“It’s Not Easy”: Former NBA Player Defends Michael Jordan From Team Owner Criticism

Former Bobcats player takes a stand in support of Michael Jordan amid his criticism as an NBA team owner in the past.

4 Min Read

Mandatory Credit: Jeremy Brevard-Imagn Images

Michael Jordan achieved the pinnacle of his basketball career during his playing days with the Bulls. However, being so great at something comes with a curse. That nothing else in the world would ever match up to the standard of what he did with the basketball in his 30s, at least for his fans and critics who keep an eye on every move he has made, even after retiring. 

He bought an ownership stake in the Charlotte Hornets (Charlotte Bobcats at the time) in 2010, four years after Raymond Felton was drafted No. 5 overall in the NBA Draft. Felton recently appeared on Paul George’s podcast and narrated a story about Jordan trash-talking him while torching him in practice, and went on to defend Jordan’s actions as an owner. 

“Him as an owner, though, man, let me say that, though, a lot of people give him, giving him dirt about being an owner. But a lot of people don’t understand, man, it’s not easy. It’s not easy, you know, you’re taking a chance and drafting kids and you know signing people in free agency and you know you just don’t know how things are going to pan out, you know? You just, you basing on their talent, you basing on what you feel like the potential can be sometimes, it works, sometimes it doesn’t. And I think he just gets a lot of scrutiny from that.”

“And I mean obviously he ain’t going to live up to being anything else in life outside of being the man who he is in a game of basketball. He’s the GOAT, and especially for me, you know, he’s the GOAT. So he can’t, anything he do ain’t going to live up to that. But you know, just people always got a lot of negativity to say when it comes to him as a basketball owner.”

Felton was drafted from Jordan’s Alma mater North Carolina Tar Heels, in 2005. During his fourth year in the league, Jordan bought a stake in the ownership of the Bobcats which he only sold recently. In 2023, when Jordan finally sold his stake in the Hornets, it was valued at $3 billion. 

The Charlotte Hornets had a 467-638 record between the 2009-10 and 2022-23 seasons. That’s a .400 team, which does not suit the stature of someone regarded as the GOAT. They made the Playoffs twice in that stretch, and both times were first-round exits in the Playoffs. Therefore, his tenure as an owner has come under a lot of criticism. His contributions to the sport are so great that nothing he can do now can supersede that. 

Jordan is returning to the NBA as part of his deal with NBC for their NBA coverage next season. Even as a media member, he is prone to face severe criticism for his opinions and takes on situations. No one knows basketball better than the greatest of all time; maybe his career as a media figure will not be as much under scrutiny as his ownership career had been.  

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Chaitanya Dadhwal is an NBA Analyst and Columnist at Fadeaway World from New Delhi, India. He fell in love with basketball in 2018 after seeing James Harden in his prime. He joined the sports journalism world in 2021, one year before finishing his law school in 2022. He attended Jindal Global Law School in Sonipat, India, where his favorite subject was also Sports Law.He transitioned from law to journalism after realizing his true passion for sports and basketball in particular. Even though his journalism is driven by his desire to understand both sides of an argument and give a neutral perspective, he openly admits he is biased towards the Houston Rockets and Arsenal. But that intersection of in-depth analysis and passion helps him simplify the fine print and complex language for his readers.His goal in life is to open his own sports management agency one day and represent athletes. He wants to ensure he can help bridge the gap in equal opportunity for athletes across various sports and different genders playing the same sport.
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