Everyone who walked through the gates of the Chicago Bulls dynasty had to contend with the leadership of Michael Jordan.
It wasn’t a choice but a fact of life — like the roaring fans in the United Center or the black-and-red jerseys stitched with six banners of triumph.
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Jordan’s style of leadership wasn’t built on diplomacy. It was built on demand. It came wrapped in sweat, snarls, curses and a terrifying commitment to greatness. But beneath the surface, there was a deeper layer.
Jordan’s vulnerability
MJ never asked teammates to do something he wasn’t willing to do himself — but that didn’t make it any easier for those around him. His standard was simple: commit to winning or step aside.
For B.J. Armstrong, a former Bulls point guard who watched “Mr. Air” up close during the early 1990s dynasty years, the experience was enlightening, if not exhausting.
“He loved the game of basketball,” Armstrong said of Jordan. “He was an artist who dedicated his life to the craft, and that’s what I was concerned about because when you are living your life, that’s vulnerable. You saw his vulnerability; you saw how he broke down emotionally.”
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Jordan’s legendary intensity often spilled over during training sessions. These weren’t casual shootarounds. Practices felt like playoff games. Opponents weren’t on other teams but were standing beside him, wearing the same jersey.
Will Perdue once got punched in the face. Steve Kerr got hit, too. And yet, when the dust settled, they all stayed. Most got better. The Bulls never fractured under the weight of Jordan’s fire; they crafted something unshakable from it.
Armstrong knew that what looked like aggression was often the byproduct of artistic obsession. He wanted to maintain a sacred standard, not showing his teammates that he was above them. It might’ve seemed ruthless from the outside, but for MJ, there was no other way. The only way to win, in his mind, was to demand everything — of himself and of everyone else. His leadership didn’t bend to feelings but bowed only to results.
The 1995–96 Bulls finished with a then-record 72 wins and they did it with “His Ainress” at the helm, still bruising egos but dragging the team toward history. Players grumbled. They clashed, but they won. Relentlessly.
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The standard
The Bulls icon never coasted. Not through practice. Not even in games that seemed out of reach. That nonstop grind wasn’t about ego but about preparation. About being ready for everything, every time.
“You saw how he prepared; you saw how he pushed himself,” Armstrong said. “There was no reason for him to do that other than there was this innate love he had for the game.”
Jordan’s preparation bordered on obsession. He studied his opponents like prey. He ran through game scenarios in his head like an actor preparing for a role, rehearsing every nuance until it lived in his bones.
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Even after three championships and a brief baseball detour, MJ returned in 1995 with a fury, dropping 55 points in his fifth game back against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden. He always needed a challenge.
That same preparation poured into every teammate around him, whether they liked it or not.
Toni Kukoc, known for his finesse and European flair, learned quickly that talent wasn’t enough in Jordan’s world. Luc Longley, Bill Wennington, Scott Burrell — all found themselves pressed into uncomfortable positions. But those pressures were tests, making sure they’d be ready when it counted.