@@mribbon89 do you know the name of the original composition the piano with the violin part? Because the song you named uses this part as a sample, im pretty sure they just sampled that part, because ive heard that part heing sampled in many movies.
Colonel Gibbs absolutely. As a person that played at the collegiate level I can say from first hand experience that winning the “suicide” sprints at the end of practice was the most important un-talked about factor in who was the real team captain/leader. I can then easily surmise that Lebron, Kobe, and MJ earned their right to be the one who is considered to be the man on their respected teams. Much respect 🙌🏾
I want to add that the most important aspect of this clip is when Jordan spouts wisdom in regards to those that call him a “tyrant.” Jordan responds with “you never won anything.” He delineates between a person that’s everyday walking through life as a zombie with the path of least resistance and someone that is a CHAMPION. That’s my friends is FIRE!
I Am King this is the most important clip that summarizes why Michael Jordan is the undisputed GOAT, and more so why he is the greatest champion of all time. If people want to use this against him that only makes this clip more significant. It transcends sports to life philosophy/metaphysics and how one should conduct themselves to be who they want and how to achieve their dreams. Pure alchemy. Powerful.
What's great about this scene is that you can feel the conflict within Jordan. He sacrificed loving friendships with his teammates in order to achieve greatness. That was the only way of course but you can feel the emotions creeping in towards the end there about what it took for him to get to the level that he did.
Spot on. I think deep down there are some things he wishes he could take back. Will he ever come out and publicly say it? Probably not. Then again he doesn't have to. What made Michael Jordan is what made Michael Jordan.
Even more than that, he sacrificed a part of his legacy as well. He will be remembered as sort of a bully/tyrant. He knows and has objectively proved that he's one of the greatest players to ever touch the sport. It's indisputable. He can't objectively prove that he's not a bad guy, and I think that kinda tears him up inside. In the documentary he says one of his biggest regrets was being represented as a 'role model'. He didn't ask for that pristine image, and it would always inevitably get tarnished. I think he feels like he let a lot of people down by not turning out to be the saint the commercials and ads all painted him as.
Jordan wasn’t expressing a conflict within him. He was clarifying his motives. He does not regret his approach. He stood firm on his philosophy and mentality by saying “this is my mentality…” and “you think this or that about me because you haven’t won anything…” his tears come from his passion for winning and the frustration of feeling he actually has to explain his passion which he believes should be self explanatory.
@@DanielF892 Whether a person is passive or aggressive, we all self-reflect on the consequences of our personality types. This self-reflection is not unique to champions or overachievers like MJ. It's entirely possible to shed tears of frustration because you recognize the majority of the world may NEVER understand your level of commitment and approach to achieving a specific goal. Jordan is isolated because of his high level of competitiveness. This reality breeds frustration... and isolation. Kobe was the same. He was isolated because he was so driven. He didn't have tons of NBA friends with whom he could share a fun pre-game handshake. Anyway, sorry for being wordy. I firmly believe he does not regret his approach. He doubled down on his philosophy by saying, "If you don't want to play that way... don't play that way." And he said, " You might say he [MJ] seems like a tyrant. Well, that's because you haven't won anything." That's doubling down. His response wasn't, "Well, I'm a nice guy once you get to know me" - in hopes of people seeing him in a different light. No, he stood his ground and said you are the problem because you don't know what it takes to achieve this level of greatness. This is why I firmly believe he does not regret his approach.
Bill gates did it zuckerberg did it so did Steve Jobs all the greats were unforgiving tyrants but that’s what it takes to be at the top of your industry ....and they all know that...that’s why They do so much charity now...they know all the throats they had to cut and enemies they had to make to get to the top...It was WAR
It's lonely at the top, and he's at the peak, still...alone. I think the tears come from all of his sacrifices, and he has internal conflicts about what it took to get there but he wouldn’t trade any of it for anything less than what he achieved
Watching this each day has become part of my daily routine. This represents the epitome of putting everything you have into your craft. Inspiring to see an emotional MJ
I think you misunderstood his emotions here. He didnt want to be the bad guy, but it was the only way to be himself and he had to be himself to win. You can see it in his face that if he could have done it a different way he would have.
Not really Tim Duncan won 5 rings and didn't have to curse people out, not knocking M.J. he's my favorite player but his way worked for him and his team. Others won their way, but Jordan's way definitely works.
Serious case of goosebumps when I first saw this scene. Had to rewatch it about 12 times immediately after. I’ve been a Heat fan since ‘91 - Jordan torched Miami more times than I’d like to admit (in all fairness though, who DIDN’T he light up?) - but this man was the epitome of greatness. I regrettably never got to see him play live, in person (tickets ALWAYS used to sell out immediately when they’d come to town), but at least I got to witness him and the Bulls during their dominating run in the 90s. Thank you MJ.
If it wasn't Jordan, the Heat would've definitely won a chip way before 06'. But that's the case for a lot of teams haha. Jordan was like a kryptonite. No one could defeat him.
To be like Kobe, Mike etc. it’s a lonely path, I’m glad they emphasized that through the whole series cause I don’t think people ever understood what it takes to be that great, you can be good, okay, mediocre but to be great the sacrifice you make is knowing that you’re alone in a lot of what you do because not everyone is willing to do what it REALLY takes. Jordan was the greatest ever at handling his emotions but you could see the loneliness in him. 🐐🐐🐐🐐
Remember Tim Duncan won 5 and he was beloved by teammates. So different personalities dictate circumstances. Kobe and Mike are both alpha males and extremely in your face perfectionist. Tim Duncan a laid back nice guy with the same competitiveness and managed to get 5 championships like Kobe. Mike and Kobe way worked extremely well for them, so did Tim's way worked for him. Different personalities and different circumstances equals the same results.
@@donnelladams340 very true, you also need people who can see that greatness down the road if tim had teammates who weren’t so disciplined prior to playing with him you never know maybe his approach would’ve been more of a Jordan, Kobe approach, maybe if lebron played with pop he would have more championships but be excluded but the Mount Rushmore conversation cause his leadership wouldn’t have been tested, it’s crazy how just tiny moves could change the course of all their careers
@@donnelladams340 right, but also remember that they were coached by Pop. Tim didn't have to be nasty when he had a coach like Pop who was demanding of players
Jordan was never selfish and it showed , he pushed his teammates, was an asshole but did it so his teammates can become just as important as he was in winning the championship and not have all the glory for himself . That’s a teammate
Absolutely tremendous stuff. His passion for being the greatest, for winning at any cost, not many humans possess this. Just trying to express it brought him to tears. Fantastic
THIS. WAS THE BEST EPISODE & ENDING OF THIS SERIES.....seeing MJ get teary eyed over some shit over 20 years ago, just because he loves the game that much but was scrutinized for it even when he always had his teammates in mind (wanting them to feel they played their PART in the win)...those guys weren't complaining when they were in locker room spraying champagne around!!!! as a huge fan, I was seriously blown away by this ending
Still come back to this clip. Missing the essential line: "winning has a price. leadership has a price." what a fucking leader. and no truer words have ever been spoken. special to see his reflection captured on film like this, in his old age now. i wonder if he regrets anything. I don't think so, because he knew the price, and it didn't matter. it's who he is, and that's why he won, and you didn't. what a clip
As a now 36 year old Bostonian who was lucky enough to experience the entire Brady-era in New England it was so easy to really “hear” what Jordan meant with this from the first time I watched this scene in the doc….some guys (like Jordan and Brady) literally fuel themselves to live and breathe each day off of the will and desire to compete, win, and be respected at the highest level possible…each would eat their own young for that next ring….it’s really an amazing spectacle to watch an athlete who operates this way, a gift and pleasure for myself to see Brady do it every season for 20 years….guys of this breed are truly relentless in the pursuit of greatness.
what i love most about him in this documentary is when he said he played every game as hard as he could because some fan who never seen him play before was in the stands. i admire how serious he took the game even after all of his achievements. he could have chilled after one or two of those championships. he kept playing as if he never won a championship.
Thank you so much for uploading this part. Easily one of the best if not the best ending to an episode in the documentary. The emotions, the music, MJ's passion all together truly makes this special to watch
What this short clip doesn`t include is the whole story behind this episode. Earlier Michael was told how his teammates saw him as, not a nice guy, and a tyrann and some saying he was too tough on his teammates. I think that affected him and made him tear him up in the end. For those who didn`t watch the whole episode.
But those same teammates also said that when they looked back on it , they got it , appreciated it and it worked , and it’s what they needed to be motivated
Honestly as soon as I finished this episode I looked up the ending on RUclips, this ending made me tear up and it was beautifully done, it shows both sides of how the teammates seen Jordan, and I feel for Jordan because you can’t listen to how someone says something you gotta listen to what they’re saying and he cared about everyone performing at their best
The heart of a champion is not a light switch that goes on and off it's constant. -greg plitt Amazing after all these years he still has the fire to win at all cost. 🐐
They say, "it's lonely at the top". But everyone I see with friends are always complaining about those friends. Friends betray you, disappoint you and they take a lot out of you trying to please them. So being at the "top" doesn't sound so bad.
The thing that made MJ the greatest was that he just straight up didn’t understand why any player wouldn’t or didn’t wanna win as badly as he did. It frustrated him on so many levels that he was pretty much the only person who thought the way he did. And that’s why he was such a pain in the ass to deal with as a teammate. Which is what ultimately made him great. I used to think “Well, okay….if he wanted to be hard on his players then fine. But why did he carry that sadistic, ball-busting demeanor with him off the court? Why couldn’t he just shut it off after games/practice?” That’s what I always thought. But the thing is….you can’t just cherry pick the good qualities MJ had. You had to take the good with the “bad.” Jordan’s ego is what made him great but also made him kind of a bully. You take his ego out of the equation and he’s neither great nor a bully. It’s a package deal with MJ and you can either take it or leave it. There is no cherry picking.
This man is the greatest player/competitor ever. I remember when I was a kid in 1991, he was already being called the greatest basketball player to ever play.. halfway through his career
I only recently started watching basketball and I might have a different 🐐 to others but one thing I can say is, MJ is one of one. The dictionary definition of "Winner" should have his picture under it. He truly embodied what it meant to love your craft and and be obsessed with winning at all cost. Irreplaceable and nonreplicable
Even if you didn't watch the whole thing..this clip here basically shows that mike is the GOAT. And I never grew up watching him (born in 99) But its facts.
Such an amazing clip. The first time I saw it it was a bit overwhelming, it actually took me a few times watching it to even understand what he was saying, which is that by being such a hard-ass he also was able to bring his teammates to new heights - most of these clips are actually his teammates celebrating and being on top of the world, not just Michael. Absolutely amazing stuff. I listened to an interview with the maker of the series, he said (paraphrasing here) that this interview actually was early on in the process of making the documentary, and as soon as this clip was filmed, he knew this was going to be something special, b/c Michael was showing his willingness to bare his emotions and leave it all out there. One of the reasons I even came back to this clip a couple years later is that I just got a video editing tool called Camtasia, and I was learning about quick editing clips, and this clip immediately dropped into my head as an amazingly well edited clip.
Watching this again after watching the speech by matt Damon in Air. Michael is probably the only athlete that until know when listening or watching a clip about him, I still get emotional and cry. Stuff only legends are made of. ❤️
Giving it all, making sacrifices, and not knowing with certainty things will pay off, that’s love. And then you make it and you look back and all those doubts you pushed down to get to the top wash away.
"If you don't want to play that way, don't play that way." Translation: If you don't want to work your hardest to be the best player you can possibly be, I don't know what to tell you. He calls for the break because he can't just make everyone better. He knows that's a waste of basketball and human potential. It breaks his heart. That's why he's the GOAT. It's not just about the rings and moments.
@@stefanogasasira9406 Exactly he put it on the line every night, the only thing I didn't agree with was when Mike said that people who called him a tyrant never won anything. That was a false statement because I read in an interview that Tim Duncan thought that Mike was a tyrant and he won 5 titles. Also Robert Parrish had a run in with Jordan about his treatment of teammates and he won 3 rings. Mike is the greatest and his approach works but just not for everyone.
I don't agree with your analysis. I think he calls for a break because he recalled about his journey and his sacrifices in playing "that way". It must hurt him somewhere to be called a tyrant or a jerk, he's human after all.
I took it as almost a position of loneliness. He’ll, in the beginning he made it VERY clear; nobody truly understands what it’s like to have that mindset and drive. To hear someone come out and say he’s not a nice person is... well it sucks. That’s why he fired back with everything that goes into his style, mentality, personality, etc. He’s justifying his position but he knows he’s misunderstood and with it comes that feeing of loneliness
Speaking selfishly because of what I was fortunate enough to witness I'm sure happy that MJ played that way I ain't ever gonna see the likes of him again...Kobe was close
Success at this level requires a certain level of commitment that one can't imagine, so when faced, it's beyond sanity for them... but that's what is required to be a champion. So you can't have both. Either you train like a champ or you don't. If you don't then you accept the reality of not become one. Simple as that. There's nothing he has to feel guilty about. They all got the choice to refuse and walk away. They shouldn't complain. Also I think some has mix up teammate brotherhood and being professional athletes as a job. MJ had a job, and he delivered it. 6 times.
Hunger + Grit = 6 time world champ. (two three-peats) Man was dialed in every day. As Coach Roy Williams said, “MJ was the only player I’ve ever coached that could turn it on or off, and he never freakin turned it off”… Bulls had no business winning game 6 title 6 against the jazz but He got it done. Boss moves
Which music ist this?
Swann - The Last Dance remix - The sound of silence instrumental (Simon & Garfunkel)
@@mribbon89 Thank you
@@mribbon89 do you know the name of the original composition the piano with the violin part? Because the song you named uses this part as a sample, im pretty sure they just sampled that part, because ive heard that part heing sampled in many movies.
think its called "Vengeance "
@@lukas9623 darude - sandstorm
“Heavy is the head that wears the crown.”
Notice how he’s the first one back on sprints.
Just competitive at everything 😂
Colonel Gibbs absolutely. As a person that played at the collegiate level I can say from first hand experience that winning the “suicide” sprints at the end of practice was the most important un-talked about factor in who was the real team captain/leader. I can then easily surmise that Lebron, Kobe, and MJ earned their right to be the one who is considered to be the man on their respected teams. Much respect 🙌🏾
I want to add that the most important aspect of this clip is when Jordan spouts wisdom in regards to those that call him a “tyrant.” Jordan responds with “you never won anything.” He delineates between a person that’s everyday walking through life as a zombie with the path of least resistance and someone that is a CHAMPION. That’s my friends is FIRE!
I Am King I agree 🙏🏾
I Am King this is the most important clip that summarizes why Michael Jordan is the undisputed GOAT, and more so why he is the greatest champion of all time. If people want to use this against him that only makes this clip more significant. It transcends sports to life philosophy/metaphysics and how one should conduct themselves to be who they want and how to achieve their dreams. Pure alchemy. Powerful.
leadership is lonely. that's why so few succeed.
Could not have said it better. Great comment Mike.
Edwin Robinson yeah.
I guess the adage is, its lonely at the top.
i dont think so. only losers paint success that way
@@aml8256 Actually you will hear this from a lot of CEO's
How did they not end the whole docuseries with this clip? I felt like this was an incredible ending
No it’s better as the ending for the 2nd act.
Indeed! It would be perfect.
Leaves a bad taste in the mouth. Thank God youre not the director.
Agreed. They should have ended the entire series with this.
Easily the best part of the entire series. This is what sports now is missing....
What's great about this scene is that you can feel the conflict within Jordan. He sacrificed loving friendships with his teammates in order to achieve greatness. That was the only way of course but you can feel the emotions creeping in towards the end there about what it took for him to get to the level that he did.
Spot on. I think deep down there are some things he wishes he could take back. Will he ever come out and publicly say it? Probably not. Then again he doesn't have to. What made Michael Jordan is what made Michael Jordan.
Even more than that, he sacrificed a part of his legacy as well. He will be remembered as sort of a bully/tyrant. He knows and has objectively proved that he's one of the greatest players to ever touch the sport. It's indisputable. He can't objectively prove that he's not a bad guy, and I think that kinda tears him up inside. In the documentary he says one of his biggest regrets was being represented as a 'role model'. He didn't ask for that pristine image, and it would always inevitably get tarnished. I think he feels like he let a lot of people down by not turning out to be the saint the commercials and ads all painted him as.
Jordan wasn’t expressing a conflict within him. He was clarifying his motives. He does not regret his approach. He stood firm on his philosophy and mentality by saying “this is my mentality…” and “you think this or that about me because you haven’t won anything…” his tears come from his passion for winning and the frustration of feeling he actually has to explain his passion which he believes should be self explanatory.
@@andregant9980 idk man. It sounds like he is trying to justify his behavior because deep down he knew he was an asshole.
@@DanielF892 Whether a person is passive or aggressive, we all self-reflect on the consequences of our personality types. This self-reflection is not unique to champions or overachievers like MJ. It's entirely possible to shed tears of frustration because you recognize the majority of the world may NEVER understand your level of commitment and approach to achieving a specific goal. Jordan is isolated because of his high level of competitiveness. This reality breeds frustration... and isolation. Kobe was the same. He was isolated because he was so driven. He didn't have tons of NBA friends with whom he could share a fun pre-game handshake. Anyway, sorry for being wordy. I firmly believe he does not regret his approach. He doubled down on his philosophy by saying, "If you don't want to play that way... don't play that way." And he said, " You might say he [MJ] seems like a tyrant. Well, that's because you haven't won anything." That's doubling down. His response wasn't, "Well, I'm a nice guy once you get to know me" - in hopes of people seeing him in a different light. No, he stood his ground and said you are the problem because you don't know what it takes to achieve this level of greatness. This is why I firmly believe he does not regret his approach.
He cried because he knew he wasn't nice and he felt bad but when it comes to being on top, you have to do whatever it takes.
He had too much self confidence in himself he had to always win at life
Bill gates did it zuckerberg did it so did Steve Jobs all the greats were unforgiving tyrants but that’s what it takes to be at the top of your industry ....and they all know that...that’s why They do so much charity now...they know all the throats they had to cut and enemies they had to make to get to the top...It was WAR
@@bsp5689
Lol
Hahaha thats wasnt the reason why he cried you dumbf**k
@@SynBlades
Do you think MJ is the type of guy to feel bad?? Lmao. Thats not his personality. He could give 2 fucks.
The Greatest Athlete of All Time.
Of all time.
No more debates.
Without question.
no
Kyron Samuels yes
Basketball player maybe (still debatable). But athlete??? Come on cuh
It's lonely at the top, and he's at the peak, still...alone. I think the tears come from all of his sacrifices, and he has internal conflicts about what it took to get there but he wouldn’t trade any of it for anything less than what he achieved
Watching this each day has become part of my daily routine. This represents the epitome of putting everything you have into your craft. Inspiring to see an emotional MJ
Wow me too
@@da5families One of the most motivating things i've ever heard.
I think you misunderstood his emotions here. He didnt want to be the bad guy, but it was the only way to be himself and he had to be himself to win. You can see it in his face that if he could have done it a different way he would have.
Feralz no I don’t think he would have cause that’s what won him 6 rings. But nobody likes being disliked I think that’s where the emotions come from.
@@fidelproductions03 - Hence, the price Michael mentioned earlier.
The dislikes are from the people who never won anything
6 people don't want to play that way...........
Not really Tim Duncan won 5 rings and didn't have to curse people out, not knocking M.J. he's my favorite player but his way worked for him and his team. Others won their way, but Jordan's way definitely works.
I saw the dislikes, that's when it became personal to me
Donnell Adams I’m sure pop was a dick to everyone on the spurs
@@donnelladams340 duncan doesnt have 6 tho
I consider him as the greatest athlete ever, he has the tenacity that no other athlete have ever had
Thomas Edward Patrick Brady Jr.?
MJ better@@rickyj1250
@@rickyj1250 Even Tom Brady will tell you MJ is goat
In collective sports for sure...
Serious case of goosebumps when I first saw this scene. Had to rewatch it about 12 times immediately after. I’ve been a Heat fan since ‘91 - Jordan torched Miami more times than I’d like to admit (in all fairness though, who DIDN’T he light up?) - but this man was the epitome of greatness. I regrettably never got to see him play live, in person (tickets ALWAYS used to sell out immediately when they’d come to town), but at least I got to witness him and the Bulls during their dominating run in the 90s.
Thank you MJ.
Wow I’m not the only one man I replayed this over probably two dozen times. Motivating
@@da5families I would literally run through a brick wall after watching this
If it wasn't Jordan, the Heat would've definitely won a chip way before 06'. But that's the case for a lot of teams haha. Jordan was like a kryptonite. No one could defeat him.
A scene that is pure magic, powerful and real.
Oh yeah as a young magic fan I hated the Bulls, 30 years later tho and MJ is like my personal hero now lol
To be like Kobe, Mike etc. it’s a lonely path, I’m glad they emphasized that through the whole series cause I don’t think people ever understood what it takes to be that great, you can be good, okay, mediocre but to be great the sacrifice you make is knowing that you’re alone in a lot of what you do because not everyone is willing to do what it REALLY takes. Jordan was the greatest ever at handling his emotions but you could see the loneliness in him. 🐐🐐🐐🐐
Remember Tim Duncan won 5 and he was beloved by teammates. So different personalities dictate circumstances. Kobe and Mike are both alpha males and extremely in your face perfectionist. Tim Duncan a laid back nice guy with the same competitiveness and managed to get 5 championships like Kobe. Mike and Kobe way worked extremely well for them, so did Tim's way worked for him. Different personalities and different circumstances equals the same results.
6 championships. So Mikes way worked.
@@donnelladams340 very true, you also need people who can see that greatness down the road if tim had teammates who weren’t so disciplined prior to playing with him you never know maybe his approach would’ve been more of a Jordan, Kobe approach, maybe if lebron played with pop he would have more championships but be excluded but the Mount Rushmore conversation cause his leadership wouldn’t have been tested, it’s crazy how just tiny moves could change the course of all their careers
I felt this.
@@donnelladams340 right, but also remember that they were coached by Pop. Tim didn't have to be nasty when he had a coach like Pop who was demanding of players
3 years still this clip is motivating
Might be the greatest scene of any documentary ever. Straight up goosebumps.
seriously, i'm going to watch this 1000 more times
Am like in 20 so far..
For whatever reason this scene made me shed a tear
This documentary deserves a Larry O'Brien trophy, a ring for each episode and an Oscar . Jordan is the GOAT
Jordan was never selfish and it showed , he pushed his teammates, was an asshole but did it so his teammates can become just as important as he was in winning the championship and not have all the glory for himself . That’s a teammate
Every time I face a setback I watch this - super motivating stuff from the 🐐
Absolutely tremendous stuff. His passion for being the greatest, for winning at any cost, not many humans possess this. Just trying to express it brought him to tears. Fantastic
Steve Jobs comes to mind.
Tiger woods, Christiano Ronaldo
All the greats have similar characteristics.
THIS. WAS THE BEST EPISODE & ENDING OF THIS SERIES.....seeing MJ get teary eyed over some shit over 20 years ago, just because he loves the game that much but was scrutinized for it even when he always had his teammates in mind (wanting them to feel they played their PART in the win)...those guys weren't complaining when they were in locker room spraying champagne around!!!! as a huge fan, I was seriously blown away by this ending
What episode was this?
@@steveschall9 this was the end of episode 7 aka one of the best episodes!
Still come back to this clip. Missing the essential line: "winning has a price. leadership has a price." what a fucking leader. and no truer words have ever been spoken. special to see his reflection captured on film like this, in his old age now. i wonder if he regrets anything. I don't think so, because he knew the price, and it didn't matter. it's who he is, and that's why he won, and you didn't. what a clip
Nothing valuable is easy-won. Everything invaluable is hard-fought. Be willing to die for what you are passionate for. Thanks MJ.
I loved this scene. So intense, yet so passionate.
He teared up off pure passion
Yes.
That break at the end was MJ calling his own shot!!! Legendary!!!
As a now 36 year old Bostonian who was lucky enough to experience the entire Brady-era in New England it was so easy to really “hear” what Jordan meant with this from the first time I watched this scene in the doc….some guys (like Jordan and Brady) literally fuel themselves to live and breathe each day off of the will and desire to compete, win, and be respected at the highest level possible…each would eat their own young for that next ring….it’s really an amazing spectacle to watch an athlete who operates this way, a gift and pleasure for myself to see Brady do it every season for 20 years….guys of this breed are truly relentless in the pursuit of greatness.
I’ll play this in the Call of Duty group chat when they question why I curse them out
“ Y’all call me a tyrant , but that’s because y’all never won anything “ 😂😂😂
if you don’t want to play that way then don’t play that way 😅
😂😂😂
What?video games is different smh 🤦
what i love most about him in this documentary is when he said he played every game as hard as he could because some fan who never seen him play before was in the stands. i admire how serious he took the game even after all of his achievements. he could have chilled after one or two of those championships. he kept playing as if he never won a championship.
I still hold my ticket stubs from the three times I saw him play. Twice in 96 🙌🏽
Thank you so much for uploading this part. Easily one of the best if not the best ending to an episode in the documentary. The emotions, the music, MJ's passion all together truly makes this special to watch
I watch this video everyday
What this short clip doesn`t include is the whole story behind this episode. Earlier Michael was told how his teammates saw him as, not a nice guy, and a tyrann and some saying he was too tough on his teammates. I think that affected him and made him tear him up in the end. For those who didn`t watch the whole episode.
But those same teammates also said that when they looked back on it , they got it , appreciated it and it worked , and it’s what they needed to be motivated
Honestly as soon as I finished this episode I looked up the ending on RUclips, this ending made me tear up and it was beautifully done, it shows both sides of how the teammates seen Jordan, and I feel for Jordan because you can’t listen to how someone says something you gotta listen to what they’re saying and he cared about everyone performing at their best
This scene has been part of my morning motivational routine every morning while brushing my teeth. GOAT...
He didn’t ask his teammates to do anything nor sacrifice anything that he himself wasn’t already doing or sacrificing.
He lead by example.
THIS sums up why he is the 🐐. Being willing to pay the price & carry the mental/emotional burden that others can't or won't.
People who have achieved something out of nothing, and knows what it takes, understand those emotions and tears.
real shit
Was looking for this scene, thanks!
No matter how many times I watch the last two mins of ep 7 I get choked up
The heart of a champion is not a light switch that goes on and off it's constant.
-greg plitt
Amazing after all these years he still has the fire to win at all cost. 🐐
The music is perfect for this. Gets you fired up to do anything you set your mind to do
This is so crazy, this montage and memories might actually be going through MJs head before he passes away. The Goat
A team of Legends. They changed the basketball landscape forever.
There will be never be another MJ and Ronaldo. Elite mentalities . Elite players . 🐐🐐💯💯.
They say, "it's lonely at the top". But everyone I see with friends are always complaining about those friends. Friends betray you, disappoint you and they take a lot out of you trying to please them. So being at the "top" doesn't sound so bad.
Leadership, integrity and manhood. This is missing today, in sports and elsewhere.
Best sequence of 2020
The words, the edition, everything's perfect, already history.. Thanks MJ
This scene gives me goosebumps always 😮
Time to time it's nice see our heroes like humans being... Memorable!!
The thing that made MJ the greatest was that he just straight up didn’t understand why any player wouldn’t or didn’t wanna win as badly as he did. It frustrated him on so many levels that he was pretty much the only person who thought the way he did. And that’s why he was such a pain in the ass to deal with as a teammate. Which is what ultimately made him great.
I used to think “Well, okay….if he wanted to be hard on his players then fine. But why did he carry that sadistic, ball-busting demeanor with him off the court? Why couldn’t he just shut it off after games/practice?” That’s what I always thought. But the thing is….you can’t just cherry pick the good qualities MJ had. You had to take the good with the “bad.” Jordan’s ego is what made him great but also made him kind of a bully. You take his ego out of the equation and he’s neither great nor a bully. It’s a package deal with MJ and you can either take it or leave it. There is no cherry picking.
This literally gives you chills lol
the best scene in the whole documentary. showed me how Jordan really had to put everything aside to WIN
How can you not watch this and not get inspired to be great ? Speechless should’ve been the ending
❤❤❤..well theres your answer to anything in life...thank u Michael
This man is the greatest player/competitor ever. I remember when I was a kid in 1991, he was already being called the greatest basketball player to ever play.. halfway through his career
The emotion Michael shows in this clip sums up why he was the goat it was his passion for basketball that made him great
I only recently started watching basketball and I might have a different 🐐 to others but one thing I can say is, MJ is one of one. The dictionary definition of "Winner" should have his picture under it. He truly embodied what it meant to love your craft and and be obsessed with winning at all cost. Irreplaceable and nonreplicable
Even if you didn't watch the whole thing..this clip here basically shows that mike is the GOAT. And I never grew up watching him (born in 99)
But its facts.
Seeing this just reminded me of Kobe, and how it feels like he has the same mentality as MJ. The feels...
MJ said he never told a teammate to do something he himself wouldn't do
This clip is so inspirational and the music just perfectly ties everything together
Such an amazing clip. The first time I saw it it was a bit overwhelming, it actually took me a few times watching it to even understand what he was saying, which is that by being such a hard-ass he also was able to bring his teammates to new heights - most of these clips are actually his teammates celebrating and being on top of the world, not just Michael. Absolutely amazing stuff.
I listened to an interview with the maker of the series, he said (paraphrasing here) that this interview actually was early on in the process of making the documentary, and as soon as this clip was filmed, he knew this was going to be something special, b/c Michael was showing his willingness to bare his emotions and leave it all out there.
One of the reasons I even came back to this clip a couple years later is that I just got a video editing tool called Camtasia, and I was learning about quick editing clips, and this clip immediately dropped into my head as an amazingly well edited clip.
I can only see him and Kobe like this.
Goat!! This is what it takes to be the GOAT, like it or not!
Best way to explain the reality of the success and its cost
Watching this again after watching the speech by matt Damon in Air. Michael is probably the only athlete that until know when listening or watching a clip about him, I still get emotional and cry. Stuff only legends are made of. ❤️
For me this is the ending of the series as I have watched this multiple times after finishing series.
The best minute of the whole series. This shows the true greatness of the man. Greatness comes at a cost and he paid it daily...
Best part of the doc is that noise he makes. "He might've been a tyrant . . UHNNDFLKJDF . . well that's you"
Jordan mentality. GOAT mentality.
Sheeeit
Giving it all, making sacrifices, and not knowing with certainty things will pay off, that’s love. And then you make it and you look back and all those doubts you pushed down to get to the top wash away.
One of the best clips from the entire series!
Best scene in the series
Even Jerry K back there getting his groove on!
"Hardships becomes a part of the routine, when achievement is the quest" ...
now that's a quote
Chills every time “ I wanted them to win as well”🔥
Was looking for this, thanks! Best part of chapter 7.
Rare. Thats all i can say is rare. You dont a lotta people with tge mental strength that MJ has
Best like ever “you don’t want to play that way….,then don’t play”
Anybody who hates losing feels MJ.
This should have been the ending scene to the documentary...I felt every bit of it..
0:38
Look at his disfigured right index finger
From his cigar cutter accident during the 98 off season.
I cry every time I watch this scene.
Yep, we watched 96-98 sesons live, it was crazy
Goosebumps
I’m glad I’m not the only one 🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️🤧💯
"If you don't want to play that way, don't play that way."
Translation: If you don't want to work your hardest to be the best player you can possibly be, I don't know what to tell you.
He calls for the break because he can't just make everyone better. He knows that's a waste of basketball and human potential. It breaks his heart.
That's why he's the GOAT. It's not just about the rings and moments.
true, he never asked anyone to do something that he didn’t do. he was willing become the “bad guy” for the team to win. winning pays a price🐐
@@stefanogasasira9406 Exactly he put it on the line every night, the only thing I didn't agree with was when Mike said that people who called him a tyrant never won anything. That was a false statement because I read in an interview that Tim Duncan thought that Mike was a tyrant and he won 5 titles. Also Robert Parrish had a run in with Jordan about his treatment of teammates and he won 3 rings. Mike is the greatest and his approach works but just not for everyone.
I don't agree with your analysis. I think he calls for a break because he recalled about his journey and his sacrifices in playing "that way". It must hurt him somewhere to be called a tyrant or a jerk, he's human after all.
I took it as almost a position of loneliness. He’ll, in the beginning he made it VERY clear; nobody truly understands what it’s like to have that mindset and drive. To hear someone come out and say he’s not a nice person is... well it sucks. That’s why he fired back with everything that goes into his style, mentality, personality, etc. He’s justifying his position but he knows he’s misunderstood and with it comes that feeing of loneliness
Legit making the GOAT explain himself because he was too successful in his goals and as a leader.
Wished this was produced earlier. It's so inspiring!
Had to come back to this because I teared up thinking about how bad I wanna win. So I thought about this moment.
Thanks for the upload 🤗🤗
Speaking selfishly because of what I was fortunate enough to witness I'm sure happy that MJ played that way
I ain't ever gonna see the likes of him again...Kobe was close
Right, I became a basketball champion at 15 years old. I can relate to him.
Elite mentality .Elite player . GOAT FASHO 🐐🐐
Success at this level requires a certain level of commitment that one can't imagine, so when faced, it's beyond sanity for them... but that's what is required to be a champion. So you can't have both. Either you train like a champ or you don't. If you don't then you accept the reality of not become one. Simple as that. There's nothing he has to feel guilty about. They all got the choice to refuse and walk away. They shouldn't complain. Also I think some has mix up teammate brotherhood and being professional athletes as a job. MJ had a job, and he delivered it. 6 times.
How involve Michael Jordan still is with basketball and winning.. This short scene shows and defines his grind for greatness.
I wanted to win but I wanted them to win and be a part as well
and that's why he is the GREATEST OF ALL TIME
This scene got me going. Favorite part from the whole show.
beautiful scene
Hunger + Grit = 6 time world champ. (two three-peats) Man was dialed in every day. As Coach Roy Williams said, “MJ was the only player I’ve ever coached that could turn it on or off, and he never freakin turned it off”… Bulls had no business winning game 6 title 6 against the jazz but He got it done. Boss moves