ABOUT OPEN MIKE

Mike Celizic

MSNBC.com contributor Mike Celizic provides his unique slant as he takes an offbeat look into the world of sports beyond the box scores.



Jordan hits nothing but air -- update

Posted: Friday, June 29, 2007 5:13 PM

Remember when Michael Jordan was running things in Washington and he took Kwame Brown with the No. 1 pick in the draft? That was in 2001 and no team had ever taken a high-school player with the first pick. At the time, people thought it was an interesting move. Soon enough, though, they thought it was proof that for all his brilliance on the court, Jordan had a lot to learn in the front office.

 

So now Jordan is in charge of personnel in Charlotte, and it doesn’t look as if he’s gotten any smarter. He wants to win now, doesn’t want any more kids who have to be nursed along, and so drafted the enormously talented Brandon Wright and then immediately traded him to Golden State for Jason Richardson.

 

Richardson is a good guy, beloved by the fans, and two years ago he was a terrific basketball player. But he’s starting to break down – knee problems and a broken hand last year held him to just 51 games and pared more than seven points off his scoring average. Wright may need some time to grow into his talent, but Richardson is growing out of his.

 

Everybody wants to win now, but Richardson isn’t going to take the Bobcats to the Finals; he might not get them in the playoffs, even in the NBA East. No one knows what Wright would do, but if anyone should know that it takes time to develop extraordinary talent, it should be his Airness. All he has to do is look at his own career.

 

He entered the league in 1985 and in his first three years he scored a lot of points, got in the playoffs, and never got out of the first round. In his fourth year, he lost in the second round. In his fifth and sixth years, he lost in the conference finals to Detroit. Not until his seventh year did everything come together and the three straight titles fall into place. And guess what? If Jordan had been running Chicago’s draft in 1985, he would have traded himself for a player who was awfully good but was never going to be great.

 

The draftniks killed Jordan on this one, and rightly so. An entirely random selection of blogs give is entries like this at armchairgm: “Poor draft for the Bobcats.”

 

And this from dcprosportsreport.com: “I guess Michael Jordan taking Kwame Brown with the first overall pick in 2001 wasn’t a fluke. The selection of Brandan Wright was fine, but trading him for Jason Richardson and his $48 million of remaining contract money was a bad idea.”

 

Sportsnetwork.com wasn’t impressed, either: “the Bobcats were lucky enough to be there to take him. But, to trade him to Golden State for Jason Richardson. What was Charlotte thinking?”

 

And on ESPN’s broadcast, Stephen A. Smith, who has such a hard time telling people what he really thinks, called the trade “stupid.”

 

Okay, so a bunch of writers saying a move is awful doesn’t make it so. The players still have the final vote through what they do on the floor. Even so, the trade doesn’t make sense.

Gerald Wallace is the Bobcats’ leading scorer at 18 per game. Like Richardson, he’s a forward swingman. Unlike Richardson, he’s also a free agent. Jordan talks as if he’s going to re-sign Wallace, but most people think Wallace is going to take the trade as reason to move to another team where there’s more chance of winning.

 

Jordan was a great player. He’s not been a great executive, not in Washington and so far not in Charlotte. And if Wright becomes great and Richardson’s body continues to fall apart, Jordan’s going to find himself on the outside again.

 

To tell you the truth, it’s where all the evidence says he belongs.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

If you are going to quote a blog to support your argument, you might want to use one that has it's facts roughly correct.  Warriors didn't receive Jamareo Davidson, they sent him out with Jason for B. Wright.  And the Warriors won't be better if Al Harrington plays like he did in the playoffs, they'll be worse.  Al struggled then.
So Chris Mullin finally slam-dunked one on Michael Jordan!
Richardson is more of a guard than a forward.
I'm sorry but your observation is totally off base.  Jason Richardson is exactly the player the Bobcast needed; a legitimate shooting guard with star power.  He averaged 20 points in the playoffs this year and was critical in the Warriors run.  Wright is a "project", exactly what the Bobcats don't need more of, and certainly what the fans in Charlotte are tired of watching.  This was a great move by MJ.
I don't think this column contains even one original thought.  If fact, I'd wager to guess that some of the passages in this article were taken verbatim from articles I read earlier in the week in Bay area publications.  All credibility was lost when you wrote that Richardson was a forward, obviously you've never even seen him play!!  
I think critics are really trying to find something to "knock" Jordan on.  That was a good move for the Bobcats.  They need some offensive fire power and Brandon Wright ain't it.  They get a good perimeter guy, and a veteran that still can finish and shot.  I like Richardson (SG), Wallace (PF), and Morrison (SF) on the floor against most in the east...fast tempo, exciting, and will sell more tickets.  Stop the insanity, Bobcats in the playoffs in 2 years.  Mark them words...
Jordan will never fully immerse himself in doing what he needs to to be a premier, much less able, NBA executive.  He will try and push buttons from Chicago, a casino, or a golf course.  His first act as Washington GM, if you recall, was to show up at practice and clean some clocks on the court.  It humiliated Wes Unseld (the coach back then) and sent a message that the work of being a GM was not his interest.  Better to do what worked when he could use his physical talents and his ability to intimidate teammates.  Perhaps Mr. Jordan needs to go sit on the bench and try coaching.  But, the casinos and golf courses would be more difficult to access, and, oh yeah, you have to actually show up and be accountable.
jordan is a lot more than just air. look at the marketing that has gone into this man and his air jordans. he is a legend


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://openmike.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=251084