LIKE MIKE BLOG

For everyone that like's Mike.

4/9/09

LIKE MIKE ONLINE STORE UPDATE


Just a heads up everybody-

We are in the process of reloading the LIKE MIKE ONLINE STORE with new LIKE MIKE shirts.
We lowered the price on all the shirts from $30 to only $23!
You can check out the store anytime by clicking on the link at the top of the blog. We accept paypal and money orders. Wholesale is available, Contact Mike@LikeMikeClothing.com for more info.

Stay tuned to LIKEMIKECLOTHING.com for more updates.

Thank you for your support!

Mike-

New LIKE MIKE shirts available at Culture Kings

LIKE MIKE "Supreme Status" White


LIKE MIKE "Supreme Status" Black


LIKE MIKE "King of the Jungle" White



Culture Kings
4300 NE 2nd Ave
Miami, Fl
33137
305.573.2399

4/8/09

MJ’s Comeback Fantasies Have Ended

The inevitable took place Monday, as Michael Jordan entered the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. The GOAT wasn’t too excited, however, about dwelling on his past accomplishments. The man was too busy regretting the fact that he’s no longer an NBA player.

The Philly Inquirer has the quotes:

“This is kind of a love-hate thing for me,” Jordan said. “It’s a great compliment and great respect, but for me, I always wanted to be able to have you think that I could 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.”



Is he talking comeback? “No, but I’d like for you to think that I am,” Jordan said. “So to me, the Hall of Fame is like, it’s over and done with. You can’t ever put a uniform back on. It’s the total end of your basketball career. It’s a great accomplishment and I know I don’t walk away from it, but I didn’t want to be up here so quickly.

“I wanted to be up here when I was 70 years old, 80 years old. But I’m 45 and I still think I can play. You guys don’t know if I can or can’t, but at least I’ve got you thinking that way.”

I think we can all breathe a sigh of relief now that Jordan has finally realized that playing hoops at the pro level is no longer an option, and certainly something no one would want to see.

Thanks for the memories, Mike.


Thank Marcel Mutoni of Slam for the story.

Even with HOF honor, Mike is still competitive as ever

I attended the annual ceremony in which the year's new basketball Hall of Famers were announced. Surprising no one, Michael Jordan was one of those chosen in his first year of eligibility. Along with Jordan, John Stockton, David Robinson, Jerry Sloan, and coach C. Vivian Stringer comprised the class of 2009.



Sportswriters aren't supposed to get excited around athletes. They're supposed to act blasé, but I didn't see a lot of blasé-ishness when it came to Jordan. Grizzled reporters asked for autographs and photos, you know, for their "kids."

Except for Michael Jordan, all of the soon-to-be-inducted members expressed how thrilled they were to be there. While he was grateful for the honor, M.J. talked about some ambivalence, for the honor implied to him his playing days were definitely over. He thought it would be more appropriate for people to be elected to the Hall of Fame when they were in "their 70s," when they could no longer tell themselves that all they had to do is put on a pair shorts and get out on the court and compete.



The others who've retired from basketball seemed to have moved on with their lives. They appeared to have adjusted fairly well to life after basketball. Not Michael Jordan. He freely admitted he missed the competition, and golf was not satisfying his competitive addiction.

Jordan's penchant for competition was obvious at the ceremony. When M.C. Jim Nantz kiddingly told the former North Carolina star that if tonight's championship game is tied after regulation, instead of overtime, it was decided that Jordan should play Michigan State's Magic Johnson one-on-one to decide the outcome, Jordan laughed, "Are you kidding me? That's no problem. Magic's never beaten me in a Final."



I asked Michael a question at the ceremony. I wanted to know what it was like for him to watch his kids play basketball and what it was like for them to play with him watching. Obviously, I said, some of us fathers didn't have the exact kind of basketball career that he did.

He replied that he didn't think it was all that different from any other parent watching his or her kids play. One major difference was that he's aware that people at the games constantly look at him to see how he reacts to the game, so he has had to control his reactions. But overall, he said that you get as much joy and just as much pride out of the experience as anybody else.

However, he then told this anecdote: His younger son, Marcus, was on the team that recently won the Illinois state high school basketball championship. Michael said he was very proud. There are even reports that he cried. After winning, Marcus pointed out to him that he had won something that Michael never had -- a state championship. Michael told us that he answered, "That's true. But I won a lot of things later on in my career."



He said his point was his son shouldn't be satisfied, and he should continue to strive to accomplish things whether in basketball or in the rest of his life. But it sure also sounded like the old man was competing with his son.

I was tempted to bet Michael that I can type faster than he can. But I held back. I figured, considering his drive, by next year, he'd be one of the fastest typists in the world.

Thank Lloyd Garver of CBSSports.com for the story.

4/7/09

Marcus Jordan headed to UCF

Who says Michael Jordan's glory days are over? Yesterday, he was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame, his alma mater won the NCAA championship and, perhaps best of all, a second son got a scholarship to play college hoops.



Marcus Jordan has committed to play for the University of Central Florida, in part because the school was interested in more than his name.

Brian Davis, Jordan's AAU coach, told the Orlando Sentinel that: "UCF really showed him that they wanted him for more than just his name . . . UCF made him feel comfortable. They wanted Marcus to come in to contribute right away and made him feel like he could make a big impact. They wanted Marcus for Marcus."



Jordan was injured early this season, but closed out his senior campaign on a flurry of high notes. He led Whitney Young to the Illinois Class 4A state championship, scoring a game-high 19 points. And on a team that is considered to have six genuine Division-I prospects, the 6-2 Jordan averaged 16.8 points, 8.5 rebounds and 3.2 assists during Whitney Young's seven-game playoff run.

I know this will make all my Central Florida Jordan Heads very happy. The last big name athlete to come from UCF was Dante Culpeper.



I lived in Orlando for 5 years and would run into Dante all the time.

It's gonna be fun to have Young Mike doing keg stands at your college house party.

Stay Classy Orlando!

4/6/09

With Mike set for the Hall of Fame, Rod Thorn remembers how it all began



Today the 2009 class of Basketball Hall of Fame will be announced, with Michael Jordan a first-time finalist.

"The only question is whether someone doesn't vote for Michael and he's not a unanimous selection," Phil Jackson said. "That will be interesting to see."

It would be preposterous, of course.

Jackson has called Jordan "the most significant person in professional basketball history," and it's not an outlandish view.



Red Auerbach, who saw them all, from George Mikan to LeBron James, once said of Jordan, "Nobody ever sold tickets like this guy." Wherever he ranks among the game's immortals, you knew the day was coming when he would be an automatic selection to the Hall.

But he wasn't always viewed as a mortal lock.

"When I drafted him, I said, 'OK, we're gonna get a good player here,'" said Rod Thorn, the Nets president who was Chicago's GM when the Bulls had the No. 3 pick in 1984. "I thought, he'll come in and play and help us. But to think that he would be what he turned out to be? No way. No way."



As great as his trade was for Jason Kidd, turning the Nets into a championship contender for the first time, Thorn's drafting of Jordan will always be his legacy as an NBA executive. Before the Nets took on Detroit in the Meadowlands this past week, he sat at courtside and talked about the draft that changed the course of pro basketball history.



"Back then, the knock on Michael was that he couldn't shoot the ball," Thorn recalled. "For a long time, that first season, he just drove the ball to the basket and he didn't need a shot. But Michael was so smart, he learned from taking some mighty licks. So he said, 'I gotta get a jump shot,' and he got one. But when we looked at him for the draft, he was 195 pounds and 6-6, so he was kind of thin. So the biggest thing about him was, can he make a shot? We wondered what kind of shooter he'd be."



Thorn could only go off of the tapes of Jordan he'd watched in Dean Smith's office in Chapel Hill several months before the draft.

"Back then, you didn't work guys out," he said. "We never worked Michael out. But I was very good friends with Dean, and every year, I'd go down to North Carolina for two or three days and he would let me watch tapes of all the ACC players. That's how I scouted the entire league. Dean thought Michael would be a really good pro - a better pro player than a college player."

After the tape sessions, Thorn went back to Chicago thinking he would draft Jordan. But if Jordan was gone, his plan was to take another Tar Heel player, forward Sam Perkins. Before making it final, Thorn decided to attend the SEC Tournament to get a first-hand look at Auburn's Charles Barkley.

"Alabama threw a zone at Charles and he had six points, fouled out and played an awful game. He couldn't make an outside shot," Thorn said. "So I left there thinking, 'How is this guy ever going to be a big-time player in pro ball? He's just too small to do what he was doing in college in the NBA.'"



Twenty-five years later, Thorn laughed at his projection.

"So, going into the draft, we determined that we were going to take Michael, unless somebody went brain dead and let (Hakeem) Olajuwon come down to us," he said. "And if Michael didn't get to us, then we would have taken Perkins over Barkley, which would have been a mistake."

But it worked out just the way Thorn wanted. Olajuwon went first to Houston, Portland took Sam Bowie second and Jordan went to the Bulls.

"When training camp started, I was not there for our first practice," Thorn said. "After they finished, I got a call from Bill Blair, who was an assistant coach, and he said, 'Rod, you didn't screw this draft up. This guy is pretty good.' Well, you know how coaches are. They just don't say that kind of stuff about a rookie. So I felt pretty good. Then the next day, I got a call from Kevin Loughery, our head coach, and he said, 'This guy is pretty good.' So I said, 'Wait a minute, he must be pretty dad-gone good if Kevin is calling me, too.'"

"Pretty dad-gone good" turned into much, much more, not so long after Thorn left Chicago in 1985. As Jordan grew into an iconic figure, known the world over, he took the league to unparalleled heights as the Bulls won six titles in eight seasons.

"We had the Bird and Magic era and they were wonderful to watch, with that great rivalry of theirs," Jackson said. "But Michael Jordan ..."

The former Bulls coach paused, looking for the right words to sum it all up. Finally, he smiled and said, "When Michael Jordan played the game, you couldn't take your eyes off him."



Thank Mitch Lawerence of NYDAILYNEWS.com for the story.

4/4/09

The Jordan 60+

The Jordan 60+ combines the elements of the Air Jordans that Michael wore on the court on his way to dropping 60+ points, which includes, the Air Jordan II and Air Jordan V.



The Jordan 60+ features the overall look and feel of the Air Jordan V within the mold/shape of the Air Jordan II. The 60+ keeps the Air Jordan V's tongue, midsole/outsole, and eyelets, and the Air Jordan II's heel and toe. The Jordan 60+ is set to release during the Fall/Winter of 2009.

And just for the record...

I hate it.

Lebron and the Cavs Play Baseball



Better then a T.O. end zone celebration.

Thank Hoopeduponline.com for the link.

The Greatest Dancer In Utah Jazz History



Karl Malone must be proud.

Thank Hoopeduponline.com for the link.

4/1/09

Mike Shows Support for Chicago's 2016 Olympic Bid

Michael Jordan displayed his support today for Chicago’s bid to host the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games in dramatic fashion.

“The Olympic spirit—it’s alive in Chicago,” Jordan declares in a surprise appearance at the end of a new film that features Olympians and Paralympics with Chicago ties.



The film was shown publicly for the first time at a news conference at Douglas Park on the city’s West Side—a key Games venue in Chicago’s plan—where Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley and Chicago 2016 Chairman and CEO Patrick G. Ryan gathered a crowd of civic and business leaders, as well as Olympians, Paralympians and volunteers, in anticipation of the arrival of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Evaluation Commission to Chicago.

The film, entitled “Moments,” is among those that will be shown to the IOC’s Evaluation Commission. The bid committee also released the results of a new poll that shows widespread public support for hosting the Games in Chicago.

“Michael Jordan is a Chicago icon, but he also is a global icon,” said Patrick G. Ryan, chairman and CEO of Chicago 2016, the not-for-profit organization that is seeking to bring the Games to Chicago. “He is a beloved and respected figure around the world, and his name and likeness are known on every continent.



“Michael’s endorsement of our bid is something that we prize,” Ryan said. “We thank him and all the other great athletes—including those who appeared with him in the new film—who have stepped forward to support Chicago.”

Jordan competed in the 1984 Games as a young athlete out of the University of North Carolina and, after joining the Bulls, as a member of the “Dream Team” that played in 1992 in Barcelona and won the gold.



“I’ve had some tremendous memories in my professional basketball career,” Jordan said. “But the memory of standing as a representative at the Olympics representing the United States is one of the proudest moments of my life. To step up on that podium representing your country—there’s no greater honor than that.”

Jordan said it was a thrill as a young athlete to compete outside the U.S. for the first time in the 1984 Games, and he enjoyed being teammates in 1992 with basketball greats he played against in the National Basketball Association. They included Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone and Clyde Drexler.



“We always fought against one another in the course of a season, and here we’re spending time with each other and representing our country and trying to win,” he said.

The basketball competition in Chicago 2016’s plan would be held at the United Center, where a sculpture of Jordan stands today as testament to his feats on the court.



The film was directed by Malik Sayeed, an accomplished African-American industry professional with RSA Films. His previous credits include work on Spike Lee’s “The Original Kings of Comedy,” as well as “Eyes Wide Shut.” He also was director of photography on “Just Married” and “Frailty.”

Element 79, a Chicago advertising agency, created the concept for the film and oversaw its production. Cutters and Another County, also Chicago-based firms, did post-production work.

The video can be downloaded at www.badertv.com/chicago2016.

Air Jordan 5 Raging Bull Pack 3M



The Air Jordan 5 Black 3M showed up on the web earlier this month for the first time. As part of the Raging Bull Pack, which will include the Red Suede version, will definitely be one of the highlights of 2009 for most heads.





The Air Jordan 5 Black 3M from the Raging Bull Pack could be the freshest colorway of the Air Jordan 5 we’ve seen since the Fire Reds returned back in 2006. The black 3M upper done looks much better then the previous 3M releases like the Green Bean Air Jordan 5’s.

Thank NiceKicks for the story and Marquee Sole for the pics.

3/30/09

Lebron Like Mike?

How Lebron Could Transcend Mike...



More than two decades after Mars Blackmon hustled America into buying Air Jordans and the "Be Like Mike" jingle had us reaching for the Gatorade, the model for how to turn a gifted basketball player into a worldwide icon remains largely unchanged. LeBron James, the latest and most worthy heir to Michael Jordan's throne, is trying to be like Mike. Some very smart people think that's a huge mistake.

Though Kobe Bryant's hang-gliding game has born the closest resemblance to Jordan's on the court, Bryant never fully captured the imagination as a marketer, spokesman or pitchman. So the vacuum left by Jordan, the first international basketball icon, has yet to be filled. James intends to fill it.



But how?

"I think it's really unfair to compare people to Michael," said David Falk, the super-agent who created the Air Jordan paradigm that James is trying to replicate. "There'll never be another Michael."



No, there won't. And there will never be anyone better as long as the next challenger falls into the same trap of trying to imitate Jordan instead of trying to surpass him.



In sheer dollars and market share, LeBron's off-court accomplishments through the first six seasons of his NBA career are "staggering," said Paul Swangard, director of the Warsaw Sports Marketing Center at the University of Oregon. 60 Minutes, in a profile of James on Sunday night, placed his annual income from basketball and other sources at $40 million last year. The Harvard Business School said James is now the third-biggest name in the sports world behind Tiger Woods and David Beckham.


"I think the challenge for LeBron is to do what Michael did 25 years ago -- to raise the bar, to create a new paradigm, a different way of looking at how an athlete is marketed," Falk said. "That's what he needs to take advantage of. He's got to create his own comparison. He's got to do it differently."

How?

"I get paid a lot of money to answer that question," Falk said.

Since he didn't attend college, James, 24, is two years younger than Jordan was at this stage of his career. Jordan won his first NBA championship in his seventh season, a mark that James could eclipse in a couple of months with the Cavaliers, who are vying with the Lakers for the best record in the NBA. Due to inflation and the economic expansion of the NBA -- in which Jordan was complicit if not primarily responsible -- the dollars are incomparable. Jordan's basketball salary in his sixth NBA season was about $2.3 million. James is paid $14.4 million this season, which is nearly $5 million more than the entire NBA salary cap in 1989-90, Jordan's sixth season.

Jordan's first endorsement deal with Nike was for $2.5 million over five years, plus royalties. James, riding those coattails, signed a seven-year, $90 million contract with Nike - when he was still in high school.

With his engaging smile, the swoosh on his shoes, the No. 23 on his jersey, and the deep voice and speech patterns -- listen to James talk about "the game of basketball" with your eyes closed, and you'd swear it's Jordan talking -- he has modeled himself after the master. If he's happy spending his entire basketball career being "the next Michael," then James would only need to keep doing what he's doing. No need to take risks or try anything different. The problem with trying to separate yourself from the best, of course, is that you might fail.



"Well, you know, I suppose averaging 35 points a game and being defensive player of the year and the MVP is probably a start," said Lakers coach Phil Jackson, who coached Jordan to six championships with the Bulls -- or was it the other way around? "But winning seven championships will probably be the one that'll make a difference between what Michael did in his career and some other player."

And off the court?

"Maybe changing sports and being MVP in baseball," Jackson said, "something Michael couldn't do."

He doesn't have to do anything that drastic, but if he wants to eclipse Jordan, LeBron is going to have to take chances.



One frontier Jordan didn't fully explore is ready and willing for the King to claim as his own: China. Swangard re-tells an old story about NBA commissioner David Stern's first trip to China, when he tried to persuade the government to allow NBA games to be shown on TV. Stern was informed that tapes of Jordan's games had already been smuggled into the country, because, "The people always loved watching Mr. Jordan from the Red Oxen," Swangard said.



If he seizes the opportunity, James could become as popular in China as Yao Ming by the end of the decade. Coinciding with Team USA's gold-medal performance at the Beijing Olympics last year, the NBA opened its first two merchandise stores in China with many more to come. It's by far the global market with the most potential for growth, and the millions of eyeballs and billions of dollars could provide the boost LeBron needs to separate himself from Jordan.

"You walk down Wangfujing [shopping district] in Beijing and you get why these guys get the millions they do," Swangard said. "It's certainly true that much of their value remains tied to their domestic notoriety. But it's a whole different world over there. It is probably the single greatest opportunity for LeBron to be a global icon in a way that Jordan just didn't have the platform. ... When the number of basketball fans in a country outpaces the number of people in the country where the league is played, you can just sort of do the simple math."

But with opportunity comes responsibility, which brings us to the next -- and perhaps even more important -- area in which James could separate himself from Jordan. To this point, LeBron and Tiger have followed the Jordan Plan: Play your sport at the highest level, endorse the products that make you the most money, and keep your nose clean. Jordan's infamous explanation for why he refused to endorse a black Democratic candidate running for the U.S. Senate in his home state of North Carolina -- "Republicans buy sneakers, too," he said -- has been the template for the two iconic athletes who have most closely followed in his footsteps.

Unlike Jim Brown -- or Tommie Smith and John Carlos, the Olympic runners who raised their firsts in the black power salute during the 200-meter medal ceremony at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics -- Jordan chose the path of most money and least resistance. So far, Tiger and LeBron have done the same. During the run-up to the 2008 Beijing Games, James avoided any involvement in protests over China's complicity in the genocide in Darfur. Even when James' teammate, Ira Newble, circulated a petition protesting China's policy, James refused to sign it, saying he needed more information. It was a page right out of Jordan's book.

"Mike paved the way for all of us to open up the endorsement door," said Celtics star Ray Allen, another Jordan Brand athlete. "But the one thing that Mike never was is political. I think in today's era, the NBA player has an even greater podium if he chooses to use it. And with Barack Obama being the first black president, it's a great forum. I think that would separate him from anybody who's done this. ... It's great to be a basketball player, but to transcend sports is a big responsibility. If he were able to pull that off -- if he wants to pull that off -- I think that would set him apart."

Can he?

Does he want to?

That's the next frontier for LeBron James.



Enjoy this Lebron James interview with 60 Minutes Steve Kroft-

3/28/09

Mike in Miami

Mike was out on South Beach Thursday night taking his girlfriend to dinner at Red the Steakhouse to celebrate her birthday.



Here's a few paparazzi shots from the night.



Peep the brace on Mike's left hand in these two shots...




Here's a few shots of his girl...



Her name is Yvette Prieto, shes a Cuban-born model who used to date Julio Iglesias Jr.



At the end of last year, it was rumored that Mike and Yvette were planning to marry, however, no confirmation has been made.



Shes fine, but don't do it Mike...



The last one cost you $168 Million!

3/27/09

Mike' Son Visits UCF

Michael Jordan may soon have a reason to come watch games at UCF Arena. Jordan's youngest son, Marcus, visited the Knights on Friday on an official recruiting trip according to Rivals.com. And a source with UCF said he enjoyed his visit to the Orlando campus.



Jordan, a senior shooting guard at Whitney Young High School in Deerfield, Illinois, recently led his team to the Class 4A Illinois state championship. The 6-2, 180 pound shooting guard scored a game high 19 points and sank four late free throws in the state championship game to help his team defeat Waukegan, 69-66.

Jordan wouldn't be the first player to come to Orlando from Whitney Young. One of his former high school teammates, A.J. Rompza started at point guard for the Knights last season.

According to Rivals.com, UCF is the only school Jordan has visited but he has also garnered interest from Miami, FLorida, Michigan State, Illinois, Iowa and Wright State with offers coming from the Knights and Hurricanes.

If Jordan decides to sign with the Knights, as a three star recruit, he would join Orlando Christian Preps Keith Clanton as one of the highest rated recruits ever to play at UCF.

3/26/09

Hare Jordan I's



The “Hare Jordan 1″ will be dropping on the 11th of April. It features all the colors and materials you would expect, considering the Air Jordan 7 “Hares” that inspired this new make-up.



A fresh look to the Jumpman logo is done up in “Hare” fashion as well, and is placed on the tongue.



I would much rather have the VII's, but if your a real Jordan Head you will pick these up just for the Bugs Bunny Jumpman logo on the tounge.



Thank Nice Kicks for the pics.