When Nothing Else Matters
Michael Jordan's Last Comeback
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
As one of the greatest, most celebrated athletes in history, Michael Jordan conquered professional basketball as no one had before. Powered by a potent mix of charisma, nearly superhuman abilities, and a ferocious need to dominate the game, he won six NBA championships with the Chicago Bulls and captured every basketball award and accolade conceivable before retiring and taking a top executive post with the Washington Wizards. But retirement didn't suit the man who was once king, and at the advanced age of thirty-eight Michael Jordan set out to reclaim the court that had been his dominion.
When Nothing Else Matters is the definitive account of Jordan's equally spectacular and disastrous return to basketball. Having gone on the road to chronicle Jordan's final two seasons, award-winning Washington Post writer Michael Leahy draws a riveting portrait of a deeply complex man waylaid by his impulses and impatience, frequently hampered by injuries, assaulted by younger players eager to usurp his throne, and ultimately done in by his presumption. Encouraged for two decades by his sport's magnates to believe that he had no limits or superiors, Jordan could not see his influence and power fading as his Wizards days ticked down and his team's losses and dissension grew. For teammates and outsiders alike, the star emerged as a relentlessly driven, at times unapproachable personality. Leahy reveals the striking contrast between Jordan's public image and the man who couldn't stand not "bein' it."
Hell-bent on transforming the mediocre Wizards into championship contenders, Jordan controlled every facet of his new team, dispensing orders behind the scenes to coaches and players. As his anger and bitterness over Washington's on-court setbacks became increasingly public, his teammates' resentment of him stoked already burgeoning tensions between Jordan and the Wizards' top brass. Leahy unmasks the myths and unravels the deeper lessons behind the highs and lows of the two seasons, illuminating the excruciating reality Jordan was forced to accept after the Wizards' failed playoff bid in his final season. When Nothing Else Matters is about nothing less than a man struggling to come to grips with the end of a career, and the uncertainty of his life ahead.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
After serving as president and part owner of the Washington Wizards for two years, Jordan, bored by his executive duties and frustrated by the team's poor play, returned to the court in 2001 in a bid to revitalize the struggling basketball franchise. But the aging superstar's attempt to resurrect the team flopped as the Wizards failed to make the playoffs in either of Jordan's two playing seasons. While the highs and lows of Jordan's comeback are known to most basketball fans, Leahy, a Washington Post feature writer who covered Jordan's return, offers an in-depth look at the inner turmoil that plagued the Jordan-led Wizards. In a smartly written, often angry work that is as much a sports story as a psychology study and condemnation of the media that built up the Jordan myth, Leahy not only documents Jordan's performance on the floor, but examines what motivated him to play despite serious knee problems. Leahy also deals with the role sportswriters (he makes it clear he isn't one) play in building America's athletes into godlike characters, a practice he abhors. Leahy has no use for idol worship and casts all three of the book's main figures Jordan, coach Doug Collins and majority owner Abe Pollin in unfavorable lights. This engaging read is marred by one flaw: Leahy's tendency to insert himself into the story.
Customer Reviews
good info
i think the author is biased against Jordan. but i’m just a big fan of the Man. but nevertheless great information.
Promising book undercut by self-promotion
I've read "Nothing Else Matters" several times since first purchasing it years ago: not because it is necessarily well written, but because to my knowledge it is the only work dedicated to Jordan's comeback with the Wizards. As such, it has fascinating stories/information of the Jordan's dalliance with Washington.
My main issue comes from the writer feeling the need to interject himself into the proceedings. His thoughts on fame and celebrity aren't interesting, and follow the standard cliches that come with such a discussion. Perhaps he alone recognized what was going on, and had the fortitude to not cowtow to Jordan, but in my opinion it reeks of ego.
The book shines a light on the darker aspects of Jordan's personality, which is important as time passes. It's worth remembering for all his talent, Jordan could be a devastatingly cruel person, albeit one who provided years of awe infringement athletic play.
Great
Awesome book. Could not put it down. Very interesting to read about the other side of Jordan we don't get to see