Statistical Cheating Machine - featuring Michael Jordan

3,286 Views | 19 Replies | Last: 5 mo ago by 01Bear
concordtom
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This is a long read, but for basketball fans with an eye on history and The Greats, I think you'll find it worth your time.

Cut to the chase: The story explains how Chicago Bulls had a longtime home games statistician who regularly padded Michael Jordan's steals and blocks numbers to absurd levels. This helped Jordan win the DPOY award in 88, his reputation as a supreme defender, and to this day elevates him in many minds as the GOAT. Maybe he is all those things, but the stats are grotesquely inaccurate.

Knowing the kind of guy Michael is/was, could it have gone so far as to even pay the stats man?
Anything is possible. Where's the story about how he set teammates up to win bets?

https://sports.yahoo.com/a-closer-look-at-michael-jordans-1988-dpoy-award-raises-questions-about-its-validity-has-lebron-james-been-chasing-a-ghost-140452567.html
concordtom
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concordtom
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Michael Jordan once demanded $17,000 from Jack Haley for losing a game of cards.
Jack Haley was drafted by the Bulls in 1987 and played alongside Jordan during the 1988-89 season. That is when he once gambled with Jordan and lost $17,000 in a game of cards.



Former Bulls coach Johnny Bach revealed the incident of Haley losing $17,000 to Jordan in a card game. In Sam Smith's 2014 book 'There Is No Next', Bach shared the incident of Jordan asking for payment. Haley, however, didn't have the money to pay him.

Johnny Bach said: "Michael said, 'Well, then you get it. You call Daddy Warbucks now.' Daddy owns a restaurant. Daddy had to meet him next morning and give him cash. Michael said, 'Don't f***ing play with me, Jack, if you can't pay off. I don't want your money, but you lost and Daddy has to come with that money in cash.' You better take Michael seriously."


Swell Guy!
bearsandgiants
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concordtom said:

Michael Jordan once demanded $17,000 from Jack Haley for losing a game of cards.
Jack Haley was drafted by the Bulls in 1987 and played alongside Jordan during the 1988-89 season. That is when he once gambled with Jordan and lost $17,000 in a game of cards.



Former Bulls coach Johnny Bach revealed the incident of Haley losing $17,000 to Jordan in a card game. In Sam Smith's 2014 book 'There Is No Next', Bach shared the incident of Jordan asking for payment. Haley, however, didn't have the money to pay him.

Johnny Bach said: "Michael said, 'Well, then you get it. You call Daddy Warbucks now.' Daddy owns a restaurant. Daddy had to meet him next morning and give him cash. Michael said, 'Don't f***ing play with me, Jack, if you can't pay off. I don't want your money, but you lost and Daddy has to come with that money in cash.' You better take Michael seriously."


Swell Guy!


I hate MJ but have no problem with him bullying someone who played with 17k he didn't have.
Big C
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Jack Haley had it coming...
Beardog26
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Correct. MJ probably was an *******, but he was 6-0 in NBA Finals … and the two years he wasn't with the Bulls (likely due to excessive gambling), the Bulls didn't make the NBA Finals.

Then he came back to win three more titles. Seems like a strong correlation to me.
concordtom
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Beardog26 said:

Correct. MJ probably was an *******, but he was 6-0 in NBA Finals … and the two years he wasn't with the Bulls (likely due to excessive gambling), the Bulls didn't make the NBA Finals.

Then he came back to win three more titles. Seems like a strong correlation to me.


Read the article.
It's about his DPOY award and the bogus stats that supported it.
I watched Jordan in his prime as much as anyone here.
Beardog26
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I don't wish to read an article that is long (as you note yourself) about a guy that I watched a lot for a good many years, in college, the NBA and the Olympics. Though Jordan was likely somewhat of a jerk personally, he dominated the game during most of the 1990s and was the single greatest player in a team sport (Gretzky and Montana were close) that I personally observed.

I'll leave it at that and just stop posting now in this thread.
01Bear
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Beardog26 said:

I don't wish to read an article that is long (as you note yourself) about a guy that I watched a lot for a good many years, in college, the NBA and the Olympics. Though Jordan was likely somewhat of a jerk personally, he dominated the game during most of the 1990s and was the single greatest player in a team sport (Gretzky and Montana were close) that I personally observed.

I'll leave it at that and just stop posting now in this thread.


Two things can be true at the same time. MJ could've been one* of the greatest to play basketball but he also could've benefited from homecourt bias i his 1988 DPOY season.

*My GOAT is still Magic Johnson. The guy played all the positions and made passing cool (and made playing basketball fun). Not to mention he co-led his team to a NBA Finals championship in his rookie season. Also, there's the little fact that he (along with Larry Bird) made basketball must see TV for the rest of the country. (Prior to Magic and Larry's matriculation to the NBA, the Finals were shown on tape delay.) It's not a stretch to suggest that Magic and Larry saved the NBA.
Beardog26
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I agree across the board. They are not mutually exclusive. Magic was also my favorite, though I still think MJ is my GOAT.
BeachedBear
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Beardog26 said:

I agree across the board. They are not mutually exclusive. Magic was also my favorite, though I still think MJ is my GOAT.
Magic looked like he was always having fun! I can say the same for Steph Curry, but am challenged to think of another top level player that demonstrated the level of joy. MJ, Bird, LeBron, Kareem, Russell, Chamberlain all looked like they were working very hard (which I truly respect). But I enjoy(ed) watching Magic and Steph play.

The Cal player that comes closest to that for me is Leon Powe.
concordtom
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Beardog26 said:

I don't wish to read an article that is long (as you note yourself) about a guy that I watched a lot for a good many years, in college, the NBA and the Olympics. Though Jordan was likely somewhat of a jerk personally, he dominated the game during most of the 1990s and was the single greatest player in a team sport (Gretzky and Montana were close) that I personally observed.

I'll leave it at that and just stop posting now in this thread.


Agree about Jordan's greatness. I guess it was just eye opening, for those of us who worshipped it, to learn how not all of it was exactly as it seemed.
concordtom
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01Bear said:

Beardog26 said:

I don't wish to read an article that is long (as you note yourself) about a guy that I watched a lot for a good many years, in college, the NBA and the Olympics. Though Jordan was likely somewhat of a jerk personally, he dominated the game during most of the 1990s and was the single greatest player in a team sport (Gretzky and Montana were close) that I personally observed.

I'll leave it at that and just stop posting now in this thread.


Two things can be true at the same time. MJ could've been one* of the greatest to play basketball but he also could've benefited from homecourt bias i his 1988 DPOY season.

*My GOAT is still Magic Johnson. The guy played all the positions and made passing cool (and made playing basketball fun). Not to mention he co-led his team to a NBA Finals championship in his rookie season. Also, there's the little fact that he (along with Larry Bird) made basketball must see TV for the rest of the country. (Prior to Magic and Larry's matriculation to the NBA, the Finals were shown on tape delay.) It's not a stretch to suggest that Magic and Larry saved the NBA.


Saved? Or vastly improved?
I don't think teams were going bankrupt, were they?


Magic Johnson did not have a great outside shot. And I'm not even talking about today's long ball. So, he could not play SG. Also, he wasn't the greatest defender, either.

I do enjoy the debates on hoops goats.

Since we've now gone there… how would my favorite, KAJ, fit in today's league? Cause I don't see him defending outside the paint, or setting up anywhere not called low block or high post, either.

For today's NBA, I lean toward Olajuwon.
01Bear
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concordtom said:

01Bear said:

Beardog26 said:

I don't wish to read an article that is long (as you note yourself) about a guy that I watched a lot for a good many years, in college, the NBA and the Olympics. Though Jordan was likely somewhat of a jerk personally, he dominated the game during most of the 1990s and was the single greatest player in a team sport (Gretzky and Montana were close) that I personally observed.

I'll leave it at that and just stop posting now in this thread.


Two things can be true at the same time. MJ could've been one* of the greatest to play basketball but he also could've benefited from homecourt bias i his 1988 DPOY season.

*My GOAT is still Magic Johnson. The guy played all the positions and made passing cool (and made playing basketball fun). Not to mention he co-led his team to a NBA Finals championship in his rookie season. Also, there's the little fact that he (along with Larry Bird) made basketball must see TV for the rest of the country. (Prior to Magic and Larry's matriculation to the NBA, the Finals were shown on tape delay.) It's not a stretch to suggest that Magic and Larry saved the NBA.


Saved? Or vastly improved?
I don't think teams were going bankrupt, were they?


Magic Johnson did not have a great outside shot. And I'm not even talking about today's long ball. So, he could not play SG. Also, he wasn't the greatest defender, either.

I do enjoy the debates on hoops goats.

Since we've now gone there… how would my favorite, KAJ, fit in today's league? Cause I don't see him defending outside the paint, or setting up anywhere not called low block or high post, either.

For today's NBA, I lean toward Olajuwon.

Magic and Larry saved the NBA. Before the joined, the NBA was sliding into irrelevance. Heck, Jack Kent Cooke lost the Lakers and the LA Kings to Dr. Jerry Buss in a card game. The teams had that little value back then. Keep in mind, just two years before they joined the NBA, Rudy Tomjanovich got knocked out by Kermit Washington in a game and there were minimal repercussions. In fact, the NBA was so irrelevant that few people even knew about the event!

The 1979 NCAA Tournament Championship game drew the highest ratings in Tournament history (though, I don't know if that's been surpassed). Its ratings dwarfed those of the NBA Championship. When Magic and Larry joined the Lakers and Boston, respectively, it helped the NBA to tap into a storyline with which college fans were already familiar. The two teams played differently and appealed to different fanbases (and here, racism did play a role, as even black Bostonians rooted for the Lakers because of the racism still rampant in Boston*).

Having the two brightest college stars play for two of the most storied NBA franchises on opposite coasts really allowed the rivalry storyline to play out. This rivalry made the NBA relevant and grew the financial strength of the league. In the 90s, Michael Jordan then took the "NBA superstar" to new heights. But even in the 80s, Magic and Larry were international icons. Their popularity turned the NBA from an "also ran" sports league on its last legs into a worldwide entertainment vehicle.

As for Kareem, he'd easily dominate in this era. His jump hook would still be unblockable. A prime Kareem was a phenomenal athlete; he'd have no problem stepping in front of smaller wing players on the pick and roll. The only question I'd have about Kareem's game would be whether he would shoot threes. If he grew up with today's training and emphasis on threes, I have no doubt he'd be proficient from behind the arc. Regardless, anyone who was essentially a guaranteed bucket in the paint would always be able to play in the NBA.

As for Magic, I agree his defense wasn't the greatest. But his defense would be comparable to how most of today's superstars play defense. Because today's defense allows for zone defenses, his defensive lapses would be less apparent and could be covered up by a good defensive scheme (especially if he had another DPOY, like Michael Cooper, in the backcourt with him).

On offense, Magic would embarrass today's defenders on a regular basis with his no-look passes, bounce passes between legs, behind-the-back passes, misdirection passes, and full court outlet passes for an easy layup. He may not be a great three point shooter, but he'd still be able to back down smaller defenders in the paint and score over them. If a bigger defender is on him, he'd either spin around the defender and dish it to a cutting teammate or throw in some shoulder fakes before going up a with hook shot for an easy two. That was his bread and butter back in the 80s.

Larry Bird would feast on today's players with the pro-offense rules. He would destroy defenders and leave them out to dry or get fouled and sink his free throws. A prine Larry average about 35 points (or more) in today's league.

While Larry wasn't that quick, he was always one of the smartest guys on the court. He knew where his open man (or men) were and he knew how to get his shot off, even in the face of tight defense. He would give master classes on clutch shots to today's players.

Because of his smarts, he's also be able to jump today's plays just as easily as (if not easier than) he did in the 80s. He would also play a more ball denial defense than wait to set up once the offensive player has the ball. Mainly, he'd get in the passing lanes and prevent his guy from getting the ball easily.

*Jackie MacMullan's When the Game Was Ours discusses this briefly.
calumnus
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BeachedBear said:

Beardog26 said:

I agree across the board. They are not mutually exclusive. Magic was also my favorite, though I still think MJ is my GOAT.
Magic looked like he was always having fun! I can say the same for Steph Curry, but am challenged to think of another top level player that demonstrated the level of joy. MJ, Bird, LeBron, Kareem, Russell, Chamberlain all looked like they were working very hard (which I truly respect). But I enjoy(ed) watching Magic and Steph play.

The Cal player that comes closest to that for me is Leon Powe.


Yes, plus Sean Lampley and Jamal Boykin
calumnus
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After Cal, I was a Laker season ticket holder in 85, 86 and 87. At the time my dad asked me "Who is the best NBA player, Magic Johnson or Larry Bird?" My answer: "Michael Jordan."

I don't care about Jordan's DPOY award. He is the GOAT. I've never seen a player more dominant with the ball in his hands and the game on the line. His shooting percentage was good, but it felt like it was 100% with the game on the line.

I love Magic, but Lakers were STACKED. At one point they had 5 players on the roster who were the #1 player taken in their respective drafts. Kareem is still the all-time NBA record holder in FGs made, with 1,000 more than second place LeBron.

Jordan's teammates were good, but overrated. Scottie Pippen the best of them, but Id take James Worthy. Jordan was a force. He repeatedly willed his team to victory.
concordtom
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No doubt.
I always place Jordan #1 GOAT.
The DPOY fraud article was compelling, though.
concordtom
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So, since you have a lot of good opinions, I'd be glad to invite you to the regular game of

NAME YOUR TOP 8-MAN ROTATION which can beat any other 8 man rotation in a competition using today's rules. You could meet a bruising team, or a run and gun team - you have to build your roster to have the best chance to face any other style.

Like, I get that no one collection of players (which defines their style) is guaranteed to beat all comers with other styles, but if you entered all the different possible 8-man groupings and put them in a march madness tournament, which team is going to win it all. That's the (eternal) challenge in my mind.

For me, my ideal team has had to shift more and more to a 3 point shooting squad - as results of the last 10 year have shown that as a winning style. Therefore, players need to shoot and defend from the perimeter - otherwise, modern coaching will beat them. Defense is always underrated. Not on my team.
01Bear
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concordtom said:

So, since you have a lot of good opinions, I'd be glad to invite you to the regular game of

NAME YOUR TOP 8-MAN ROTATION which can beat any other 8 man rotation in a competition using today's rules. You could meet a bruising team, or a run and gun team - you have to build your roster to have the best chance to face any other style.

Like, I get that no one collection of players (which defines their style) is guaranteed to beat all comers with other styles, but if you entered all the different possible 8-man groupings and put them in a march madness tournament, which team is going to win it all. That's the (eternal) challenge in my mind.

For me, my ideal team has had to shift more and more to a 3 point shooting squad - as results of the last 10 year have shown that as a winning style. Therefore, players need to shoot and defend from the perimeter - otherwise, modern coaching will beat them. Defense is always underrated. Not on my team.

1) Magic
2) MJ
3) Larry
4) Lebron
5) Kareem
Off the bench:
Kobe
Steph
Shaq

If I get a ninth, it's be Pippen. If they were playing under the 80s/90s rules, Steph would be replaced by Pip. My tenth would either be the Dream for defense.

Although 3 point shooting is now at a premium, if Magic and Larry are allowed to push the pace of the game, they'll be scoring within seconds of grabbing a rebound. Their open court game will decimate teams that need to rely on threes. Also, given modern training regimens, I can all but guarantee Larry, Kobe, and MJ would get their 3 point percentages up to about 40%.

I put a premium in the killer instinct, which is missing in guys like KD. TBH, I'm not sure Lebron has it, either. But if he's on a team with Magic, MJ, Larry, and Kareem, he can be the fifth option and focus on defense and hitting spot up threes.

I don't know about others, but I loved watching Scottie play. I liked how he made even difficult plays look easy. He was arguably the best wing defender of his era, but could also create his own shot, catch and shoot, or set a screen on a screen and roll. I actually think Scottie's game was underrated. Without Scottie, Jordan never won a ring. When Jordan stepped away to play baseball, Scottie led the Jordan-less Bulls (a team that had been built around MJ) on deep playoff runs. Scottie was probably my favorite non-Bear, non-Laker in the NBA.
01Bear
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calumnus said:

After Cal, I was a Laker season ticket holder in 85, 86 and 87. At the time my dad asked me "Who is the best NBA player, Magic Johnson or Larry Bird?" My answer: "Michael Jordan."

I don't care about Jordan's DPOY award. He is the GOAT. I've never seen a player more dominant with the ball in his hands and the game on the line. His shooting percentage was good, but it felt like it was 100% with the game on the line.

I love Magic, but Lakers were STACKED. At one point they had 5 players on the roster who were the #1 player taken in their respective drafts. Kareem is still the all-time NBA record holder in FGs made, with 1,000 more than second place LeBron.

Jordan's teammates were good, but overrated. Scottie Pippen the best of them, but Id take James Worthy. Jordan was a force. He repeatedly willed his team to victory.


I loved the Showtime Lakers. They're why I love basketball. But I'd take a prime Scottie over a prime Big Game. Scottie was the best perimeter defender of his era. Big Game was great at making midrange shots that mattered. But Scottie could also do the same. As much as it pains elementary-school-aged-me, I'd pick Scottie over Big Game for any team.
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