Founders
Episode 212 Michael Jordan: The Life
Founders

Episode 212: Michael Jordan: The Life

Founders

Episode 212

Michael Jordan: The Life

David Senra is the host of Founders, where he studies history's greatest entrepreneurs. This is what I learned from reading Michael Jordan: The Life by Roland Lazenby.

[00:05:07] - His competence was exceeded only by his confidence.

[00:05:58] - He worked at the game, and if he wasn't good at something, he had the motivation to be the best at it.

[00:06:33] - It seemed that he discovered the secret quite early in his competitive life: the more pressure he heaped on himself, the greater his ability to rise to the occasion.

[00:14:06] - At each step along his path, others would express amazement at how hard he competed. At every level, he was driven as if he were pursuing something that others couldn't see.

[00:16:10] - Whenever I was working out and got tired and figured I ought to stop, I'd close my eyes and see that list in the locker room without my name on it, and that got me going again.

[00:19:29] - Jordan could sense immediately that he had something the others didn't.

[00:59:53] - The Jordan Rules succeeded against the Bulls so well that they became textbook for guarding athletic scorers. The scheme helped Detroit win two NBA championships, but it also helped in the long run, by forcing Jordan to find an answer. "I think that 'Jordan Rules' defense, as much as anything else, played a part in the making of Michael Jordan," Tex Winter said.

[01:16:35] - Jordan had been surprised to learn how lazy many of his Olympic teammates were about practice, how they were deceiving themselves about what the game required.

[01:19:56] - I have always liked practice and I hate to miss it. When you miss that one day, you feel like you missed a lot. You take extra work to make up for that one day. I've always been a practice player. I believe in it.

[01:29:47] - Jordan presented a singleness of purpose that was hard to dent.

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Michael Jordan: The Life

Introduction

It took the fewest of words to set them off. Sometimes nothing more than the famous trace of a smirk. He was also capable of making things up, conjuring up on a front out of thin air. That's what they would all realize afterwards. He would seize on apparently meaningless cracks or gestures and plunge them deep into his heart until they glowed radioactively. The nuclear fuel rods of his great fire. Only much later would the public come to understand just how incapable he was of letting go of even the tiniest details.

Many observers mistakenly thought that these are fronts were laughable things of Michael's own manufacture, little devices to spur his competitive juices and that he would jokingly toss them aside when he was done with them after he had run another sweaty victory from the evening, but he could not let them go any more than he could shed his right arm. They were as organic to his being as his famous tongue.

Many of the things that deeply offended Michael Jordan were hardly the stuff of stinging rebuke, except perhaps the very first one, which, as it later turned out, was the most important of all. Just go in the house with the women of the millions of sentences that James Jordan uttered to his youngest son, this one was the one that glowed neon bright across the decades. His father's mean words had activated deep within some errant strain of DNA, a mutation of competitive nature so strong as to almost seem titanium.

Years later, during the early days of his NBA career, he confessed that it was his father's early treatment of him and his dad's declaration of his worthlessness that became the driving force that motivated him. Each accomplishment that he achieved was his battle cry for defeating his father's negative opinions of him.

Michael paid him back again and again by achieving so much in a life that his father could never hope to grasp. That is what offspring of disapproving fathers often do. Without even realizing it, they lock in on an answer and deliver it over and over, confirming that they do not need to just go in a house. And they continued to confirm it even after the father has gone to dust as if they are unconsciously yelling across time in an argument with the old man.

That was an excerpt from the book, and we talk to you about today, which is Michael Jordan: The Life, and it was written by Roland Lazenby, remember that part about his father for the end because at the end of the book brings that story full circle. So before I jump on the book, I'm going to tell you why I wanted to do this book. One, I would say, I've looked up to Michael Jordan since I was a little kid. He's probably -- if I look back, he's probably the first like hero I ever had. And so I had a deep personal interest in learning more about him. But also, I've come across recently, I was thinking about like -- so you come across these deals that people or individuals are able to obtain for themselves in their life and career that almost seem impossible to believe.

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