Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls may rightly be called the greatest basketball player who ever lived. An NCAA title, Olympic gold medals, NBA championships, all these prove what an unbelievable athlete Michael Jordan truly was, and still is.
Michael Jordan, Inc. seeks to make sense of a celebrated figure whose public existence illuminates a late capitalist order defined by the convergence of corporate and media interests.
The day of the draft, Ron Coley, who had worked for a time as a volunteer assistant at Laney High School back in Wilmington, called James Jordan. “Move over Oscar Robertson and Jerry West,” Coley had told Michael's father, invoking the ...
A brief biography of the popular basketball player, Michael Jordan.
Examines the life and career of the high-scoring Chicago Bulls player, who made a brief attempt to play minor league baseball in 1994 and returned to basketball with the Washington Wizards in 2001. Original.
Jordan's quotability is incredible, as are the dozens of compelling anecdotes contained in this special keepsake.
Basketball journalist Roland Lazenby spent almost thirty years covering Michael Jordan's career in college and the pros.
This must-own book is a great way to introduce young ballers to basketball's Greatest of All Time. Other titles in this series: The Legend of Kobe Bryant
More than that—I've been there and saw all of it. ... And his three finales: The grand TV spectacle retirement show in 1993, again with somewhat less kitsch in 1998, and in 2003 with the Washington Wizards in ... But, I digress.
This book covers all facets of MJ's life through insight from his closest friends and intense rivals and through the works of the NBA's most talented photographers.
In this enthralling book Jordan emerges as an ambitious, at times deeply unattractive character with, unsurprisingly, a monstrous ego.