“Michael Jordan Would Kill Me”: When 6ft 9’ Larry Bird Came Clean On Facing MJ One-On-One
There are several legendary players in the NBA to look up to, and most players mold their games following those players as idols. Larry Bird is among the few superstars whom nobody dares to copy.
The 6ft 9’ legendary forward, who came into the league in 1979 alongside Magic Johnson, could do it all. To top his skills that helped the Celtics win 3 championships in probably the toughest decade of the league, the man was a godly trash-talker.
Larry legend always had the game, to walk his talk and he delivered every single time. He feared none and defeated the likes of Showtime Lakers and Bad Boy Pistons, leading the Cs.
But even the greats bow down to somebody, don’t they?
When Larry Bird accepted Michael Jordan would kill him in a 1v1
The fans of Larry Bird reading this would not believe that Larry Bird would accept that he could be beaten by somebody on a basketball court. But he, most certainly, did.
The 3x MVP is one of the proudest players who is respected among the legends of the game much more than the fans for both his game and his flagrancy. Nevertheless, even he once admitted that Michael Jordan would “kill” him in a 1-on-1 game.
In his appearance on the Dan Patrick Show a few years back, to everyone’s surprise, the 2x FMVP confessed to something he would never do while he was playing.
Despite being the face of the league in the 80s, Bird was grounded and honest
With his finesse hidden behind pure dominance, Bird at his peak, defeated a prime Magic Johnson who had a near-perfect team.
The man even humbled the rough-and-tough Isiah Thomas’ Pistons on multiple occasions during the Celtics’ 4-Finlas runs between 1984 and 1987.
“The Hick From French Lick” along with Magic was responsible for taking NBA’s popularity to all-new heights before MJ took over in the 90s.
Even if he had said “I’d win because of my size, but I’d be a close contest,” nobody would call it arrogant. So, for him to accept that, when he didn’t have to, it was really humble of him.
About the author
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