Michael Jordan’s Hall of Fame Speech: Raw and Uncut
The greatest basketball player of all time delivered his Hall of Fame speech Friday evening and he has been under scrutiny ever since.
So when Jordan stepped onto that stage Friday night in front of that enormous crowd and in front of millions of viewers, Jordan decided to go one way with his speech; raw and uncut. He didn’t pick the sexy choice to introduce him at the ceremony although everyone wanted him to. They would have loved for him to choose Scottie Pippen or Dean Smith or James Worthy. He chose, for reasons he kept to himself, David Thompson. That was only the beginning.
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He first acknowledged Scottie Pippen for always being there during his success with the Bulls. Then he quickly covered ground by thanking Dean Smith and a few other coaches. Then he got going. He told the world during his Hall of Fame speech not of all the glorious moments of a storied career, but of how he pushed through the muck and the gunk and came out on top. He told of how he was competitive, how the choices of others fueled him to be better, how he refused to let anything stop him. He called out his high school coach for not choosing him for varsity and how it only made him more determined to prove him wrong. He told of how Bryon Russell taunted him during his brief retirement in ninety four and how he wanted to show him what was what. He wasn’t bitter, although some could take it that way. He was honest and direct with how he felt. He told the world what drove him to be the best, not what they wanted to hear.
Jordan told his story. He did it without apologies or regret. Only Michael knew what it was like going through the stages of his career, fighting his inner demons and his battles both on and off the court. He shared with the world not a story of bitterness or regret, but a story of survival and success. He did overcome obstacles and he let the naysayers and the Bulls upper management and his competitors fuel his desire to win. And he gave them credit, all those who tried to knock him down. He stood there on that stage and smiled, told the story of how he was inspired by the things they did, the words they spoke, how he turned those negatives into a pure desire to win.
In his closing remarks he said that the enshrinement into the Hall of Fame wasn’t the end of the road for his relationship with basketball, but a continuation. He said for us not to be surprised if we see him out there someday, fifty years old, competing again. The crowd laughed at him. Don’t laugh, he said. “Never say never. Because limits, like fears, are often just an illusion. Thank you very much.”
And he walked off the stage with his friend, David Thompson, and went to his family, perhaps in the most poetic of forms. Through all the success, trials and tribulations, in the end it is only family and true friends that are there, purely and simply, without expectations or wants, just there.
Whether or not Jordan said what the world wanted to hear or not does not change the fact that he belongs in the Hall of Fame. And whether the world wants him to or not, Michael Jordan may indeed lace up his shoes once again, to take to the court, fueled still by the naysayers and doubters, turning that into a desire to overcome and win.
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Post Commenthfj
On September 13, 2009 at 10:40 pm
Great article Army. I caught some of Jordan’s acceptance speech, and like you stated in your well written article, he was very direct and to the point on his career on and off the basketball court. He was truely one of the most gifted basketball players to ever lace up a pair of tennis shoes. As for David Thompson, i thought for his size of 6″4, he was the greatest leapers and college basketball player that i ever watched play. If he didn’t develope a drug habit during his pro-career, its untelling how many records David Thompson would have set. Well done friend.