Retired
NBA legend Michael Jordan has warned that the “superteam” era will
create a league with 28 “garbage” clubs that will struggle. Jordan, who
sparked the Chicago Bulls to six NBA titles in the 1990s, addressed the
topic in an interview with Cigar Aficionado magazine unveiled on
Thursday on its website.
He also talked about his pal Tiger Woods, a
14-time major champion golfer struggling to return after multiple back
operations, and said he himself might not have “survived in this Twitter
time.”
Jordan’s toughest talk was on the state of the NBA, where
several teams have stockpiled talent to try and dethrone the reigning
champion Golden State Warriors, who last season united stars Kevin
Durant and Stephen Curry to form a dominant squad that claimed a second
title in three seasons.
In the past few months, the Cleveland
Cavaliers, Houston Rockets and Oklahoma City Thunder have added star
talent to their rosters. “I think it’s going to hurt the overall aspect
of the league from a competitive standpoint,” Jordan told the magazine.
“You’re
going to have one or two teams that are going to be great and another
28 teams that are going to be garbage, or they are going to have a tough
time surviving in the business environment.”
Jordan, 54, also said
he lacks the patience to be a coach, saying his biggest problem is the
focus level of today’s players. “For me to ask an individual to focus on
the game the way I played would, in some ways, be unfair and if he
didn’t do it, there’s no telling where my emotions would be,” Jordan
said.
Regarding Woods, whose major total ranks second to the 18 won
by Jack Nicklaus, Jordan said the injured star is in a transitional
phase perhaps made more difficult by today’s social media. “I don’t know
if I could have survived in this Twitter time where you don’t have the
privacy that you would want.”
Jordan would not be drawn into a
comparison of Woods and Nicklaus in the Greatest of All Time debate.
“That’s more for stories and hype,” Jordan said.
“Jack and Tiger
never played against each other. They never played with the same
equipment. I never played against Wilt Chamberlain. I never played
against Jerry West. To now say that one is greater than the other is
being a little bit unfair.
“How much did each one impact, change or
evolve the game? Obviously Jack won more during the time he played.
Tiger evolved it to where it crossed a lot of different boundaries,
where it’s not just a white guy’s sport — black guys, African-Americans,
all minorities play the game. He played it at a level to where it
generated so much interest financially that it grew the game from a
financial standpoint. Now does that constitute him being the greatest?
To say he’s any less than Jack, I think, is unfair.”
Jordan moved the
Nicklaus-Woods win argument to the NBA level, comparing his title total
to the record 11 won by former Boston Celtics legend Bill Russell.
“Yeah, Jack has got 18 majors and Tiger has got 14. And that’s how
people are judging certain things,” Jordan said. “I won 6 championships.
Bill Russell won 11. Does that make Bill Russell better than me? Make
me better than him? No because when you try to compare different eras
and equate who is better than the other, it’s an unfair parallel, an
unfair choice.”
Jordan also praised Northern Ireland star Rory
McIlroy, saying he admires him but has yet to play a round with him.
“Very talented. Never played golf with him yet,” Jordan said. “We’ve
talked. I’m a big fan. For someone that small to generate that much
power is truly amazing.”
NBA hall of famer Michael Jordan.