twitter: @elgee35
Ben Taylor is the author of Thinking Basketball, a Nylon Calculus contributor, creator of the Backpicks Top 40 series & host of the Thinking Basketball podcast.
Stats courtesy:
www.pbpstats.com @bballport
www.basketball-reference.com
stats.nba.com
-----
Footage in this video is owned by the NBA and its partners. It is intended for critique and education.
Music by Nemesis and Hair Fairlight
#ThinkingBasketball

Пікірлер: 4 400
@OmarScruggs
@OmarScruggs Жыл бұрын
Lil known fact: Sixers statistician Harvey Pollack invented plus/minus stat. I was his intern in 02-03. He was with the nba since day 1 in 1947/49 with Syracuse Nationals. We did plus minus for the whole league and he released it in his book yearly. He would take interns out to dinner if we got a perfect sheet doing a game. He passed in 2015 in his 80s. NBA hall of Famer. RIP
@thehabitof885
@thehabitof885 3 ай бұрын
Wow awesome stuff
@JumpingOnion
@JumpingOnion 2 ай бұрын
Wow awesome stuff
@11DowningStreet
@11DowningStreet Ай бұрын
Wow awesome stuff
@BreadstickJesse
@BreadstickJesse 29 күн бұрын
Wow awesome stuff
@lightbeforethetunnel
@lightbeforethetunnel 20 күн бұрын
There are a lot of legends in the NBA who aren't at the forefront and many people don't know about. Thanks for this post.
@23ofSeptember
@23ofSeptember Жыл бұрын
One thing that amazes me is how MJ escaped these games without ever (if rarely) twisting an ankle. All that shooting in the key and close to opponents jumping out to contest a shot. I know he taped his ankles every game, but still. So many feet to possibly step on.
@NewsGuyFred
@NewsGuyFred Жыл бұрын
Other than the injury his 2nd season, he was a consistent 78gm+ a year. Surprising given how he played
@chibababy
@chibababy Жыл бұрын
Its gotta be the shoes 😁
@enzodapan5016
@enzodapan5016 Жыл бұрын
Probably how shoes were designed in the 90s.
@nathanlawson313
@nathanlawson313 Жыл бұрын
There was no such thing as a twisted ankle before this snowflake era. Guys played through it.
@jamessalomon1196
@jamessalomon1196 Жыл бұрын
Jordan sprained his ankle in Game 5 of the 1992 Finals, Game 3 of the 1993 First Round, and Game 3 of the 1996 ECF. Stayed in the game each time and never missed any playoff games afterwards. His trainer Tim Grover had MJ do specific exercises to strengthen his ankles (and wrists) as preventative maintenance to better withstand injuries.
@saiwaqa2573
@saiwaqa2573 Жыл бұрын
That Quote by Jordan about him not wanting to excel as a 3p shooter and why, SHOULD be talked about more instead of this ridiculous notion that he couldn't shoot threes.
@shaft9000
@shaft9000 Жыл бұрын
And it's still a relevant issue for 80% of players today. I mean - who on earth wants to see Dwight Howard attempt a 3... ever lol
@sportstalkonly1442
@sportstalkonly1442 Жыл бұрын
He couldn't shoot 3s clearly. That was just an excuse that he gave.
@BenjaminFranklinFF1706
@BenjaminFranklinFF1706 Жыл бұрын
@@sportstalkonly1442 Who has the highest ppg average in nba history?
@sportstalkonly1442
@sportstalkonly1442 Жыл бұрын
@@BenjaminFranklinFF1706 what tf does that have to do with whether he could shoot 3s or not?
@BenjaminFranklinFF1706
@BenjaminFranklinFF1706 Жыл бұрын
@@sportstalkonly1442 37% 3pt in the Finals 🤫
@eromanjr43
@eromanjr43 Жыл бұрын
the man was and still is to this date the most amazing player ever who could do whatever he wanted on the floor and get everyone involved to win.
@TheLionaaa
@TheLionaaa Жыл бұрын
True
@baroklim9511
@baroklim9511 8 ай бұрын
amen, the self-proclaimed King or GOAT doesn't even come close in terms of impact, presence, grace, showmanship, list goes on . . . .
@ratcomedy
@ratcomedy 8 ай бұрын
Passing, rebounding, rim protection, finishing,
@johnthree1611
@johnthree1611 4 ай бұрын
There will never be anyone like him. It doesn't matter how many rule changes they do, to make it easier to score.
@bnsz8704
@bnsz8704 4 ай бұрын
@@baroklim9511LeBum came too late to ever have even close to the impact Jordan had.
@atlien1988
@atlien1988 Жыл бұрын
I watched Jordan and to this day, I haven't seen a more consistently dominant player than MJ in the playoffs. It was ridiculous to watch someone play 80+ games a season and still play every game in the playoffs with an even greater intensity than he did in the regular season - each and every year. As he aged, I watched teams creep even closer to the Bulls where it looked like someone would overtake the Bulls, and although the Magic beat the Bulls in 1995, it didn't feel as convincing as Jordan only played the last 17 games that season. Despite that, I was surprised at how good they looked in the playoffs - especially against the Magic since the Bulls were struggling during the season. I'm just glad I was able to witness MJ. Although I was also blessed to also see a rendition of His Airness in Kobe, who's also my favorite player, there was just something completely different about MJ.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
At 17:55 you pretty much sum up why I think Jordan is the clear goat. I was 13 when Jordan won his first championship and it was my first year watching NBA more serious. For the next 6 playoffs of Jordan (not including comeback year), he was just unstoppable. I felt confident Jordan was easily the best player, best clutch player, and would win (except last ring when Jordan was aging). I’ve been watching basketball religiously since 1990 and not even lebron feels like Jordan. Shaq through 3 quarters was the closest I saw in dominating the game but his inability to take over at end of the game is why I still put lebron as the best since Jordan. I can’t make the same judgements about players before 1990 but since 1990, Jordan especially in playoffs has been the clear GOAT. That feeling of knowing with high certainty the bulls will win due to Jordan playing great ball and Just about always coming through in the clutch is something I probably will never feel again.
@beef2503
@beef2503 Жыл бұрын
luka may be the next dominant playoff performer
@lankankeys8310
@lankankeys8310 Жыл бұрын
You are a true OG. Respect!
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@beef2503 he's puting up stats on a losing team though. I want to see if he can do that on a winning team.
@4evahodlingdoge226
@4evahodlingdoge226 Жыл бұрын
@@beef2503 Luka is playing in an era with Giannis so i don't see it.
@kr0nz
@kr0nz Жыл бұрын
I loved Jordan's quote at 3:39. Translation: Basically, I'm just too good at everything else to waste my time out there waiting for someone to throw me the rock.
@Kashed
@Kashed Жыл бұрын
The other thing people tend to not realize is when MJ played at North Carolina, college didn’t even have a 3 point line, and when he got to the NBA the 3 point line was only in it’s 6th year in the league. Unlike today, kids didn’t grow up practicing shooting three’s back then. So for him to have 3 point percentages slightly lower than Lebron who grew up practicing it just goes to show how good of a shooter he was.
@brickathon7322
@brickathon7322 Жыл бұрын
@@Kashed Jordan is around below-average or decent in 3PTers (imo). Jordan when consistently attempting over a 3 a game in the regular season (89-93) has a % of 33.4% (not counting last 3-peat because 3-PT line was shortened) on 1.9 attempts. And in the postseason 35.7% on 2.5 attempts.
@brickathon7322
@brickathon7322 Жыл бұрын
@@Kashed If he was in todays league, he would probably be a very respectable shooter.
@TheRealAbraxas
@TheRealAbraxas Жыл бұрын
@@Kashed LeBron didn’t grow up practicing 3’s as a primary source of scoring. He actually developed that WAY late in his career which is extremely impressive. The 3pt era came well into the 2010’s
@Kashed
@Kashed Жыл бұрын
@@TheRealAbraxas Bwahahahaha
@Jaageful
@Jaageful Жыл бұрын
You don't need numbers to see that Jordan was and still is best player ever. Just watch him play. Truly poetry in motion.
@MADDOXXXbr
@MADDOXXXbr Жыл бұрын
exactly
@HughMungus4655
@HughMungus4655 Жыл бұрын
well, second best
@alextouchstone1334
@alextouchstone1334 Жыл бұрын
And when you do check the numbers per game, he really did have the greatest impact on his team more than any player ever did before
@2Times22
@2Times22 Жыл бұрын
Dont be jealous
@MR.__G
@MR.__G Жыл бұрын
Thank you !! It’s no different from going to your local park & analyzing the competition. The eye test & feel you get watching someone play will always be the most important assessment
@jogger2224
@jogger2224 Жыл бұрын
Jordan's main contribution to his teammates was how demanding he was in practice, forcing them to practice at a high level and his high expectations for focus and intensity during actual games. He didn't have to work at getting them involved in a game, the were already there from the beginning.
@dough5415
@dough5415 9 ай бұрын
💯💯💯 just need to look at all them Knicks series he taught them toughness and they used it to get the Larry 6 times
@markanthonymadamba
@markanthonymadamba 8 ай бұрын
Yes this is the actual readson why bulls became a very good contender on and off the court. His background influence, mind setting to all his individual team mates. That is very reason even though he retired the bulls have maintained high efficiency on the court.
@Daliman13
@Daliman13 8 ай бұрын
His maniacal drive was almost certainly an advantage to team building in the short term, but it also burned him out twice and the Bulls once. Why on earth would the Bulls decide to stop trying to compete in 1999 otherwise?
@lewildale28
@lewildale28 7 ай бұрын
​@@Daliman13 Answer: Jerry Krause
@BonesDMS4life
@BonesDMS4life 7 ай бұрын
@@Daliman13that team was broke up they didn’t quit
@trvspvrk
@trvspvrk Жыл бұрын
Jordan was a way better passer/ playmaker than I thought and gets credit for. You showed many amazing passes he made that I never seen or heard people talk about
@justice6593
@justice6593 Жыл бұрын
telegram me ☝️☝️ I have an offer for you endeavor to reach out....
@ThePadai
@ThePadai Жыл бұрын
Mj average almost 11 apg in 1991 finals.
@retrosoul8770
@retrosoul8770 Жыл бұрын
@@ThePadai exactly, whole scoring 30+ ppg too. Also he did avg 11.4 assists, not almost.
@jtremaine23
@jtremaine23 Жыл бұрын
Because people want to discredit that part of his game and only look at his scoring and sometimes his defense. He had 7 straight triple doubles when he played point guard for just 20+ games and that's something Magic nor LeBron ever did and both of them played the point position their whole career whether it was point guard or point forward. He also averaged 11 assists in the '91 Finals and was averaging more than Magic until the very last game when Magic had 20 to his 10.
@retrosoul8770
@retrosoul8770 Жыл бұрын
@@jtremaine23 this is part of why I cringe when ppl say anyone else is a more "all around" player.
@anthonynorman7545
@anthonynorman7545 Жыл бұрын
It's staggering the impact the illegal defense rules had. Those doubles are so ineffective because the defense can't zone up to handle the lack of numbers.
@Martin-tr4sj
@Martin-tr4sj Жыл бұрын
The illegal defense still exists today in the form of the illegal defensive 3.
@anthonynorman7545
@anthonynorman7545 Жыл бұрын
@@Martin-tr4sj yes, 3 in the key is a thing, but the impact of zone being illegal is much more impactful.
@Martin-tr4sj
@Martin-tr4sj Жыл бұрын
@Rorschach 0007 I’m not saying there aren’t differences but in any given season everyone is playing under the same ruleset. KG and Duncan were in the 90’s playing in all star games with MJ
@Martin-tr4sj
@Martin-tr4sj Жыл бұрын
@Rorschach 0007 Scoring efficiency did not decline in the 2001-02 season if that’s what you’re referring to.
@Martin-tr4sj
@Martin-tr4sj Жыл бұрын
@@anthonynorman7545 So you’re saying that if MJ played today, he could play less restrictive zone defenses ? You see how every balances out ?. Just like lebron can get away with more handchecking and back downs in the 90’s
@rodneyspears4308
@rodneyspears4308 Жыл бұрын
one thing you didn't mention, but also is something you can't quantify is what his team mates said about how MJ pushed them in practices. All his teams talk about how much better they became as players because of how hard MJ was in practice.
@MarcCastellsBallesta
@MarcCastellsBallesta Жыл бұрын
I'm more of a football (soccer) spectator and Leo Messi's teammates say the same about training with them. And if you go back a few years, Ronaldinho's teammates say the same, and even Gerard Piqué learned a lot when he shared squad with Cristiano Ronaldo back in Manchester United.
@erichdgoth8451
@erichdgoth8451 Жыл бұрын
That's absolutely the reason why his teammates became better. Imagine a star player teammate heckling you each and every practice or actual game for you to work harder. It'll either break you or mold you into a better player. It's like going on an elite special forces course where men are separated from boys.
@ruben21
@ruben21 Жыл бұрын
The 2nd season of MJ first retirement the bulls was 34-31 and finished 47-35 after his return. People always bring up the first year where they almost make the finals but never bring up the 2nd year where they almost missed the playoffs without Jordan.
@KyraStitch
@KyraStitch Жыл бұрын
All things considered, bulls lost in the 2nd round. Huge difference between being knocked out in 2nd round, and winning a ship. All because you lost one player.
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
@@KyraStitch could of made the finals...the knicks went 7 with them and took the rockets to 7 and many close games...
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
In 93 they added kukoc meyers kerr longley and wennington plus still had bj pippen grant scott cartwright king purdue...they did lose tucker doe as well and from the 90-92 teams cliff and hodges....
@Nate-im3sg
@Nate-im3sg 11 ай бұрын
@@razkable They still got bounced in the 2nd round. The '08 Hawks won 37 games and took the Celtics to 7. They were not legitimate title contenders and neither were the Bulls.
@Primenumber19
@Primenumber19 Жыл бұрын
MJ didn’t learn how to be unselfish under Jackson, he just had a coach who came up with a system beyond “give Michael the ball and get out of the damn way.” That was Doug collins through and through.
@Soosss
@Soosss Жыл бұрын
Yeah MJ always had the ability to be unselfish, like when he played PG under Doug and was racking up assists like crazy.
@KleinpeterHank
@KleinpeterHank Жыл бұрын
Well said. MJ had the college experience of playing with other competent players, but when he got to the crack circus in Chicago, he developed a “selfish” attitude because he pretty much had to. Getting Phil Jackson to help him understand to utilize actual nba talent once the Bulls drafted and traded for better players was critical. Imagining what the beginning of his career would look like if he was drafted by a team like the Bucks, Nuggets, or other good teams at the time is an interesting thought, I doubt he’d have the same “selfish” label early on.
@myweirdsecondchannelwithap9070
@myweirdsecondchannelwithap9070 Жыл бұрын
That’s false. MJ had to spend a long time thinking about whether he wanted his usage to go down or not after Phil told him that’s what they’re gonna do.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
yes, but also Pippen and Grant matured into good players. A combo of both Phil Jackson reshaping the offense and players maturing. I would say MJ had already been unselfish at least one season before Jackson became head coach.
@Primenumber19
@Primenumber19 Жыл бұрын
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson he said that but the reality is that Michael was always coachable. He listened to dean smith, collins and Jackson regardless of how much he complained to himself about it.
@dulogmaz
@dulogmaz Жыл бұрын
The thing is, Doug Collins' tactics were too reliant on MJ to carry the Bulls on his back, while Phil Jackson's triangle offense gave room for other players to grow.
@bigken5045
@bigken5045 Жыл бұрын
No..that credit belongs to Tex Winter..its was the same staff when Phil took over the team..Phil backstabbed Doug Collins that's how he got the job cause he got kool with Jerry..the GM
@marcbarnes5913
@marcbarnes5913 Жыл бұрын
Scottie bro all Scottie
@MistaTofMaine
@MistaTofMaine Жыл бұрын
@@marcbarnes5913 Scottie was #2 but grant and later rodman we're the key #3 guy. All the bulls titles had a big 3 imo.
@logicaldude3611
@logicaldude3611 Жыл бұрын
I think more than anything, it made everyone else feel like an important part of the team. And it made every player interchangeable. MJ finally realized he could still get the shots he wanted, he just had to adjust to the offense and learn to attack from those sets. It paid off big time in his mid-30s because he took advantage of the post clear outs and developed into the best post-up guard ever. One of the best post-up players ever, actually. But all those other guys on the court had jobs and motions to make, they were a part of the team. That helps chemistry all around, especially on defense. A lot of people don’t understand how MJs acceptance of the Triangle really elevated the Bulls and made them what they became.
@depannist
@depannist Жыл бұрын
@@MistaTofMaine you must be young. In no universe was Grant considered part of a “big 3”. A very solid role player.
@JayZoop
@JayZoop Жыл бұрын
Man! He drew double and triple coverage all the time. His passing options where limitless.
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
Imagine now a days him passing to actual shooters when doubled as he attacks and not being bogged down near the paint by 2 bigs on the court at a time smdh....the bulls now would just play rodman or grant at center instead of these wasted purdue king scott cartwright wennington a hair of salley and edwards in 96 even extra longley minutes smdh....the bulls would be better off going small with bj and paxon and harper kerr toni during these runs
@yhassenbey
@yhassenbey 11 ай бұрын
Lies lol
@RobinXlone
@RobinXlone 11 ай бұрын
@@razkable none of that matters, the bulls was the best super team ever. better than any team ever.
@Vipa567
@Vipa567 8 ай бұрын
That's because you weren't allowed to hedge on help defense back then, you had to commit. So, he always had passing options when he was doubled.
@deboldsinas6415
@deboldsinas6415 3 ай бұрын
@@razkableNow, there are players who could do a single coverage on mj. Fight me.
@RFlash-xc4lo
@RFlash-xc4lo Жыл бұрын
Found this channel on a whim and it is leaps and bounds ahead of similar channels and I've only seen 5 mintues in. Seeing MJ broken down like this makes you realize just how scary good he was even more so.
@FreeDawkins
@FreeDawkins Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video, MJ is just ridiculous af
@justice6593
@justice6593 Жыл бұрын
telegram me ☝️☝️ I have an offer for you endeavor to reach out
@justice6593
@justice6593 Жыл бұрын
telegram me ☝️☝️ I have an offer for you endeavor to reach out
@edisjd
@edisjd Жыл бұрын
And his teammates too
@DaggerSecurity
@DaggerSecurity Жыл бұрын
@@edisjd Exactly. MJ played was most effective when he played with a supporting cast that was filled with future hall of famers and coaches.
@solacenmute4840
@solacenmute4840 Жыл бұрын
@@DaggerSecurity lol what???
@manaboosted
@manaboosted Жыл бұрын
Every video this channel has made is an absolute statistical and analytical masterclass, I enjoy every single one this channel uploads. Whether it be a recap of a game, a conversation of who was the best at their best, a regular analysis, every single video is entertaining, informative, and just down right amazing.
@Akuei13Chiman13
@Akuei13Chiman13 Жыл бұрын
say that again for those in the back.
@adriandaliva1341
@adriandaliva1341 Жыл бұрын
there are 3 things guaranteed in life. death, taxes, and this basketball youtube channel's excellence
@blakecordes2812
@blakecordes2812 Жыл бұрын
Could not have said it better myself, well done my friend
@mairehall1448
@mairehall1448 Жыл бұрын
9ാാ9ം'
@1987retroman
@1987retroman Жыл бұрын
It's only a masterclass for people with a limited understanding of statistical analysis and its problems. Not trying to be insulting, but this is pop statistics, nothing particularly substantive here.
@allensmith9879
@allensmith9879 Жыл бұрын
Yeah you can see it on film as well as the stats 91,92&96 were his best Championship seasons. Athletically his peak was undoubtedly 86-89 his speed, agility & explosiveness were otherworldly 👽
@stillwaterwoodworks
@stillwaterwoodworks Жыл бұрын
The thing that these stats don’t really take into account directly is how and why his teammates improved during those years. We all know how hard MJ pushed everyone around him in practices - mentally and physically - and I think that variable returns again back to Michael being the main catalyst for the entire team.
@soulofamerica
@soulofamerica Жыл бұрын
You also have to give Chicago Bulls GM credit for acquiring better players for Phil Jackson to coach up
@bokjrincanada7891
@bokjrincanada7891 Жыл бұрын
@@soulofamerica of course and also miami heat,cavs and lakers for Brons team.,lol where every now and then bron demanding for all stars team mates
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
Mj and pippen were the only bulls on even the 93 title team that were still on the 96 title team...that tells you how important mj was....pippen was great but having both made the bulls what they are
@davidmartinez52420
@davidmartinez52420 Жыл бұрын
It's been said by damn near everyone that played for the Bulls that practice was harder than the games themselves. Jordan had a huge part in that.
@asnark7115
@asnark7115 Жыл бұрын
See: The Chicago Bulls Breakfast Club.
@jamesmarshall6619
@jamesmarshall6619 Жыл бұрын
Although his 93 Finals against my Suns look more impressive you'll never convince me it was better than his 91 Finals. Game 1 he looked a bit nervous and didn't play great but from game 2 on he was just amazing, scoring, passing, rebounding, defense athleticism, intelligence, he just put it all together. He just seemed to be in complete control of the entire series after game 1 and just put 4 complete games together to completely suck any chance the Lakers thought they had at winning. He was incredible in other Finals as well but for me the first one was peak Jordan.
@ThinkingBasketball
@ThinkingBasketball Жыл бұрын
Agree!
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@ThinkingBasketball I would say that first championship is his transition from the first stage of his career to the 2nd stage of his career. His 3rd stage would be 2nd 3peat. Stage 1 (pre-championship into first championship): Most athletic player ever. Unstoppable drive to the hoop and short jumper from 5-10ft. Stage 2 (first 3peat, certainly last 2 rings): Looses half a step but becomes arguably the best mid range shot creator / mid range shooter of all time. He is still the best player at taking it to the the hoop and scoring in the paint but just slightly behind stage 1. Stage 3 (2nd 3peat): Looses a full step but becomes arguably the best post playing guard of all time and maintains the best mid range shot creator / mid range shooter in the league. His ability to get the hoop diminishes by the end. That first championship he is still nearly at peak physical form while becoming the best mid range player ever.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@secoTheSonicFan sure he did add some muscle, but it was also natural back then to loose little step by late 20s. They have much better sports medicine and training today to keep players on peak physical level for longer. Just look at Curry, Durant and lebron still all among top 7 players of the league despite being 37, 34, and 33...with Durant having some serious injury at 31.
@AndrewCarey69
@AndrewCarey69 Жыл бұрын
yep,at that stage you could maybe quibble that his craftiness and game intelligence wasnt at absolute peak but it would have been pretty close,which is plenty good enough..but good lord,his athleticism and quickness at that point was still alien like and more than made up for anything you could say was slightly lacking and his skills and efficiency were extraordinary. obviously though,as with many greats,the great thing about jordan was his incredible baseline performance of consistent excellence during all his playoff runs except a wee bit of slippage in his final bulls season.so it is always nitpicking a bit,but yeah 91 jordan would be my favourite. and i realise that this video is pointing out the improvement of the supporting cast over time but that 91 squad minus jordan looks VERY ordinary on paper,which elevates jordans effort in breaking through for the title....yes we know about pippens greatness but when you dig into the roster and see names like grant,paxson,armstrong,cartwright,king,levingston these are not shining lights of basketball history and achieved very little of note outside of being known as part of that bulls team.in fact,of the few teams that have 3-peated,or even repeated,in the history of the game that must surely be the weakest supporting cast
@honorfirst7506
@honorfirst7506 Жыл бұрын
Game 1, 1991 finals, Jorfnas bulls teammates, were even more nervous, than Jordan himself was, & it showed in their play.
@whitebelt2905
@whitebelt2905 Жыл бұрын
The most impressive and unimpressive part of Jordan’s game was his ability to take 1-2 dribbles to get his shot off. I say unimpressive because modern day fans are used to players taking 5-8 dribbles btw their legs before they shoot. They don’t appreciate his efficiency
@edupbeat
@edupbeat Жыл бұрын
facts! he still has the quickest first step anyone has ever seen. this goes overlooked often when analyzing his offense. he could literally blow by anyone with that 1st step..
@whitebelt2905
@whitebelt2905 Жыл бұрын
@@edupbeat YES! He didn’t need to do a bunch of faints and crossovers. MJ would take one step and he was already past his defender.
@javigar133
@javigar133 Жыл бұрын
The more dribbles the more you kill the clock and the more chances you give to your opponent
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
His back to the basket game and ability to turn around and make plays instantly is so undervalued...kobe learned a lot from him and it's something lebron can learn from still...don't hold onto the ball too long for stats...mj didn't care if he got the assist
@whataboutthepotatoes6085
@whataboutthepotatoes6085 Жыл бұрын
For sure. You couldn't have said it any better. MJ was efficient.
@mark11967AD
@mark11967AD Жыл бұрын
Nice work. When you slow down some of these plays you really see the magic of Michael as a passer. His hang time and generally amazing physical skills allow him so many options for deception and setting up his teammates. It’s really unreal. Between that and his spin ability to twist to the basket or hit fadeaways while creating great working space from tight quarters I’m quite confident he’s the only player to be able to pull this off so effectively in the history of the game. Another reason to consider him perhaps the greatest ever. I’m happy putting him, Kareem and Russell at the top.
@Boots_McScoots
@Boots_McScoots Жыл бұрын
Jordan is the one player I could *never* feel bad about the C's losing to. Nobody else. He was otherworldly.
@williammccormick984
@williammccormick984 Жыл бұрын
Charles Barkley said it best: "Sports are a gun fight and we lost to the fastest gun."
@antwahnredding6294
@antwahnredding6294 Жыл бұрын
This is also a testament to how great Phil Jackson was as a coach
@JulioLeonFandinho
@JulioLeonFandinho Жыл бұрын
that's a guy MJ fanboys forget about... of course leaving Phil Jackson out of a conversation regarding MJ is just criminal
@theoneweekwonder
@theoneweekwonder Жыл бұрын
Phil only coached teams on the up. never a rebuilding team. He got lucky
@johncarolina4950
@johncarolina4950 Жыл бұрын
@@theoneweekwonder He was savvy
@thirsty57
@thirsty57 Жыл бұрын
@@JulioLeonFandinho Phil Jackson was great but he can only do so much. Players make coaches. Not the other way around…. Give Steve kerr a g league team you think he’s gonna make them a contender. No
@justinlevy274
@justinlevy274 Жыл бұрын
They also got a whole different supporting cast.
@KleinpeterHank
@KleinpeterHank Жыл бұрын
3:33 Wow, Jordan truly was ahead of his time.
@ThinkingBasketball
@ThinkingBasketball Жыл бұрын
Possible he was a time traveler
@samuelstensgaard4828
@samuelstensgaard4828 Жыл бұрын
@@ThinkingBasketball "My mom said I had to learn to live with my mistakes, and I took that personally."
@NewsGuyFred
@NewsGuyFred Жыл бұрын
@@samuelstensgaard4828 Ever time Jordan said that, he would then go and beat that opponent. does That mean he beat his mom?
@scottscottsdale7868
@scottscottsdale7868 Жыл бұрын
Jordan was performing Ballett while everyone else was just stomping around. If you saw him live you know what I mean.
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
I think the best part of mj is he could hit the three but he chose instead to take tough contested double teamed long mid range twos and post up like a big and attack centers near the rim...he wasn't scarred...now a days he would score easier and get more assists and his defense would be even more crucial...he would be the perfect player in todays nba...even more effective than in his own era if you can believe it
@Seattle-2017
@Seattle-2017 27 күн бұрын
Yes, I did see him live (on TV) starting with the 1982 NCAA title game. In his first few years in the NBA I didn't see him play much, and I thought "Is this guy really that great as people are saying he is". Then I watched him drop 63 on the to-be-champion Celtics, and said to myself "I guess so". As a Pistons fan in the late 80's, he drove me crazy, as I was realizing that Jordan was becoming one of the all time greats, and it got to the point where you just KNEW he was going to hit every clutch shot, or make a critical steal or pass, and that is what he did throughout the 90's (with a few VERY rare exceptions). The man combined other worldly taleny with relentless drive, hard work and compeitiveness to become the greatest ever.
@mitch-lawless
@mitch-lawless Жыл бұрын
It's noteworthy when evaluating plus-minus to consider how much of an impact the player - in this case, MJ - made to the team's playing ability behind the scenes, like in training. I'm sure just having MJ on your team would improve your own standards and make you rev the tank just a but more while on the court.
@music4thesoul-bymastalee6375
@music4thesoul-bymastalee6375 Жыл бұрын
Good point!
@ianburns1175
@ianburns1175 Жыл бұрын
This right here is facts.....Nobody was harder on teammates....His nickname for Bill Cartwright was Bill can't get right.....He told Horace Grant after a game he shouldn't be allowed to eat the post game meal because he got 0 rebounds....Hell he punched Steve Kerr in the face just to see how he'd react, if he fought back he knew he had someone he could count on in crunch time.....This method did not work for Kwame Brown but it did seem to work for Chicago....Toni Kukoc was another one that was ridden hard by Pippen and Jordan they didn't respect foreign players. The first game they played in the Olympics in 1992 against Croatia with Drazen Petrovic and Toni Kukoc.....Pippen and Jordan split time guarding Kukoc because it was rumored Jerry Krause was trying to sign him. Kukoc struggled the 1st meeting but the 2nd one in the gold medal game he dropped 20 on Pippen and Jordan, Petrovic was lights out shooting and it kept the game reasonably close.....
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
Thinking Basketball has a video on the flaws of plus minus and proposes adjusted plus minus which factors in the talent or the players on the court when they star is playing and where the star isn’t playing, for both teams. The bulls often had Pippen leading the offense when Jordan sat so they staggered their offense so one of those two was alway on the court. This would reduce Jordan plus minus because they spread their offensive lineup so that they don’t drop significantly when Jordan sits
@ernestmccaleb3545
@ernestmccaleb3545 Жыл бұрын
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson The bulls rotation wasn't any different than any other team's. Every team staggers the rotation of their best players. Note Brown and Tatum, Paul and Booker etc.
@akhilavila7590
@akhilavila7590 Жыл бұрын
16:20 That awesome plus-minus blueprint tailored by an older Jordan in his 2nd three-peat - he definitely lost athleticism but compensated some with his improved strength and guile and remained an all time level player
@phillipschuman4307
@phillipschuman4307 Жыл бұрын
In his last four Bulls' seasons, he averaged 30 just once, and never shot 50%. As Charles Barkley once said, in Jordan's second time with the Bulls, he was still the best player in the league, but not as good as he had been (which Barkley said was the best ever).
@orestes1984
@orestes1984 Жыл бұрын
@@phillipschuman4307 Charles Barkley is a certified idiot. He literally lost his only chance at winning a title because of his own stupidity. Jordan was still by far the best player in the league. His playing style simply changed from an aggressive driver of the ball, to a look first guard where if he didn't have a clear shot he was more likely to kick the ball out to elite perimeter shooters like Pippen, Kukoc and Kerr. That said, because of his trade mark fade away unless Jordan was smothered his jump shot was basically unblockable and where contact defense was still a thing, he became craftier because you can read the game with his classic "you reach I teach" eyes in the back of his head from people's touch.
@joshuachang5210
@joshuachang5210 Жыл бұрын
@@phillipschuman4307 The late 90s have lower pace and less offensive efficiency league-wide. Second three-peat Jordan might not be as good as a player as the younger Jordan, but using points per game and raw percentages surely isn’t the way to go about the argument.
@NewsGuyFred
@NewsGuyFred Жыл бұрын
@@phillipschuman4307 That's a bit misleading because the pace was much slower during his 2nd threepeat. In fact, per 100 possessions he scored more in each of those season than he did in 1991-92 or 88-89 or his rookie year. First threepeat Jordan was clearly better than 2nd threepeat but the points per game is highly misleading. What you do see in the per 100 possions is that his scoring was similar to his first threepeat but his assist dropped from about 7.5 to 5.5 and of course his defensive stats like steals and blocks also dropped.
@nolang1
@nolang1 Жыл бұрын
Also the league got 2 expansion teams to dilute the talent and the three-point line was shortened, which would obviously be a godsend for any perimeter player with declining athleticism.
@bilalkhares9337
@bilalkhares9337 Жыл бұрын
I think this shows that Jordan's work ethic and mentality helped give his teammates lasting improvements that stayed even if he left, as well as Scottie growing into his peak
@m.l.9199
@m.l.9199 3 ай бұрын
One of the greatest summaries i have seen about MJ.Not everybody is talking about the things you just put together in this video.Great work with a lot of things I even as I die hard MJ fan didn’t realize.👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
@SARCASMlC
@SARCASMlC 9 ай бұрын
The thing about +/- across eras (comparing Jordan to LeBron/Steph/etc) is how much +/- gets affected by the pace of the game. Between 1996-1998 the highest PPG team in the NBA (in the playoffs) was 97.7 and between 16-21' playoffs, you've got Golden state putting up 112 PPG. The more rapid pace of the game favors newer players in +/- since they're getting more possessions to increase their +/-. This is why baseball has normalized stats, where things like batting average are compared to the average batting average of the year they played in to see how players stacked up against their competition instead of directly seeing how they stack up against players who are essentially playing a game with fundamental changes made to it. Instead of just looking at +/- in an on/off setting, you could look at something like +/- differential and divide that by the number of possessions per game to see how impactful players are on a per possession basis. You could also look at something like +/- differential divided by the total amount of points scored in the game to account for the change in scoring pace. With the methodology used in this video, being +15 in a game that ends 80-81 is the same as being +15 in a game that ends 130-131. Both are obviously good games, but I would argue being +15 in the game that's 80-81 is far more impressive assuming both players play the same number of minutes. It's way more work and I understand why you wouldn't do it for sure, but this is why using stats to compare across eras in basketball is fundamentally flawed.
@bobbyd1632
@bobbyd1632 7 ай бұрын
yes everything needs context, well said
@SARCASMlC
@SARCASMlC 7 ай бұрын
@@bobbyd1632 It just shows how bad statistics are in basketball imo. The sport is lightyears behind basically every other sport statistically. The normalized stats in baseball (the gold standard for sports stats if we're being real) add so much more perspective and that's why the historical comparisons hold so much more water. Stuff like spin rate from pitchers affects batting averages to an insane degree...as that's gone up, getting hits has gone down so you end up with lower batting averages compared to a lot of historical figures, but compared to peers, there's still incredible hitters today. Then you get to basketball and it's just people using TS% across eras like it's vaguely the same game with how much defenses have been hampered. The amount of times I've seen guys like Kobe get shit on for TS% (career 55%) is insane. Obviously that's poor compared to today's numbers, where league average is 58.1%, but over the years Kobe played, league average was 53.2% so he was actually ABOVE league-average efficiency over his career. Then I see videos like this where it's just straight up +/- with nothing done to account for the pace changes and if you're a stats nerd it's just very clearly a flawed way of thinking about it. A million confounding variables just being ignored entirely for the sake of ease.
@bobbyd1632
@bobbyd1632 7 ай бұрын
@@SARCASMlC to me it reveals two dimensional thinkers (aka Bron fans, kidding, not really kidding) to three dimensional thinkers (not MJ fans by default btw, they can be just as bad as Bron fans) All stats are objective but they also need context to be accurate. 23ppg in 2002 for example is the same team percentage ppg as 28ppg in 2023
@MrMagnaniman
@MrMagnaniman 5 ай бұрын
@@SARCASMlC This video didn't compare +/- across eras or do anything else that you accused it of doing. It examined +/- of THE SAME PLAYERS over a relatively short period of time. I think you just heard "plus-minus" and then turned off your ears.
@SARCASMlC
@SARCASMlC 4 ай бұрын
@@MrMagnaniman he literally uses +/- when players were on/off the court to compare Jordan to modern NBA players in the video lmao. If you're using on/off splits and putting MJ on the same graph as a LeBron, you're using +/- across eras...you're using it marginally better than most people, but you're still doing it. On/off splits are literally just +/- for the team when a guy is or is not on the floor. Modern players will always have higher on/off splits than 90's players because the both the pace and scoring percentage is way higher in modern basketball. Not only is it easier to score in the modern NBA, they're getting more possessions per game to do it. It's really simple math....Jordan gets 50 possessions on and 20 possessions off per game (it's probably less than this to be completely honest)...Steph gets 75 possessions on and 30 possessions off...his on/off splits will be higher because he very clearly is an incredible player. If you want to actually compare these players in a more objective way, you would do what he did, but divide the on/off by the number of possessions to see who was more impactful on a per-possession basis. You normalize the stat...even then it's hard to normalize for how much easier it is to score for modern players, but it'd be closer.
@geekout1642
@geekout1642 Жыл бұрын
"Thinking Basketball every day" -Michael Jordan 😂
@adriencook6208
@adriencook6208 Жыл бұрын
This more shows the greatness of coach Phil Jackson in creating a system that drew out the best of the role players. It also shows Michael greatness in fitting into that system and making his teammates better even when off the court.
@Dontlookatme651
@Dontlookatme651 Жыл бұрын
“Making his teammates better even when off the court.” 😂😂😂I get it man MJ is great but let’s not schlob his nob too raw now
@snakebitten6967
@snakebitten6967 Жыл бұрын
Adrien Cook that is the falicy that espn etc keep pushing. It was not Phil’s system that Jordan adopted it was Tex Winters Triangle Offence system that Phil asked MJ to buy into. If MJ did a Lebron and insisted he remain the facilitator MJ would not be the goat. His teams would have fallen apart with him off court just as Lebrons teams have historically when he is on the bench and when he leaves the team. You guys are missing that MJ had to accept that new sustem and master it. That is not Phil Jackson’s doing. That’s the players buying into the system and also becoming proficient in it. Players make coaches. Lebron fans and the media give Phil Jackson way too much credit. Phil had no name as a coach when he came to Chicago. He was not a hall of fam anything before MJ and later Kobe and Shaq. Look how he could do nothing with the Knicks who did not have any players the caliber or high b-ball IQ like MJ or Kobe. He could do nothing. That is a true sign of great coaching like a Pat Riley etc have proven. Phil is good coach no doubt but he didn’t make MJ it’s the other way around. MJ, Shaq and Kobe skill made Phil the hall of famed he is.
@eazymoneymane7789
@eazymoneymane7789 Жыл бұрын
Tex winter's created the offense not Phil, Phil learned from tex winters
@lakersin4latenightconvo
@lakersin4latenightconvo Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/b5CqY5yJrL-Jn5o🤣🤣
@prolific1518
@prolific1518 Жыл бұрын
@@snakebitten6967 you're missing the fact that it was Phil's coaching ability and system that got MJ to buy in. LeBron never had a coach with Phil's ability. Look at MJ and Kobe they both never won without him. LeBron made Spo and Spo hasn't won without LeBron. That's the different levels of greatness.
@Schraiber
@Schraiber Жыл бұрын
Amazing video. Absolutely love everything this channel puts out. Can't believe how much research went into this and how detailed it was
@ermedic1986
@ermedic1986 Жыл бұрын
Ive been watching Jordan for 25 years and you've put in highlights and angles Ive never seen in my life...love the content
@leptonparticle238
@leptonparticle238 Жыл бұрын
Mj's team not being trash without him is not a bad thing, he was the leader of the team and always pushed them in practice and helped them improve their game and become mentally tough. His teammates making progress in their game while playing with Jordan is a sign of his greatness as well. Also that has something to do with the team's offenseive system, that wasn't built for him. Like LeBron's teams that stop functioning and look so lost when he sits down because he is their system, he runs every play and makes every decision, while others just do their simple tasks of stretching the floor for him, waiting to get the pass to shoot the 3 and cutting, but without him they don't know what to do. MJ did his damage by being a part of the system, not the system itself, that's why his bulls were able to hold their own and play without him as well.
@TayGee-mh8eo
@TayGee-mh8eo Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@TayGee-mh8eo
@TayGee-mh8eo Жыл бұрын
This is the problem with seeing everything through statistics: in this case the plus/minus. The Plus/Minus cannot measure leadership, driving teammates in practice to be more accountable, teamwork on the floor, offensive system, coaching decisions, etc. It REWARDS the LeBron system where LeBron controls everything on the court -- and didn't win or dominate as much. MJ had a similar system in the 80's. Had he chosen to he would have blown up every offensive record not held by Wilt but he wouldn't have become the 6 time champion that way. MJ won by stepping back! There is no stat that can measure that dynamic. No stat to measure the impact "The Breakfast Club" had on his teammates.
@gordonbradbury4130
@gordonbradbury4130 Жыл бұрын
Come on man look at Jordan's usage and tell me the team wasn't built around him
@TayGee-mh8eo
@TayGee-mh8eo Жыл бұрын
@@gordonbradbury4130 What he meant was that the triangle offense was not contingent on MJ doing everything. The offense didn't depend on MJ making every decision. He was a major part of the system but he wasn't THE system.
@d34n_
@d34n_ Жыл бұрын
I’d say that if players get better playing with you and continue to play at that level after, you made that player better. If you go off the court and now that player looks garbage, you didn’t make them a better player, you just made them reliant on you.
@CoryWillis
@CoryWillis Жыл бұрын
I just want you to know, Ben, that I can't understate my love for your content. Your last podcast on athleticism was so amazing. I honestly was still wanting more after almost 2 hours of pure genius. Great work!
@CoryWillis
@CoryWillis Жыл бұрын
I also have been watching ever since the pascal siakam video
@ThinkingBasketball
@ThinkingBasketball Жыл бұрын
@@CoryWillis Appreciate that a ton. Really awesome to hear from people who have been watching since Pascal.
@bantazmo1978
@bantazmo1978 Жыл бұрын
Link the Podcast episode.
@reece417
@reece417 Жыл бұрын
@@ThinkingBasketball Where is the video on athleticism?
@CoryWillis
@CoryWillis Жыл бұрын
@Critical Damage I can taste the salt from here, bro. Don't be hating; it causes wrinkles.
@alinjo4421
@alinjo4421 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Love looking back on vids about great players that I didn’t get to see in real time. I enjoyed it 🔥🔥🔥
@uscgbmcmretired2490
@uscgbmcmretired2490 11 ай бұрын
Awesome video! Michael's pursuit of excellence produced the best athlete I've ever witnessed in team sports! Thanks for putting that together!
@thegumbojumbo2944
@thegumbojumbo2944 Жыл бұрын
Even for your standards this is pretty nuts, I hope we get more comprehensive data for the 90s and earlier with all the games the NBA has locked away. It would be awesome if we could get some hard impact metrics for MJ but this is a great start.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
yes. I appreciate how he referenced someone who took the time to measure Jordan's shot in 1991 season. That's the only way it going to be done now, someone has to literally go through all the games . Him shooting 51% from mid range means he was a better shooter than OKC Kevin Durant from midrange. KD saw 10ft to 3pt line fg% sky rocket in past 5 years as the league shooting improved due to more spacing creating from 3pt shots. Jordan's 91/92 shot data also seems inline with the 96/97 season when the NBA first measured shot data. In 96/97 he shot .492 from 10-16 and .521 from 16-3p for 50.6% from 10-3p which were 59% of his shots and he scored 30ppg. That's extreme high volume 10-3p and very high fg%. In 96/97, he took nearly 60% of this shots rom 10-3p vs 1991-92 he took about 40% of his shots from 10-3p.
@roygirling5859
@roygirling5859 Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad I stumbled across this KZbin channel years ago and have watched and listened to your stuff ever since. The best analysis with the right mix of stats and videos to explain and discuss basketball. I also read your book which really challenged the way I watch and think about basketball. Thanken you sir.
@nickclements2727
@nickclements2727 Жыл бұрын
That was incredible! Thanks for all the work you put into it!
@floydmills8963
@floydmills8963 Жыл бұрын
This is a very impressive video, I love the way you broke down the numbers. Thanks for taking the time to do this. Jordan almost always killed my Knicks, but I always loved watching the game. Jordan spoke a lot of truth about the 3 ball. I tried to watch a basketball game awhile back, and everybody just stood on the three point line waiting for something to happen. I just don't enjoy watching that style of ball. I hope some players get back in touch with actually playing ball. Peace and love y'all 🤟
@domg6251
@domg6251 Жыл бұрын
David Robinson underrated. His teams averaged 22 PPG less with him off the court in the playoffs. I know this about MJ but that really stood out to me.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
I think there are some tricky things going on with David Robinson.He lead the league in win shares per 48 min in the 97, 98 and 2000 seasons despite being not the player he was before and Duncan being the best player by far on the team. 35yr old Robninson was 14.4pts 8.reb 2.5blk yet higher ws per 48 than Duncan? My guess is some of the stats are inflated based on the lineups he played with.
@domg6251
@domg6251 Жыл бұрын
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson I know that all stats need context still stood out a bit though.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@domg6251 Yes, it still stands out. It certainly shows he must have still been a force late in his career even if the number is a bit inflated. I can't remember who (maybe this channel) but there is a video looking at Robinson and his impact. He was a defensive machine even late in his career with Duncan and lots of advance stats showed that.
@TapCat
@TapCat Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I thought it was weird the way this video just brushes him aside because he didn't lead his team in minutes. He averaged over 35 minutes a game in the playoffs in 98-00 so it's no like he was cherry picking easy minutes against scrubs.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@TapCat it showed the stat isn’t perfect. Those were very clearly Duncan teams but that stat showed the old David Robison was the star so obviously a flawed stat
@RonquixoteDIII
@RonquixoteDIII Жыл бұрын
93 Jordan tore up the Suns but just imagine 90-91 Jordan who has even more speed. He would have average 3-4 ppg more on the same efficiency
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
3 stages of Jordan. 1. Pre championship and maybe first championship, Jordan was most athletic player ever and unstoppable drive to the basket. 2. First 3pt, he lost half step but became the best mid-range shooter / mid-range shot creator of all-time while still being the best at taking it to hoop. 3. 2nd 3peat, he lost a full step but he became the best post player of any guard in NBA history and was still the best mid range shooter / mid-range shot creator of all-time. He no longer was the best player at taking it too the hoop but he was still among the best at that until his last Bulls season where it became almost non-existent at times.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@housesports000 yes, that’s what I was getting at. But he was a touch slower in the 2nd and certainly 3rd ring. He gained wait and was 29 and 30 which is when players start losing a step back then
@mrmacross
@mrmacross Жыл бұрын
Funny fact about the 1993 Finals is that Jordan averaged 41 ppg but shot terribly from the line. He left 2 ppg off the table just by missing FTs he normally made.
@BenjaminFranklinFF1706
@BenjaminFranklinFF1706 Жыл бұрын
@@mrmacross True
@popeyeisgood
@popeyeisgood Жыл бұрын
@pdanderspetea It was the wrist I believe.
@MrMackxl65
@MrMackxl65 8 ай бұрын
In chaotic traffic situations where the majority of players would freeze, Jordan would thrive and excel by slicing through multiple defenders on his way to a dunk or some other magnificent play which left defensive players spectating and shaking their heads in frustration and amazement. Barkley and Ainge know exactly what I'm talking about. In fact that was the first time that Barkley was quoted saying, "He's the best player I've ever seen!". Ainge was literally left too dumb founded for words.
@just-a-kollector1568
@just-a-kollector1568 Жыл бұрын
I love your videos! Most ESPN analyst have nothing on you! You literally have that “THINKING BASKETBALL” mind. Thank you for your amazingly informative videos.
@MALLYGEEZ1
@MALLYGEEZ1 Жыл бұрын
As strange as it may sound to say about a player who scored as much as MJ. He surprisingly played a team game. He avg 6.3 rebounds and 5 2 assist for his career. Which is elite for a shooting guard. Phil Jackson brought a system where the Bulls could accomplish winning Championships. MJ made sure his teammates were ready for the wars of the seasons. I've still haven't seen another player quit like MJ.
@solomons5669
@solomons5669 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t call that elite it’s average
@MALLYGEEZ1
@MALLYGEEZ1 Жыл бұрын
@@solomons5669 For SG it's elite in my opinion.
@iamhungey12345
@iamhungey12345 Жыл бұрын
@@solomons5669 Considering the guy was a shooting guard and played under the Triangle Offense, it was understandable.
@s_ame1135
@s_ame1135 Жыл бұрын
@@solomons5669 on a time where PGs do most the assists and big men do most of the rebounds, it was elite. You're comparing it to this positionless era which makes your opinion moot.
@mattesyl33
@mattesyl33 Жыл бұрын
RIP Bill Russell: LEGEND in the NBA as well as a truely awesome gentleman warrior, a man who fought for actual equality. A man who opposed real injustice. An amazing 11 time champion player, and coach. The ultimate GREATEST OF ALL TIME! God bless his family in suffering their loss, a loss felt by all who knew the history of Bill Russell. #6LOVE ☘️💚😢
@kol8214
@kol8214 Жыл бұрын
W
@NewsGuyFred
@NewsGuyFred Жыл бұрын
When MJ was proclaimed the GOAT in 1990/1991, he was seen as taking the GOAT from Bill Russel. That's how great and influential Bill Russel was .
@onestopgenuis9611
@onestopgenuis9611 Жыл бұрын
I respect your opinion. Bill Russell is considered one of the greats of all time, you cant compare his 11 rings to 80's to present, Celtics fought 10 teams on a regular season, it will be a different thing if they have 30 teams competing for the title. If Wilt and Rusell competed with Shaq,David,Hakeem,Ewing and the rest of the centers at least 7'0 in height or more, it will be a great thing to watch but they will not be as dominator as they are. Just my opinion
@NewsGuyFred
@NewsGuyFred Жыл бұрын
@@onestopgenuis9611 quick calculation, the odds of winning in the 90’s was 2.5x more difficult than winning in the 60’s. I would say 6 straight or 6 of 8 depending he you look at it is more difficult than Bull Russel 11 total. Or at least very close to being equal.
@kingofnewyork7765
@kingofnewyork7765 Жыл бұрын
@@onestopgenuis9611 stupid argument, 90s is the most diluted era ever.
@ron403b
@ron403b Жыл бұрын
Absolutely fantastic and fascinating video, especially for a huge MJ fan. Why did it take me so long to discover you? I will definitely be checking out more.
@kpag3030
@kpag3030 Жыл бұрын
Good video man. This is a pretty good summary of the 90’s bulls with Jordan.
@jorgkrenmayr9128
@jorgkrenmayr9128 Жыл бұрын
One thing, we could mention in addition is, that very often they rested many of the starting 5 at the end of easy wins. So the weaker numbers "off Jordan" include big time-spans, when several better Bulls were off the court. But as one of those glad, who could watch that games on a regular basis, there is anyway no piece of doubt, that he was the difference maker. But you have to have a strong team, that hold you near enough, so there is that difference you can make at the end. 🙂 Great video. Thx for all that effort.
@MoeJaxon
@MoeJaxon Жыл бұрын
Very informative. Very interesting and this one of the better video highlighting jordan and the team aspect without degrading like other podcasters do. Fantastic job
@chrisc3825
@chrisc3825 3 ай бұрын
It's difficult to use statistics to prove how good MJ was, but this video does a really good job at showing his dominance in every phase and across multiple situations. It retrospect, despite having been a Knicks fan, we were robbed of what likely could've been 2 of the best years of Jordan's career with his retirement, right at the crossover between speed and strength.
@austinlaing9012
@austinlaing9012 Жыл бұрын
I watched the three greatest players play Jordan, Kobe and Lebron. Jordan is just different! When everyone watched him they knew they would never see a better player ever! MJ best all time always will be.
@inordirection_
@inordirection_ Жыл бұрын
One of things I like about Michael Jordan is how good at basketball he was.
@michaelbuffington4047
@michaelbuffington4047 Жыл бұрын
LOL
@knightdance8377
@knightdance8377 Жыл бұрын
In the *prime* years focused on in this video (1988-1993). Jordan had 4 playoff series in which he AVERAGED 40.0ppg or more. Every other player in NBA history COMBINED *excluding* Jordan has 4 playoff series in which they averaged 40.0 ppg or more.
@King-if5kh
@King-if5kh Жыл бұрын
Actually jordan has 5 playoff series in which he averaged 40ppg or more
@knightdance8377
@knightdance8377 Жыл бұрын
@@King-if5kh the time period is from 1988-1993
@tammydj9941
@tammydj9941 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Your effort is amazing. It showed MJ23 evolving as well from the charge the rim and explosive dunks to passing to open team mates to those midrange quick shots to it's even evolved form of reclined midrange shots. Like wine MJ23 aged better and craftier losing none of his assassin mentality. Peace and goodwill to you man!
@stefanschneider3681
@stefanschneider3681 Жыл бұрын
It‘s so much fun so listen to your interesting stats and at the same time watch him do his magic! Thanks for that!
@cbm3
@cbm3 Жыл бұрын
So in the latter part of his career Jordan was the difference between a very good team and arguably the best team ever.
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
Scottie didn't play as well offensively in 2 of the last 3 rings so Jordan had to carry the team. Jordan scored 35% of his teams points in his last Bulls championship playoff run. That's like average 40pts in today's game.
@WhelmedButReady
@WhelmedButReady Жыл бұрын
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson The crescendo being the Finale in Game 6. Still to this day the highest percentage total of points for a Finals closeout game. MJ's 45 was about half the Bulls points. And with all the adversity mounting in those final 48min he still pulled it out and secured the victory/title. Which is why many believe it to be the single great at game anyone's ever played. Not cuz of the overall tally, but because the mix of skill and will that it took to do it. 🐐
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@WhelmedButReady I watched that game live on TV. That was a tremendous ending to his career (he never played again). It captures everything about Jordan's career -- best clutch player ever, best scorer ever (45 out 87), and has a steal in final 30 seconds that lead to the clutch shot. The Bulls didnt have another very good option to create scoring...Pippen was hurt and therest except Kukoc are role players who play D or spot up jumpers. Kukoc was the only other player to score over 8pts with his 15pts in 42min playing heavy minutes because Pippen played just 25min and injured. if you haven't seen the game, Pippen tried his best play. He was moving slow and awkward but eventually they shut him down to his back problems.
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
The Bulls were ok in 94-95 97 and 98 without mj but with him they were actual threats for a title...that's the difference...same thing in 88-89 and 90...let's put it that way...
@Quay_25
@Quay_25 Жыл бұрын
It was so badass seeing Jordan as a video outside of greatest peaks. Thank you so much. I love ur work‼️
@henryswanson5402
@henryswanson5402 Жыл бұрын
Great video! This deserves a lot of recognition.
@maxpeng9641
@maxpeng9641 Жыл бұрын
always a great day when ben taylor uploads. just cannot wait until that top 10 video drops for 2022! keep up the fantastic work, ben :)
@Romeyrome2424
@Romeyrome2424 Жыл бұрын
Appreciate the work you did to bring us this video bro!
@yehor_ivanov
@yehor_ivanov 3 ай бұрын
thanks a lot, highly insightful and well-done! would be truly interesting to see the same stats videos about Bird and Magic, for example, btw
@jayjaynieman
@jayjaynieman Жыл бұрын
Great video! Love the build up to get to your point!
@t9b389
@t9b389 Жыл бұрын
Thinking basketball has the greatest on/off numbers ever. Truly the GOAT
@mrmacross
@mrmacross Жыл бұрын
17:44 remains one of my favorite plays in the Bulls title runs. I downloaded a short video clip of that in 1997 off AOL and rewatched it dozens of times.
@iLL-EgO
@iLL-EgO Жыл бұрын
Great content!! As a "old head" who grew up watching MJ, I remember being 6 or 7 yrs old recording games on our beta max n watching them before n after school as well as after Saturday morning cartoons n then go out n try to mimic almost every layup n jumpshot. Then the 90s rolled around and MJ gave the world a whole new culture in commercials, interviews, music, movies n of course sports!! Seeing ppl from other countries wearing Jordan jerseys n shoes blew my mind 🤯 thinking this guy really got the midas touch. To this day I haven't seen an impact like this... Maybe Football (soccer) with guys like Maradona n Renaldo. Then the dreamteam was jus next level. The 3peats, the scoring, the clutch moments, the defense all leading up to those championships!! Great time great era!! Sorry for the rant but seeing some of these clips jus reminded me of how MJ was a movement domestically n worldwide by the time his career was all said n done!! #23 #blackcat #blackjesus #air #hisairness #mj #MichealJordan
@anilsud6531
@anilsud6531 Жыл бұрын
Another class video, thank you!
@weekend2short393
@weekend2short393 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic project!!! Good job fellas!
@kaetha1
@kaetha1 Жыл бұрын
MJ changed the mindset and the culture in chicago so even when he wasn’t on the court they still played hard
@Ghost-hj5jy
@Ghost-hj5jy Жыл бұрын
Too bad that didn't last long I mean look at post MJ. Pretty much Bulls are stuck to never ever again being no.1 or even get to the finals after MJ retired.
@stolensentience
@stolensentience Жыл бұрын
@@Ghost-hj5jy thanks to that Derrick rose tragedy
@isaacarseneau190
@isaacarseneau190 Жыл бұрын
@@Ghost-hj5jy Their entire identity during the late 2000s and early 2010s was built on overachieving by playing harder than everyone else. Fortunes changed, maybe, but the mindset was similar for a long time.
@albertalejandro2840
@albertalejandro2840 Жыл бұрын
You pointed out that the bulls got better. But my question is, did he help make them better? That would make him more valuable. I think by hearing his teammates in other interviews he pushed them to be better.
@eddawson9617
@eddawson9617 Жыл бұрын
I believe what you say to be true I believe when your main player is off 1:1 ratio is the goal I believe MJs personality from what we’ve seen would not be hard to imagine today’s commentary driving him to be the best 3 point shooter All speculation but you look old enough to get some things just don’t have any measurable metric
@Triggy6825
@Triggy6825 Жыл бұрын
Exactly my thoughts here too. It has to be noted vs someone like Lebron, where Jordans 87 Bulls and 95 Bulls are brand new completely different teams, but nearly all of the players were brought to the Bulls and made better because of him and Phil Jackson. Someone like Pippen is likely an average ball player without Jordan.
@whataboutthepotatoes6085
@whataboutthepotatoes6085 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, Kukoc brought MJ to his HOF induction to thank MJ for making him a better player. Pippen, too, said the same thing in the Last Dance. I'm sure other teammates have said the same thing. Oh, Scott Burrell, too.
@irishirvinrico3602
@irishirvinrico3602 11 ай бұрын
exactly my thought, he MADE them better
@xosevi17
@xosevi17 3 ай бұрын
it's quite obvious MJ made his teammates better. They wanted to excel and played their best basketball with or without him but after playing with him
@nodefense
@nodefense Жыл бұрын
This video really put into perspective for me, as someone born well after MJs peak days, how brilliant of a player he was. I knew he was the GOAT but just these added layers of excellence that he consistently brought that don’t get talked about as much as his pure scoring and chips is so interesting. Fantastic video as always, this channel is always an inspiration for me to try create high quality videos of my own
@razkable
@razkable Жыл бұрын
What separates mj from the rest is his defensive impact...a big reason why hakeem duncan both malones rbinson and kareem get underrated as well by most...heck shaq and kobe were amazing defenders as well at times
@motorboater1020
@motorboater1020 Жыл бұрын
His fundamentals were unmatched. Ridiculously good, Kobe came close to matching if not matched.
@rashomon2934
@rashomon2934 Жыл бұрын
Great analysis, thanks! One thing that you could have added was mentioning differences over time in league scoring averages. The value of an extra point in terms of winning was higher when average scoring overall was lower wasn't it? From a quick look at basketball reference, the team league scoring average in the 1997 playoffs for example was 92 against around 100 in the early 90s, 100 in 2016 and 106 in 2017. So comparing raw points +/- undervalues significantly late 90s Jordan (and possibly early 90s Jordan too) compared to late 2010s and 2020s. In my mind this also makes Shaq's numbers even more impressive! All this not to take anything away from Lebron or Curry who obviously still look incredible on that chart (around minute 14)
@nkrumansantos1794
@nkrumansantos1794 Жыл бұрын
Funny how no matter how you try to slice it, MJ still comes out as dominant. This is what, in my opinion, makes him the GOAT.
@NewsGuyFred
@NewsGuyFred Жыл бұрын
Anyone that actually saw him play would know he’s the clear GOAT
@rageflash9
@rageflash9 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. This is absolutely GOLD and even MJ gave you a shoutout LOL I'm not a numbers nerd but you're analysis and more detailed look and/or footages on his Moves i want to apply to my game and his approach to the game what made this GOLD for me. again, Thank you very much
@michaelrooze278
@michaelrooze278 Ай бұрын
I think it should be noted how much Mj elevated his teammates' level of play. He didn't want his team to fall apart when he went out. He was a good enough leader to make sure that difference was minimal.
@2kTeacher
@2kTeacher Жыл бұрын
You a killer TB. Love these breakdowns
@Ruudgi
@Ruudgi Жыл бұрын
This was one the best videos y'all have done!
@mycabbages3538
@mycabbages3538 Жыл бұрын
Man so glad KZbin suggested this video to me. Subbed. Now I got something to binge.
@MarcCastellsBallesta
@MarcCastellsBallesta Жыл бұрын
Dude, the statistical analysis and the charts and graphs you've shown are really good and well presented. There are many NBA youtube channels I like because of the charts, and you're one of them.
@JohnAsquith-ey6ld
@JohnAsquith-ey6ld Жыл бұрын
yes very pretty shame the data sets dont account for all the variables before making assertions.
@RSchittko
@RSchittko Жыл бұрын
Wow! Great video and an amazing service to the community. Curious why you went for per48min, as opposed to per100poss? I guess with the former you can speed through games until the next Jordan substitution, with the latter you might have to count every single possession?
@brrryyyy
@brrryyyy Жыл бұрын
Another upload from the GOAT @Thinking Basketball
@alexnagy2044
@alexnagy2044 Жыл бұрын
You did an insanely incredible job... Congrats and respect, Keep it up! (I subbed for sure. ✌🏻) 🏀👌🏾💯🔥
@lancertheanswer6351
@lancertheanswer6351 Жыл бұрын
Quality vid as usual. It would be awesome if you did a playoff analysis on other ATGs who played at least 100 games like Kobe, LeBron, etc.
@Sonnel_James
@Sonnel_James Жыл бұрын
6:17 the way MJ surveys the floor while mid-air is amazing.. his Airness the GOAT Michael Jordan
@JonBernard41
@JonBernard41 Жыл бұрын
Jump passes are widely known as a bad habit.
@ReidoFutebol98
@ReidoFutebol98 Жыл бұрын
@@JonBernard41 Not for MJ
@NikoBellic20080
@NikoBellic20080 Жыл бұрын
@@JonBernard41 Not when you have a 40+ inch vertical 😉
@MrFantastic23
@MrFantastic23 Жыл бұрын
You simply are the platinum standard for statiscal NBA content!
@goody869
@goody869 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video with tons of good info!
@oscarjr.cobarrubias6678
@oscarjr.cobarrubias6678 Жыл бұрын
Amazing work. Keep it up.
@krisskrosssss
@krisskrosssss Жыл бұрын
I’m craving for the annual top 10 players assessment of this season. Looking forward to it.
@ryangranger5204
@ryangranger5204 Жыл бұрын
Whether MJ was the greatest ever, I don't know. He's certainly got as good an argument as anyone, but there have been a lot of greats. What can't be doubted is that he was the most stylish, most graceful player ever. He's poetry in motion.
@yza9654
@yza9654 Жыл бұрын
I agree and think it’s a principal factor in why he’s widely revered as the greatest. He played the way we all wished we could play in our minds.
@jonathansykes4986
@jonathansykes4986 Жыл бұрын
There is no debate. Jordan is the greatest.
@jonathansykes4986
@jonathansykes4986 Жыл бұрын
@@yza9654 Or maybe because he has the best numbers..
@SteveCrimialMindsFan
@SteveCrimialMindsFan Жыл бұрын
@@jonathansykes4986 why are you here? Ben clearly said MJ is not an outlier.
@retrosoul8770
@retrosoul8770 Жыл бұрын
@@SteveCrimialMindsFan he is individually
@ericc5556
@ericc5556 11 ай бұрын
Great video! One thing to consider when referencing this stat you have to consider the era and rules. After 2000s the numbers will be higher because the NBA changed how defense would be played. +/- has its place, but the amounts of shots has to factor in based on less defense. So you have to extrapolate Jordan's +/- based on these changes for a clearer picture when comparing him to Robinson/Curry/Shaq/LeBron.
@NickPR87
@NickPR87 Жыл бұрын
Tremendous! MJ's bag is right up there with some of the best in the history of the game. I'll especially never get tired of watching him work in the post and the way he adjusted mid-shot once he turned to shoot his turnaround J.
@eazymoneymane7789
@eazymoneymane7789 Жыл бұрын
Kobe and Hakeem are the only 2 who was at the level skill wise as Jordan
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
Plus minus is good but one major flaw is that it hurts players who have a strong bench. I’m sure Duncan’s numbers are effected by the fact he had Manu Ginobli to carry the offense while Duncan sat. And Lebron is helped tremendously by the fact he rarely ever had a a good bench so no one on the bench to carry the team. 3:33 lol. Jordan is a fan of the channel 30 years ago
@youraverage90sguys7
@youraverage90sguys7 Жыл бұрын
thats literally the point of it though, its to show who had a good bench and who didnt. confirming bulls were absolutely top dog in 90s and were top tier even without jordan
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
Hey, I want to say what a great video this was and I appreciate you took the time look at about 100 playoff games. At 17:55 you pretty much sum up why I think Jordan is the clear goat. I was 13 when Jordan won his first championship and it was my first year watching NBA more serious. For the next 6 playoffs of Jordan (not including comeback year), he was just unstoppable. I felt confident Jordan was easily the best player, best clutch player, and would win (except last ring when Jordan was aging). I’ve been watching basketball religiously since 1990 and not even lebron feels like Jordan. Shaq through 3 quarters was the closest I saw in dominating the game but his inability to take over at end of the game is why I still put lebron as the best since Jordan. I can’t make the same judgements about players before 1990 but since 1990, Jordan especially in playoffs has been the clear GOAT. That feeling of knowing with high certainty the bulls will win due to Jordan playing great ball and Just about always coming through in the clutch is something I probably will never feel again.
@youraverage90sguys7
@youraverage90sguys7 Жыл бұрын
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson its funny you dont count the comeback year cuz he was playing better then than the next season, but jordan made excuses about basktball body and being rusty, casual ass clowns gobbled that shit up
@shepardice3775
@shepardice3775 Жыл бұрын
Yes that's what this video is about lol. It's asking if Jordan had a good team and as we can see he clearly had an elite supporting cast
@Homer-OJ-Simpson
@Homer-OJ-Simpson Жыл бұрын
@@youraverage90sguys7 I wouldn't say that's the point though. Some people look at that plus/minus to judge how great a player was. Some use it to see how good a bench is. The truth is that's a flawed but still worthwhile stat. You can take the exact same team and try to measure their stars plus/minus one season and then do the same next season with identical team but with the best bench player out. Season two will produce much better plus/minus difference for the star player but it doesn't mean he was any better than previous season -- his plus/minus numbers benefited from the weaker bench.
@kardel8850
@kardel8850 Жыл бұрын
5:04 that was a very smooth move by the GOAT
@hayseanward
@hayseanward 11 ай бұрын
Great video and thank you!
@erfansvideos
@erfansvideos Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis 👍
@mrhoopfan1
@mrhoopfan1 Жыл бұрын
Excellent!! I'd love to see a breakdown of Ben simmons last playoff series vs Hawks....he had a mental breakdown at the foul line and in being agressive in 4th quarter.......but intriguingly, he was never a negative plus-minus in any of their losses
@kennethch9549
@kennethch9549 Жыл бұрын
He was good as hell against us but he Strunk in the 4th quarter
АВДА КЕДАВРАААААА😂
00:11
Romanov BY
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
Қайрат Нұртас & ИРИНА КАЙРАТОВНА - Түн
03:41
RAKHMONOV ENTERTAINMENT
Рет қаралды 489 М.
How a basic play became nearly unstoppable
14:22
Thinking Basketball
Рет қаралды 951 М.
Why Steph Curry might be the best offensive player ever | Greatest Peaks Ep. 15
36:04
What They Won't Tell You In The Bulls Documentary
14:27
JxmyHighroller
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
Why is Jimmy Butler so good in the playoffs?
11:07
Thinking Basketball
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
How the NBA continues to make scoring easier
29:04
Thinking Basketball
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
7 NBA Legends Sharing SAVAGE Michael Jordan Stories
14:53
Nick Smith NBA
Рет қаралды 605 М.
Did LeBron James play the 3 greatest games ever in 2016?
13:46
Thinking Basketball
Рет қаралды 930 М.
#MicroSkills Michael Jordan | Episode 1: Mid-Range & Separation Moves
18:00
Pure Sweat Basketball
Рет қаралды 370 М.
Переплюнула Волочкову! 😂
0:15
Anabel Shpilka
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
When things don't go to plan 🥹 #athletics #sports #relays #japan
0:17
World Athletics
Рет қаралды 2,8 МЛН