Michael Jordan

Michael Jordan

Michael Jordan



About Michael Jordan

  • Michael Jordan, who is regarded by many as the best player in NBA history, won six championships while playing for the Chicago Bulls.
  • Throughout his career, he has received a total salary of $90 million; however, he has also received $2.4 billion (pre-tax) from corporate partners like Gatorade, Nike, and Hanes.
  • In September 2020, Michael J. joined the sports betting company DraftKings as an investor and special advisor to the board.
  • In late 2020, he also acquired a co-ownership in a NASCAR team.
  • In 2023, Jordan sold the majority of his Charlotte Hornets ownership, bringing the NBA team's valuation to $3 billion.
Michael Jordan




Personal Stats
Age
60
Source of Wealth
Charlotte Hornets, endorsements, Self Made
Self-Made Score
8
Philanthropy Score
1
Residence
Jupiter, Florida
Citizenship
United States
Marital Status
Married
Children
5
Education
Bachelor of Arts/Science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill


Michael Jordan Age

                                 60 Year
Jordan was born and raised in Wilmington, North Carolina, and enrolled at UNC-Chapel Hill in 1981. He scored the game-winning basket in the 1982 national championship game against Georgetown while still a freshman. Jordan left North Carolina after his junior year, having won College Player of the Year in both his sophomore and junior years. In 1984 in Los Angeles and in 1992 in Barcelona, Spain, he guided the U.S. basketball team to Olympic gold medals.



The Chicago Bulls drafted Jordan in 1984. After missing the majority of the next season due to a broken foot, he returned to lead the NBA in scoring for seven straight seasons, averaging almost 33 points per game. He led the league in scoring in his first season (1984–1985) and won first of the Year. After Wilt Chamberlain, he was the first player to reach 3,000 points in a single season (1986–87). 


In addition to winning Defensive Player of the Year in 1988, Jordan was awarded the NBA's Most Valuable Player (MVP) five times (1988, 1991, 1992, 1996, and 1998). After guiding the Bulls to their third straight title in October 1993, Jordan took a temporary hiatus to explore a career in professional baseball. In March 1995, he started playing hoops again. Jordan led the Bulls to the greatest regular season record in NBA history in 1995–96, which was surpassed by the Golden State Warriors in 2015–16. The Jordan-led Bulls won three titles in a row from 1996 to 1998, and Jordan was voted the NBA Finals MVP each time. Jordan once more retired following the 1997–98 campaign.


Jordan kept his connection to basketball strong, investing in a portion of the Washington Wizards in January 2000. In addition, he was appointed president of basketball operations for the team. Jordan, however, felt that roster management and wage caps were insufficient, and in September 2001 he gave up his ownership and managerial responsibilities with the Wizards in order to play for the team. After his 1998 retirement, the NBA had seen a decline in both attendance and broadcast ratings. However, the league welcomed him back with open arms on his second visit. Following the 2002–03 campaign, Jordan declared his ultimate retirement. 



His career finished with 32,292 points overall, the greatest point average in league history (30.12 points per game), and the second-most steals (2,514). Jordan joined the NBA's Charlotte Bobcats in 2006 as general manager and a minority owner (now known as the Charlotte Hornets). In 2010, he acquired a majority stake in the squad, making history as the first ex-NBA player to possess a full stake in a league franchise.


Jordan was a guard who stood 6 feet 6 inches (1.98 meters) tall and was a fierce defender in addition to being an incredibly gifted shooter and passer. Because of his incredible jumping prowess and acrobatic skills, he was dubbed "Air Jordan," and his fame reached heights that not many athletes—or celebrities in general—have experienced. Through sponsorships, he amassed millions of dollars, most famously for his Air Jordan basketball sneakers. In the popular movie Space Jam (1996), he costarred alongside Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny, two animated characters. He was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2009 after being selected by the NBA in 1996 as one of the 50 best players of all time. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016.




The Washington Wizards are a Washington, D.C.-based American professional basketball club. During the 1970s, the Wizards, who were once known as the Washington Bullets, advanced to four NBA finals and took home the NBA title during the 1977–1978 campaign.



Originally established as the Chicago Packers in 1961, the team changed its name to the Bullets in 1963 after moving to Baltimore, Maryland. They played as the Capital Bullets for a season in 1973 after relocating to Landover, Maryland. In 1974, they changed their name to the Washington Bullets, a moniker they had until 1995, when owner Abe Pollin rebranded the club as the Washington Wizards due to the term bullet's suggestive connotations.



In 1964–65, the Bullets made their first-ever trip to the NBA playoffs. However, it wasn't until the 1970s when players who would go on to become Hall of Famers, like Earl Monroe, Gus Johnson, Wes Unseld, and Elvin Hayes, elevated the team to the status of perennial challengers for the NBA title. During that decade, the Bullets qualified for the playoffs every year and finished first in their division six times. The 1977–78 season saw them capture their sole NBA championship. The 1977–78 Bullets squad had an unspectacular 44 wins and 38 defeats at the end of the NBA regular season, but they shocked three teams in a row in the playoffs to win Washington’s first professional sports title in thirty-six years.



Although they frequently qualified for the playoffs until the middle of the 1980s, the Bullets teams of the next decades were less successful. These teams included forward Bernard King, guard Jeff Malone, and center Moses Malone. Yet, Washington only made it to the postseason once between the 1988–89 and 2003–04 seasons.



The Wizards made the playoffs in the middle of the decade thanks to the play of All-Stars Gilbert Arenas, Antawn Jamison, and Caron Butler, but they finished last season in the bottom half of the league and had to trade most of their star players. In 2000, retired NBA superstar Michael Jordan became a minority owner and president of basketball operations of the team. The following year, he came out of retirement to play for the Wizards, but he was relatively ineffective in his return to the court and retired permanently in 2003. Afterwards, citing Jordan's poor management decisions, Pollin shocked fans and commentators by refusing to keep Jordan as team president.



In the 2013–14 campaign, the Wizards returned to the postseason thanks to the brilliance of exceptional rookie point guard John Wall. Wall guided the Wizards to their first division title in 38 years in 2016–17. However, their season came to an end in the conference semifinals after a tough seven-game series loss. The next year, an injury-plagued Wizards squad made it back to the postseason, but they were eliminated in the opening round. During the 2018–19 season, Wall sustained a torn Achilles tendon; as a result, Washington won just 32 games and missed the playoffs.



The National Basketball Association (NBA) is home to the Chicago Bulls, an American professional basketball franchise. The former shooting guard Michael Jordan, who helped the Bulls win six NBA titles (1991–1993, 1996–1998) and is widely considered the best basketball player of all time, is most likely the person most associated with the franchise.



With 33 wins and 48 losses, the club had the greatest record ever for an NBA expansion team when it was founded in 1966. Under the leadership of notable players Bob Love, Chet Walker, Jerry Sloan, and Norm Van Lier, the Bulls made it to the play-offs each year between 1969–70 and 1974–75, although they only made it past the opening round twice. The Bulls fell into mediocrity and had losing seasons for the bulk of the late 1970s and early 1980s when the great quartet left the team. 



Jordan was selected by Chicago with the third overall pick in the 1984 NBA Draft, and the squad started its rise to prominence. In 1984–85, Jordan earned the NBA Rookie of the Year title and guided Chicago to their first of 14 straight play-off berths. Jordan's excellent individual play did not, however, transfer into postseason success for his team right away; in each of his first three seasons, the Bulls were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs.



The addition of forward Scottie Pippen to Chicago in 1987 significantly raised the caliber of the young squad and nicely matched Jordan's abilities. The Bulls reached the Eastern Conference finals in 1989, but the Detroit Pistons removed them from the playoffs for the second year in a row. After the season, Phil Jackson took over as head coach of the Bulls in lieu of Doug Collins. The "triangle offense," a playmaking style based on precise player spacing and movement without the ball, was implemented by Jackson and assistant coach Tex Winter to deter rival defensive players from double-teaming Jordan.



Jordan, Pippen, and a group of important supporting players—such as tenacious big Horace Grant, seasoned center Bill Cartwright, and three-point shooting expert John Paxson—helped the Pistons extend the 1990 Eastern Conference finals to a seventh game after implementing the new strategy. The next season, the Bulls finally conquered their tenacious opponents, sweeping Detroit in four games to secure a trip to the 1991 NBA Finals, where they defeated the Los Angeles Lakers to capture their first championship. The Bulls were the first NBA team to win three straight championships since the Boston Celtics won eight straight from 1959 to 1966. They were champions again in 1992 and 1993.



Jordan announced his retirement prior to the 1993–94 season, claiming a desire to pursue a career in professional baseball instead than basketball. The Bulls underperformed without him, losing in the 1994 play-offs second round. Jordan joined the squad again in March 1995, but his tardy arrival did not save the Bulls from losing the postseason early again. 


In the 1995 offseason, the team signed controversial and flamboyant star rebounder Dennis Rodman. The Bulls were revitalized and dominated the league the following year, setting an NBA record with 72 wins and just 10 losses (which was surpassed by the Golden State Warriors in 2015–16) with the aid of outstanding supporting players like Steve Kerr. In the 1996 NBA Finals, the Bulls defeated the Seattle Supersonics to cap off their incredible run. In 1997 and 1998, Chicago made it back to the NBA Finals, where the Bulls triumphed against the Utah Jazz to win the championship each time.



Jackson led the club to six titles in eight years, but he was dissatisfied with the team's administration, particularly general manager Jerry Krause, who was given a lot of credit for the Bulls' success. As a result, Jackson elected to leave Chicago following the 1997–98 season. Pippen's request to be traded to a different club, Jordan's second retirement, and Rodman's choice to join with the Lakers were all influenced by his departure. The following four seasons, the suddenly talent-depleted Bulls ended with the lowest record in the Eastern Conference without Jackson and their three best players.


After a gradual rebuilding process that started in the 2004–05 season, Chicago made it back to the playoffs three times in a row. The Bulls won the NBA title in both the 2010–11 and 2011–12 regular seasons thanks to the play of star point guard Derrick Rose. However, in the former season, the team lost in the Eastern Conference finals and in the latter, the eighth-seeded Philadelphia 76ers upset the Bulls after Rose sustained a serious knee injury late in the first game of the series.


Despite Rose missing the whole 2013–14 season and all but 10 games due to a further injury, the Bulls persevered and made it to the playoffs both seasons without their best player. During the 2014–15 season, Rose played in about a third of the team's games. The Bulls advanced to the postseason once more but were eliminated in the second round. In an attempt to stop the Bulls' dwindling returns on the court, the organization changed coaches during the next off-season. However, Chicago concluded 2015–16 with a 42–40 record, ending its seven-year run of play-off qualifying.


The franchise let Rose go in free agency the next off-season and brought in hometown hero Dwyane Wade to partner with rising star Jimmy Butler. The Bulls were defeated in the first round of the playoffs in 2016–17, but that combination propelled them back. After parting ways with Wade and Butler in the off-season that followed, the Bulls lost 14 games and began a rebuilding process in 2017–18.





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