The Jordan Rules

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The Jordan Rules Page 12

by Sam Smith


  “I was told that’s the way it worked with the Bulls,” said rookie agent Roger Kirschenbaum, who represented Levingston. “But Krause makes it so hard and gets you so mad you seem to forget.”

  Then Reinsdorf would move in with a seemingly generous offer and a deal would quickly be agreed upon. It would be the price Reinsdorf was going to give them in the first place, but they’d be so glad to be dealing with someone so reasonable that they’d take it.

  But Pippen had had it with Krause. There would be no talking with him, not even with Reinsdorf, this time. “Why bother?” he told Sexton. Sexton urged Pippen to go to camp, that he had to be there to get a deal done, that Reinsdorf wouldn’t deal any other way.

  Pippen was stubborn. “Let them see how many games they’ll win without me,” he said.

  Sexton, though, persuaded Pippen to call Reinsdorf and at least tell him he wasn’t coming.

  Reinsdorf was stunned. Pippen had to come to camp, he insisted. He was under contract. He’d be taken care of, but he had to be there. It was an obligation. This was a contract, for God’s sake. You live up to contracts. That’s the way it was.

  Pippen said it was a bad contract and he had no intention of honoring it. He said he’d think about it, and hung up.

  “The thing was,” said Pippen, “I really wanted to go to camp. I’d worked out all off-season and I wanted to show what I could do, not sit around.”

  Sexton persuaded Pippen that it was important to him to make the All-Star team again, that many had thought his previous appearance a fluke, especially after the migraine incident in the playoffs. Also, Nike had offered Pippen a shoe deal, and Sexton said a holdout might embarrass Nike and hurt Pippen’s endorsement opportunities.

  Finally, Pippen changed his mind. “I’m going to camp,” he told Sexton. “But they better do something quick.”

  The prime role of the exhibition season for the Bulls is to make money, which they do exceptionally well thanks to Jordan. And while Jordan hardly needed the playing time, Jackson often felt compelled to play him.

  “I know the people are here to see him and that we’re not only playing basketball, we’re in the entertainment business,” said Jackson. “They want Jordan.”

  To what extent was often beyond belief. In Vancouver, kids hung from the team bus like spiders trying to get a view of Jordan. In Seattle they threw firecrackers around the bus. Exhibition games are usually played in cities without NBA teams, so the security is often poor; the NBA cities and regular team hotels have learned how to deal with the Jordan phenomenon, but this year the Bulls went to Nashville and Iowa City, Vancouver and Chapel Hill, and capacity crowds watched the team everywhere, as opposed to the few thousand who attend most exhibition games.

  The Bulls played well, frighteningly so at times, running up 30- and 35-point leads in some games. “We’ve been solid, really overwhelming at times,” admitted Jackson, “although we won’t be that overpowering all season. The key for us will be to run the system and force everyone into recognition of that system, which will take time.” Yet Jackson would welcome a gradual ascent. He experimented repeatedly with different combinations, something that would continue throughout the season. He’d play the reserves as a unit, then try them with Jordan or Pippen or both; he’d squeeze the offense so that Jordan ended up in corners it was almost impossible to score from, and then Jackson would ask Jordan to do so. He’d challenge Grant with verbal attacks and encourage Pippen with soft praise. “This is a ball club that has to be extended all the time,” Jackson would tell the coaches. “We have to give them things to extend them and put them in negative situations so they learn to recover, not only in practice but in games. They’re going to have to figure out situations as a group all season and find something to hang their hat on.”

  Jordan remained a phenomenon of epic proportions. The Bulls attracted more than twenty-five thousand to the Kingdome in Seattle, and just as many in the new Sun Coast Dome in Saint Petersburg, where Reinsdorf had almost moved the White Sox. At the last minute a new stadium deal convinced him to stay in Chicago, but he appreciated Saint Petersburg’s interest and asked how he could repay the favor. Bring the Bulls to our new dome, he was told. So the Bulls were scheduled for the first basketball game in the new arena on October 18, facing Seattle, and it was the top story in all the local newspapers. Like most big stars, Jordan performs when the stage lights go up. No matter how he might feel or how routine the games seem, he always seems energized by the crowd and the demands placed on him. He knows the fans are rooting for the big breakway dunk or the slashing baseline jam or the reverse hanging lay-up.

  He also knows this style of play goes against Jackson’s best instincts about how the game should be played.

  “I almost wish sometimes that we could put in a play where Michael can dribble around like Marques Haynes and everyone would clear out and we could do a Globetrotter backdoor and jam the ball at the end of the twenty-four-second clock,” mused Jackson once. “Then we’d give them that one play where they could see him dribble and pass and slam. Maybe if we just asked the other team they’d lay down for one play and it would be all over and out of the way and we could get on with playing the game.”

  But Jordan wasn’t thinking that way in Saint Petersburg after an unusual 0-for-7 shooting half when his jumpers were bounding off the rim and his lay-ups were sliding away.

  The fans were growing restless. Jackson felt an obligation to leave Jordan on the court, playing him thirty-five minutes in a meaningless exhibition game, and Jordan felt an obligation to score. The first five times the Bulls had the ball in the second half he dribbled around, drove, and shot. His teammates stood around watching helplessly, hopelessly. They had seen it before and they knew they would not be seeing the ball much. The Bulls ended up losing the game down the stretch when Sedale Threatt hit several jumpers in a row.

  Bill Cartwright had attempted 3 shots to Jordan’s 18, even though Seattle had Olden Polynice and Michael Cage, both natural forwards, playing center.

  “I’ve got one fear,” said Cartwright later. “It’s that I’m going to play all this time in the league and come so close and never get a ring. I only want to win. He’s got so much talent and can do so much for this team, but I keep thinking he’s going to keep us all from it unless he changes.”

  November 1990

  11/2 v. Philadelphia; 11/3 at Washington; 11/6 v. Boston; 11/7 at Minnesota; 11/9 at Boston; 11/10 v. Charlotte; 11/13 at Utah; 11/15 at Golden State; 11/17 at Seattle; 11/18 at Portland; 11/21 at Phoenix; 11/23 at L.A. Clippers; 11/24 at Denver; 11/28 v. Washington; 11/30 v. Indiana

  IT DIDN’T TAKE LONG FOR THE BULLS TO DISCOVER THEY WEREN’T as good as they thought they’d be.

  Before the opening game against Philadelphia, Jordan sent a diamond ear stud over to Charles Barkley with Barkley’s number 34 on it, just like the number 23 Jordan was now wearing in his ear. Rick Mahorn had told Jordan that Barkley had seen a picture of Jordan with his ear stud during training camp and liked it, so Jordan picked one up for Barkley. “Maybe it will keep him from hitting me,” Jordan joked.

  Actually, the two had become good friends. After the 1989–90 season, Jordan played in a celebrity golf tournament in Philadelphia with Barkley caddying for him. “Charles is a nice guy, a fun guy to be with; he makes me laugh,” Jordan would explain about how Oliver Twist and the Artful Dodger had come together, how the league’s Goody Two-Shoes and Peck’s Bad Boy could coexist. “We’re friends,” added Barkley, “because most of the guys in this league are jerks and you wouldn’t want to spend any time with them.”

  As the season went on, the two would engage in a personal race for the league scoring title, and one would often call the other to taunt him about how many points behind he was. In December, Jordan would take over the scoring lead for the first time all season, after a slow start; he’d been playing by Jackson’s rules. But Perdue remembers Jordan sitting in the locker room before a game, sayi
ng that Barkley needed to score 45 that night to pass him. “No way he’ll do that,” Jordan said. But sure enough, Barkley did, and Jordan would go for a season-high 42 in his next game to keep pace.

  Jordan, like most players in the league, studied his statistics, for that was, in the end, how players were paid. Play as a team, they were told; but in negotiating sessions, statistics were always held up as the barometer of value. It was hard to find an NBA player who did not know his current statistics, and those of most of the players in the league. During the 1988–89 season, when Collins switched Jordan to point guard, he started picking up triple doubles, and it became something of a contest to see how many he could get and whether he could pass Magic Johnson, who usually led the league in that category. For several games, Jordan would check with the official scorer during the game to see how many more rebounds or assists he needed for another triple double; it only stopped when the league got word and ordered the scorer to refrain from giving out the information during the game. But Jordan has always kept his point totals in his head as he’s played: Late in the 1989–90 season, during a time-out in a close game, the overhead scoreboard in Chicago Stadium listed Jordan’s point total as 38. “Go tell them it’s got to be thirty-nine,” Jordan told trainer Mark Pfeil. “I know I shot an odd number of free throws, so it’s got to be an odd number.”

  Jordan liked Barkley’s brashness and respected his ability, which some said made him the most unstoppable player in the game, although their personalities were different. Jordan could be razor-sharp of tongue with an implicit, cutting message, like when he saw struggling rookie Stacey King walking into the locker room carrying a box: “I hope there’s a jump shot in there,” Jordan cracked. Or when then-reserve Charles Davis was sorting through tickets for friends and family when the team was playing a game in Atlanta: “They don’t need a ticket to watch you sitting on the bench. They can go to your house for that.”

  Barkley, who doesn’t own an unexpressed thought, rarely worries about whether outsiders hear his taunts. Everything about him is on public display, as in the 1990 playoffs, when he signaled with his thumb for coach Jim Lynam to yank Mike Gminski during a game. He’s annually the most fined player in the league, once saying he’d considered donating his annual total to the homeless, “but then they’d have better homes than I do.” In the 1989–90 season, he and New York’s Mark Jackson were fined for saying they had bet on which of them would make the winning shot in a close Knicks-76ers game. Barkley would be called in by the commissioner for a slap on the wrist and lecture, only to say, when asked if he were going to be fined, “Wanna bet?”

  Barkley angered women’s groups for saying, after a loss, that it was the kind of game after which you go home and beat your wife. “Screw the women’s groups,” he said when asked if he’d actually like to see that in print. He slammed New York: “It’s my kind of town … because I’ve got a gun.” He said of Larry Bird, “As long as he’s around, I’ll only be the second-worst defensive player in basketball.” He talks throughout games to anyone who’ll listen, and he once told lead referee Tommy Nunez to make a call because “you know Moe and Larry won’t.”

  “Charles says what’s on his mind,” says Jordan. “I like him because it’s like I’m the good brother and he’s the bad brother. He says a lot of good things the good brother wants to say, but doesn’t. And I like that. I know I’m always laughing when we’re together.”

  But Barkley’s play is no joke, and despite his developing friendship with Jordan, Barkley said he was going to show all the preseason prognosticators that the Eastern Conference race wasn’t just between Detroit and Chicago. In the season opener in Chicago, he went out and outscored Jordan 37–34 and added 10 rebounds as the 76ers won rather easily, 124–116, after building a 19-point halftime lead.

  The Bulls went into Washington the next night to play a Bullets team they’d defeated easily in the preseason. With Chicago trailing by 1, Jordan had a last-second shot attempt blocked, and the Bulls were now 0–2.

  The Bulls had come to expect last-second heroics from Jordan. After all, who could forget that stunning fifth and final game of the 1989 opening-round playoff series in Cleveland? With Jordan promising a victory and Collins fearing for his job, there were half a dozen lead changes in the fourth quarter when Cleveland ran a brilliant screen play from Larry Nance to Craig Ehlo and scored to take a 1-point lead with three seconds left.

  Collins called time-out, gathered everyone in a tight circle, and began to draw a play for Dave Corzine. “Everyone started to look around,” recalled backup forward Jack Haley, who would call the moment the most thrilling of his life. “Doug could see everyone sort of frowning, and he started to explain that they wouldn’t be expecting Corzine to get the ball. Michael just slammed his fist down on the clipboard and said, ‘Give me the fuckin’ ball.’

  “Doug looked at him, drew up the play Jordan wanted, and he hit that amazing hanging jumper to win the game. Now that’s what I call taking charge,” said Haley, who would later go to the Nets.

  Taking charge: It was what Jordan was there for. But Jackson had been drilling his team—including Jordan—about moving the ball and hitting the open man. And on the final, decisive play in the Washington game, no one was near Craig Hodges in his favorite spot in the comer, yet four Bullets jumped at Jordan and blocked his shot. It happens, but some began to wonder when it happened again the next game: Boston squeezed out a 110–108 victory in Chicago when Jordan missed an eighteen-foot jumper with about twenty seconds left, and then Brian Shaw, whom Jordan was supposed to be guarding, rebounded a missed Robert Parish jumper over Jordan and put the ball in at the buzzer to win the game.

  A week before at the Bulls’ kickoff luncheon, player after player had talked about winning a title; management was saying this was the year, national publications were picking the Bulls as one of four or five teams with the best chance to win a championship.

  The Bulls were 0–3.

  After this start, Jordan told reporters he’d talked it over and decided to become more assertive on offense. And just whom had he talked that over with? “I talked it over with myself,” Jordan explained.

  The Bulls ended the first nine days of the season 3–3, but two of those wins were over expansion teams—Minnesota and Charlotte—and some were worried. But not Jackson. He’s a patient man, well suited for coaching the modem athlete. From his experience in the game he can relate to players, particularly big men, which is rare for a coach. Many eventually fail because they lose the respect of the bigger players, who doubt that a smaller man who never played the game can understand what they do. It’s one reason Golden State’s Don Nelson remains so successful But Jackson is successful for another reason: He refuses to blame his players for the team’s failures, which is something that eventually doomed Collins. “It would be either that he won or we lost,” recalls Will Perdue. “It was always ‘The coaching staff did all they could.’ It was ‘you guys’ who let down when we lost, and then when we won it was ‘What a great job of preparation the coaches did and how hard they worked watching those films.’”

  Collins had been a great player, a three-time All-Star with the Philadelphia 76ers, because of his hustle, enthusiasm, and impassioned, almost insane desire. His own personal demons drove him to be a standout while also keeping him on a highly emotional edge. But that same intensity eventually took him down as a coach.

  When Stan Albeck was fired in 1986, Krause felt that Collins, then an analyst for televised NBA games, would relate better to the current generation of players because he had been one so recently.

  “You mean the TV guy?” said Reinsdorf incredulously. “As our coach?”

  But Krause was adamant, and he was right—at first. Collins was enthusiastic and let Jordan loose to average 37 points per game. But as time passed and the Bulls failed to join the NBA’s elite, Collins became desperately controlling, calling every play and privately blaming Jordan for his inability to ge
t the team to play a fast-breaking transition offense.

  And in 1988 when the team traded for Cartwright and drafted center Will Perdue from Vanderbilt and Krause proclaimed the team set at center for the 1990s, Collins found himself under great pressure to develop a low-post game at a time when he didn’t know how, never having studied the position or played it. In the 1988 exhibition season, by which time the team was fully expected to win—they had crashed the fifty-win barrier, they had Jordan, and they now had the center everyone always said the team lacked—Collins was near a breakdown, strung tighter than piano wire. He was breaking out in a rash that the players noticed whenever he was nervous, he wasn’t sleeping or eating much, and his permed Little Orphan Annie hair sat on top of an ever-shrinking face that was a mask of rage one day, tears the next.

  Once at a charity exhibition, Jordan sat with players from around the league, swapping stories, when the subject turned to coaches. Everyone had something to add, from Dominique Wilkins telling about Mike Fratello’s demonic rages to Isiah Thomas telling about his willful exchanges with Chuck Daly. So everyone had a good laugh, but there was silence after Jordan said, “You may think you’ve got problems with your coaches, but, well, mine cries every day.”

  Finally, Krause and Collins became bitter enemies, with Krause compiling indiscretions by Collins, and Collins calling Reinsdorf and demanding Krause be sent home from a road trip or remain out of the locker room. Collins’s mania had become too draining on everyone around. He had to go.

  Jackson was never predictable, though in a different way than Collins; he still mystified his players, although they liked and respected him. He was a guy who could wear his hat sideways during practice, but then confront them in the harshest terms about their play. To some, Jackson was a master of psychology, using a variety of ploys to produce results. “I think it’s important to do anything you can to make them play hard,” he’d say.

 

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