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Jordan holds nothing back at Hall inductions

Stockton, David Robinson, Sloan and Stringer join His Airness in Springfield

Image: NBA Hall of Fame Induction WeekendImage: Jordan, RobinsonGetty Images
Michael Jordan sheds a few tears after being presented by David Thompson during the Hall of Fame induction ceremony Friday night.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. - Michael Jordan’s thank you list went well beyond friends and family.

There was the coach who cut him. The player who dissed him. The media who doubted him.

Anyone who ever provided Jordan with motivation to become a better player — perhaps the greatest one ever.

Jordan recalled all of it Friday night, when he joined David Robinson and John Stockton, a pair of his 1992 Dream Team teammates, and coaches Jerry Sloan and C. Vivian Stringer in a distinguished class enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame.

“The game of basketball has been everything to me,” Jordan said.

Jordan insisted during a press conference that the weekend wasn’t just about him, but he was clearly the star before a crowd that included former teammates Scottie Pippen and Dennis Rodman.

“He makes one big shot and everybody thinks he’s kind of cool,” Stockton joked. “I don’t get it.”

Jordan cried before beginning his acceptance speech, then entertained the crowd with memories of any slights that inspired him to get to basketball’s birthplace:

“I wanted to make sure you understood: You made a mistake, dude.”

“I wanted to prove to you, Magic (Johnson), Larry (Bird), George (Gervin), everybody that I deserved (to be there) just as much as anybody else, and I hope over the period of my career I’ve done that without a doubt.”

“I just so happen to be a friendly guy. I get along with everybody, but at the same time, when the light comes on, I’m as competitive as anybody you know.”

“I had to listen to all that, and that put so much wood on that fire that it kept me each and every day trying to get better as a basketball player.”

“From this day forward, if I ever see him in shorts, I’m coming at him.”

The enshrinement ceremony took place at Springfield’s Symphony Hall, because Jordan was too big for the Hall of Fame. The move to the other building allowed for a crowd of about 2,600, more than double what the Hall can accommodate.

Video
  Meet the Class of 2009
Sept. 11: Michael Jordan finds it hard to pick out his one favorite moments in basketball and David Robinson reminisces about first joining the Spurs.
Robinson was enshrined first on Friday before a large San Antonio contingent that included teammates Tim Duncan and Avery Johnson, and coaches Larry Brown and Gregg Popovich. Stockton told the Spurs that his running mate, Karl Malone, was the best power forward, not Duncan.

Stringer, the first coach to lead three different teams to the Final Four, still couldn’t believe a coal miner’s daughter had made it, calling it the “most unusual, unexpected thing in the world.”

She thanked her players —“basketball daughters” — and praised her 2007 Rutgers team for the class and dignity it showed after the racially insensitive comments made by Don Imus.

“I know that I stand here on the shoulders of so many,” Stringer said.

Sloan also thanked his players, his former coaches from high school to the NBA, and late Utah owner Larry Miller for sticking with him even during the team’s bad years.

“Loyalty is the No. 1 reason I’m still coaching the Jazz,” Sloan said.

Most of the attention was on Jordan, the five-time NBA MVP, but the others in the class are some of the most accomplished in the sport. Stockton is the career leader in assists and steals, Robinson won an MVP trophy and two titles in San Antonio, and Sloan is the only coach to win 1,000 games with one team.

“Unique, unique competitors,” Stockton said during the morning press conference.

Fiery ones, too. Sloan, Stockton’s longtime coach, told two different tales of fights he was in as a hard-nosed player for Chicago.


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