Michael Jordan HUMILIATES Anthony Edwards For Calling Larry Bird “Unskilled”

The modern NBA is currently witnessing a staggering display of historical illiteracy and unearned arrogance, personified by Anthony Edwards’ recent dismissal of the 1980s and 90s as an era devoid of “skill.” For a player who admitted he has never actually watched the footage, Edwards’ claim that Michael Jordan was the only skilled player of his generation isn’t just an opinion—it is a confession of ignorance. The irony is as thick as it is pathetic: while Edwards sits on a podcast trashing the architects of the league, he remains a player who, by Jordan’s own investigation, cannot consistently solve a basic double team.

The hypocrisy of this “new school” mentality is exactly what Michael Jordan means when he says the game is being “cheated.” Today’s stars are handed global brands, max contracts, and signature logos before they have ever felt the weight of a championship trophy or mastered the fundamental geometry of the court. Edwards has the rewards of a legend without the resume of a winner, leading to a toxic culture where success is given rather than earned. Jordan didn’t launch “Brand Jordan” until he had spent years being physically dismantled by the Pistons and the Celtics; he put the work first and let the brand evolve from the wreckage of his opponents.

To call a man like Larry Bird “unskilled” is to reveal that you don’t actually understand what basketball skill is. Bird didn’t just play the game; he conducted it. There are countless accounts of Bird telling elite defenders exactly where he was going to shoot from, exactly how many seconds he was going to leave on the clock, and then executing the play to their faces while they stood helpless. That isn’t just talent; it is a level of psychological and physical mastery that Edwards—who struggles with the “simple” tactical respect of a double team—has yet to even glimpse.

Kevin Garnett hit the nail on the head when he reminded this generation that twenty years ago, they wouldn’t have survived the physicality or the efficiency requirements of the era. The “love of the game” clause in Jordan’s contract, which allowed him to play pickup ball at his own risk because he simply couldn’t stay away from a hoop, stands in stark contrast to a generation that views the court as a backdrop for content creation. Jordan isn’t being a “bitter old head” by speaking out; he is fulfilling a fundamental obligation to protect the standard of the game from being diluted by those who want the glory without the grit. There will never be another Larry Bird, and if the current trajectory continues, there may never be another era where the work actually comes before the hype.