April 16, 2003
By The Associated Press
Feb. 17, 1963 - Born in Brooklyn, N.Y.
March 29, 1982 - As a freshman at North Carolina, hits game-winning basket
for Tar Heels 63-62 win in the NCAA championship game against Georgetown.
1982-83 - AP All-America first team. Sporting News College Player of the
Year. Sporting News All-America first team.
1983-84 - AP All-America first team. AP College Player of the Year. Sporting
News College Player of the Year. Sporting News All-America first team. Member
of gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic basketball team.
Sept. 12, 1984 - Bulls No. 1 draft choice, chosen third overall, behind
Hakeem Olajuwon and Sam Bowie.
1984-85 - NBA Rookie of the Year after averaging 28.2 points.
1985-86 - Missed 64 games with broken foot.
April 20, 1986 - Scores playoff-record 63 points in a first-round game
against Boston.
1986-87 - Slam Dunk Champion. Scores 3,041 points, the third highest total
in NBA history. Averages 37.1 points to win first of seven straight NBA scoring
titles. Named All-NBA first team for first of seven straight seasons.
Jan. 29, 1988 - Has 10 steals in game against New Jersey.
May 1, 1988 - Scores 55 points in playoff victory against Cleveland.
1987-88 - Slam Dunk Champion. Averages 35 points. Regular-season MVP.
Defensive Player of the Year. All-Star Game MVP. Named NBA All-Defensive first
team for first of six straight years.
March 24, 1989 - Has 17 assists in game against Portland.
May 9, 1989 - Has a triple-double (34 points, 10 rebounds, 12 assists) in a
playoff game against New York.
1988-89 - Averages 32.5 points.
March 28, 1990 - Scores career-best 69 points against Cleveland.
1989-90 - Averages 33.6 points.
1990-91 - Averages 31.5 points. Regular-season MVP. NBA Finals MVP. Leads
ulls to first NBA championship.
June 3, 1992 - Scores an NBA Finals record 35 first-half points against
Portland in Game 1.
1991-92 - Averages 30.1 points. Regular season MVP. NBA Finals MVP for the
second straight year, the first player so honored. Scores playoff record 135
points (45 ppg) in leading the Bulls to a three-game sweep of Miami in the
first round. Included is a 56-point performance, his fifth career game of at
least 50 points in the playoffs. Leads Bulls to NBA championship. Member of
gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic basketball team.
June 2, 1993 - Has a triple-double (29 points, 10 rebounds, 14 assists) in
playoff game against New York.
June 20, 1993 - Highest scoring average in NBA Finals history, 41.0 points
against Phoenix, as Bulls win third straight title, in six games. Becomes first
player named Finals MVP three years in a row.
1992-1993 - Averages 32.6 points to tie Wilt Chamberlain's NBA record of
seven straight scoring titles. Scores his 20,000th point, becoming the second
fastest to reach the mark.
Aug. 3, 1993 - The body of Jordan's father, James, is found in South
Carolina. Authorities determine he was killed July 23 in North Carolina. Two
men are eventually convicted in the murder.
Oct. 6, 1993 - Jordan stuns the basketball world by retiring, saying he has
nothing left to prove in basketball.
December 1993 - Jordan begins playing baseball, eyeing a tryout with the
Chicago White Sox.
Feb. 7, 1994 - Jordan signs free-agent contract with the White Sox, saying
he is not afraid to fail. The team invites him to spring training.
March 31, 1994 - White Sox assign Jordan to the Class AA Birmingham Barons
of the Southern League.
April 8, 1994 - Jordan starts his first pro baseball game, playing right
field. For the season, Jordan bats .202 with 51 RBIs, 30 stolen bases and 114
strikeouts in 127 games. His presence boosts attendance throughout the Southern
League.
Sept. 9, 1994 - Jordan scores 52 points in a charity basketball game set up
by former Bulls teammate Scottie Pippen. After the game - the last one at
Chicago Stadium - Jordan kneels and kisses the center of the floor.
Sept.-Nov. 1994 - Jordan plays for the Scottsdale Scorpions of Arizona Fall
League, batting .252 in 35 games.
Nov. 1, 1994 - Bulls retire Jordan's No. 23 and unveil a statue of him in
front of the United Center.
Feb. 17, 1995 - Jordan turns 32 in Sarasota, Fla., as the White Sox open
spring training.
March 2, 1995 - Jordan leaves White Sox spring training camp after the team
is split into those who will play exhibition games and those who won't. Jordan
had vowed earlier to stay out of the middle of the baseball strike.
March 7-9, 1995 - Jordan's appearances at the Bulls' training facility
prompt speculation he will return to basketball.
March 18, 1995 - Jordan and the Bulls announce he will rejoin the team and
play in the next day's nationally televised game against the Pacers in
Indianapolis.
March 19, 1995 - Wearing No. 45, the same number he wore for the Barons and
as a basketball player in junior high school, Jordan plays 38 minutes, scoring
19 points on 7-for-28 shooting with six rebounds and six assists in Chicago's
103-96 overtime loss to Indiana.
March 28, 1995 - In his fifth game back, Jordan scores 55 points on
21-for-37 shooting in Chicago's 113-111 victory at New York.
May 18, 1995 - Jordan and the Bulls are knocked out of the playoffs by the
Orlando Magic in the Eastern Conference semifinals. It is the first time a
Jordan-led Chicago team is bounced from the playoffs since 1989-90.
Oct. 29, 1996 - Jordan is named as a member of NBA's 50 greatest players.
June 16, 1996 - Jordan leads Chicago over Seattle in the NBA Finals in his
first full season back since retirement. The Bulls win an NBA season-record 72
games and Jordan wins his eighth scoring title, is named regular season MVP,
NBA Finals MVP and All-Star Game MVP.
Nov. 30, 1996 - Jordan scores 25,000th career point in San Antonio.
March 18, 1997 - Jordan has 18 rebounds in a game against Seattle.
June 13, 1997 - Jordan and the Bulls win their second straight NBA title -
fifth overall - by defeating Utah in six games.
1996-97 - Jordan wins his second consecutive scoring title, ninth overall,
and is named NBA Finals MVP for the second straight season.
March 27, 1998 - The largest crowd in NBA history - 62,046 - shows up at the
Georgia Dome. Jordan scores 34 points in Chicago's 89-74 win over Atlanta.
April 3, 1998 - Jordan scores 41 points against Minnesota to become the
third player in NBA history to reach 29,000 points. The others are Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar and Wilt Chamberlain.
June 14, 1998 - Jordan steals the ball from Karl Malone and makes the
championship-winning shot against Utah in Game 6. Chicago wins its third
straight NBA title and sixth in eight years. It is the second time in the
decade the Bulls won three consecutive titles.
1997-98 - Jordan wins his third straight scoring title and 10th of his
career. Named regular season MVP, NBA Finals MVP and All-Star Game MVP.
Jan. 13, 1999 - Officially announces his retirement from the NBA, saying he
is "99.9 percent" sure he would never return.
Dec. 26, 1999 - Named Athlete of the Century by ESPN, beating out Babe
Ruth..
Jan. 19, 2000 - Joins the Washington Wizards as part-owner and president of
basketball operations. Jordan also acquires an ownership stake in the
Washington Capitals.
Sept. 10, 2001 - Says he is nearing a decision on a comeback, strongly
hinting he will return. "I'm doing it for the love of the game. Nothing
else," he said.
Sept. 25, 2001 - Jordan makes return official, agreeing to a two-year deal
to play for the Wizards.
Oct. 30, 2001 - Jordan in first regular season game since coming out of
retirement, scored 19 points as the Washington Wizards lose to the New York
Knicks 93-91 at Madison Square Garden.
Nov. 28, 2002 - Jordan announces he will retire - for the third time - at
the end of the season.
April 16, 2003 - Jordan plays his final game, scoring 15 points in
Washington's 107-87 loss at Philadelphia.