DETROIT — Most people go into the Hall of Fame first. Then they get the statue.
Not Michael Jordan. Even as he stood in the ballroom of a downtown Detroit hotel Monday for the announcement of his election to the Hall class of 2009, the same snowstorm that swirled outside blanketed a statue erected almost 15 years ago in front of the United Center in Chicago - The House That Jordan Built - a few hundred kilometres to the south.
The figure cast in bronze atop a granite base soars toward the sky, a basketball at the end of its outstretched arm. The pose captures almost perfectly the illusion of Jordan: that he could fly. But down near the bottom, where the statue is affixed to the earth, is an inscription that captures the reality: "The best there ever was. The best there ever will be."
What made Jordan that, and more, was not the string of NBA scoring titles, regular-season and finals MVP awards, not even all the championships he won. A few members of the exclusive club he will formally join upon induction into the Hall come September boast accomplishments just as outsized.
No, the real wonder of Jordan is that he always kept score. Not just in his head, not just on a basketball court, and not just some nights, but every minute of every day.
In his front yard, against an older brother on a makeshift court of caked dirt ... at North Carolina, where he swished a last-second jump shot to win an NCAA championship ... in Barcelona, where he led the Dream Team to a second Olympic gold medal ... on the team bus playing cards, gambling in casinos, even wagering whose suitcase would come down the baggage shoot first at the airport ... in corporate boardrooms, where he helped sell more of everything - hot dogs, hamburgers, Wheaties, sunglasses, calling cards, underwear and the Internet ... in Salt Lake City, where another heart-stopping jumper swished through the net, securing his sixth title and sucking every last bit of air out of the state ... in Washington, when he came out of retirement the second time, age having diminished everything but his desire.
He is keeping score still.
"This is not fun for me," Jordan said during a brief news conference. "I don't like being up here for the Hall of Fame, because at that time, your basketball career is completely over. That's the way I look at it. I was hoping this day was coming in 20 more years, or that I'd actually go in when I'm dead and done.
"Because the way you always look at it," - or at the least way Jordan did - "you can always go and put on shorts on and play. Now you get into the Hall of Fame, what else is there to do?
"Look," Jordan continued. "It's a great accomplishment, it's great the respect everyone is paying. But for me, I always want to have you thinking that I can always go back and play the game of basketball. As long as you have that thought you never know what can happen. You never know what my abilities can do.
"Am I?" Jordan paused.
"No," he quickly added. "But I'd like for you to think that way."
His father, the late James Jordan, once said that obsession was what marked his son as special, even as a child. From the moment he started playing games, Michael had to win, and just as important, there had to be something riding on the outcome.
"He doesn't have a gambling problem," James Jordan said.
"What he does have is a competition problem. He was born with that. And if he didn't have a competition problem," his father added, "you guys wouldn't be writing about him. The person he tries to outdo most of the time is himself."
Once, Jordan travelled everywhere and anywhere to feed that competitive urge, a modern-day Ulysses roaming the world in sneakers and baggy shorts, Atlas holding up a globe with seams stretched across it. But Jordan knows his day has passed and that desire is not like a gene that can be passed from one generation to the next, no matter how hard he tries.
He recounted how after his younger son's basketball team won an Illinois state high school championship last month, "My kid comes back to me and says, 'Dad, I did something that you never did. You never won a state championship.'
"And my reply to him," Jordan said, "is that everybody that won a state championship didn't always win after that."
The room cracked up, but Jordan barely cracked a smile. His eyes were red and focused on something in the distance.
And it was in that moment, after chronicling nearly everything Jordan has done from the day he first turned up at practice 25 years ago in Chicago that I was reminded for better or worse, that whether it was a sublime gift or the cruellest sort of curse, he is still restless in a way the rest of us will never be.
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