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Michael Jordan’s post control



Michael Jordan’s post control

by Insufferable-Asshat

32 Comments

  1. Insufferable-Asshat

    Man seeing this live must have been nuts

    Imagine being current age in the Jordan era, and seeing him 3 peat twice, win 5 MVPs, 10 scoring titles, dpoy etc Jesus

  2. Its weird how off defenders had to play back then. Either commit to a double team or run back to your man. No in between.

  3. 100PercentRealGinger

    That’s a double-dribble, right?

    Edit: I’m an idiot that was a bounce pass to MJ, right?

  4. His ability to just float in the air a fraction of a second longer than anyone else is crazy, especially in slow motion.

  5. HellNawlCantDoDis

    this angle is so sick. better than anything modern TV production gives

  6. WeTheNinjas

    Wild how far the league has come. Nowadays we have DeRozan doing this more than once a game and no one bats an eye

  7. It’d be hard to find someone in the league today that can’t duplicate this shot.

  8. Physical-Present-302

    Why didn’t the defender went out of the way and just watched

  9. MJ’s mid-range game is aesthetically my favorite skill in NBA history. So cool and so many variations, whether from the post or facing up.

    A fun MJ mid-range stat:

    The farthest back NBA.com’s shot-location data goes back to is 1996-97.

    That season, MJ shot 48.9% from the mid-range on 14.7 attempts a game (KD attempted the most mid-rangers this season at 6.6 per game, amazing how much analytics have shifted the game).

    In 1996-97 the league (much lower offensive environment than today) shot 48.0% from 2-point range overall, including all lay-ups and dunks.

    So MJ shot better from mid-range than the whole league shot from 2-point range. He has to be the only player ever to do that on high volume. (*edit: nvm, just checked and Dirk did this in 2010-11 and 2006-07. What a legend. Of course, far more of Dirk’s mid-rangers were catch-and-shoot compared to MJ’s post and iso game, so it’s not exactly apples-to-apples.)*

    I really wish we had better shot location data from MJ’s prime. There has to be so many insane numbers we just don’t have access to. Cool videos like this will do though.

  10. There are still players like Kawhi that do this. It’s just not true that post skills went away altogether.

    Smart coaches just learned to optimize the game. These smart coaches beat teams that didn’t know how to optimize the game.

    It was like natural selection.

    Offenses that let weak post players bleed efficiency lost. Those coaches adapted or were weeded out.

  11. Meditationberry

    Jordan Fadeaway and Kareem’s Sky Hook. Two of the most unstoppable plays in all of sports.

  12. PensiveinNJ

    I love a good Jordan post but I wish it was a compilation rather than just one play.

  13. Another1MitesTheDust

    This is that 90s defense I’ve been hearing so much about?

  14. letsgoraps

    This is what I remember about watching Jordan: the fade away.

    I started watching the NBA in the mid 90’s so I saw the second 3 peat. He may not have been as athletic as during the first 3 peat, but he had mastered the fadeaway. You couldn’t really stop it.

  15. Witch-kingOfBrynMawr

    You know, I’m sure this is common knowledge, but whenever anyone talks about how much longer Jordan “hangs in the air” than anyone else, I always want to point out that he just… held the ball longer before shooting. He’d explode into a layup attempt or fade away, but wouldn’t release the ball until he was well past the peak of his leap. That’s where so much of his midrange/close-range advantage came from. He’d wait a few extra beats before committing to a layup, allowing him to throw just ooooone more little ball move to get the clean finish. One some of his famous finishes, it’s a race to flip the ball towards the hoop before his feet hit the ground.

  16. somethingeatingspace

    Other than his insane shooting, this is *all* about that bump.

  17. Miserable-Lawyer-233

    They put a 6’8 250 slow PF Anthony Mason on MJ. That’s disrespectful. MJ was a guard. Why didn’t he just blow by him? MJ fell in love with his jumper after he lost his first step burst in about 1995. In 1997 Jordan took 1921 jump shots (46.3% conversion rate), compared to 364 layups and 71 dunks.

  18. KungFuJoe23

    MJ’s ability to shoot on the way down is peerless. It might seem simple but it is extremely difficult for even elite bball players to do it effectively. You are taught to shoot on the way up your whole life because your shot comes from your legs and shooting on the way down is the absolute worst way to shoot.

    But like so many of his other abilities he just did whatever he wanted to whenever he wanted to.

  19. Ingrownpimple

    Really, that’s it? I thought there would be more. I seen people at my LA fitness do more in the post. Jordan is GOAT, but this is a single bump and then fadeaway — something most physically abled people can do.

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