“I seen Michael Jordan play before I came to the Bulls, he was a horrible player” – Scottie Pippen says Michael Jordan only cared about stats until Phil Jackson forced him to change
The partnership of Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen was the nucleus of the Chicago Bulls dynasty, a two-man wrecking crew that delivered six championships and turned a franchise into a global brand. But beneath the banners and behind the documentaries, tension always simmered.
Pippen pulled back the curtain, casting Jordan not as the ultimate team player but as someone obsessed with personal glory until team structure reined him in.
One-man team
Jordan came into a Chicago side without any pedigree whatsoever in the Eastern Conference. He wanted to elevate the team all by himself. Pippen called that out.
“Our game is a team game and one player can’t do it,” Pippen said. “I seen Michael Jordan play before I came to the Bulls; he was a horrible player. He was horrible to play with. He was all one-on-one. He’s shooting bad shots and all of a sudden, we become a team and we started winning and everybody forgot who he was.”
Before Pippen arrived in 1987, Jordan was already a star, a scoring machine averaging 37.1 points per game during the 1986–87 season. But the Bulls were going nowhere. In his first three seasons, Jordan’s team never won more than 38 games. They were routinely bounced in the first round of the playoffs, including back-to-back sweeps at the hands of the Larry Bird-led Boston Celtics.
Jordan dazzled individually, but the Bulls weren’t contending for anything. Pippen, meanwhile, came into the league as a lanky, high-IQ forward out of Central Arkansas, groomed not just to complement Jordan’s scoring but to elevate the entire roster’s flow.
His arrival shifted the tempo. Defensive switches improved. Ball movement took precedence. The offense no longer stopped when Jordan had the ball. It evolved.
Jordan as a team player
Between 1984 and 1987, Jordan was the league’s darling — but also its most isolated superstar. He led the NBA in field goal attempts multiple times before Pippen’s emergence. His style, while electrifying, rarely translated to playoff success. And it wasn’t until the late ’80s — when coach Doug Collins was replaced by Phil Jackson — that the shift Pippen alluded to truly took shape.
“He was a player that winning wasn’t at the top of his category; it was scoring, going after scoring titles,” Pippen said of Jordan. “It wasn’t until Phil Jackson showed up that kind of changed the menu a little bit.”
Coach Jackson’s arrival in 1989 introduced a basketball ideology that redefined the Bulls’ hierarchy. The triangle offense, developed by assistant coach Tex Winter and embraced by Jackson, prioritized movement, trust, spacing — and sacrifice. Under this system, Jordan’s usage rate dipped slightly, but his efficiency skyrocketed. More importantly, the team grew lethal.
From 1990 to 1993, the Bulls became the most formidable force in basketball. During this span, Jordan still averaged over 30 points per game, but the load was shared more evenly. Pippen became a perennial All-Star. Role players like Horace Grant, John Paxson and B.J. Armstrong found their places in the machine.
Yet the way Pippen frames it, this evolution didn’t happen organically. It wasn’t some natural maturity arc for Jordan. It was forced. Nudged along by coaching, by structure and by the presence of someone like Pippen, who refused to be reduced to a footnote.
By the time the Bulls completed their first three-peat in 1993, Jordan had transformed into a winner. However, Pippen argues that transformation began not with Jordan’s will but with circumstance.