
Michael Jordan
Photo by: Bob Donnan
Michael Jordan Carolina Basketball Facts
April 19, 2020 | Men's Basketball
Michael Jordan was part of a five-player freshman class in 1981-82 that included John Brownlee of Fort Worth, Texas; Warren Martin of Axton, Va.; Lynwood Robinson of Mt. Olive, N.C.; and Buzz Peterson of Asheville, N.C.
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Jordan was listed as Mike Jordan in the 1981-82 media guide and was introduced to the crowd in his first game against Kansas as freshman guard Mike Jordan.
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Jordan named Walter Davis and Magic Johnson as his favorite players.
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The last player to wear No. 23 prior to Jordan was Ged Doughton, a guard from Winston-Salem, N.C., who played for Carolina from 1975-79.
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A Raleigh Times column the day after the 1981 NCAA championship game identified Jordan as Michael "Magic" Jordan among the next season's incoming freshmen.
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Jordan was the fourth freshman to start his first college game for head coach Dean Smith, following Phil Ford, Mike O'Koren and James Worthy.
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Jordan scored 12 points against Kansas in Charlotte on Nov. 28, 1981, in his first game as a Tar Heel.
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Carolina was ranked No. 1 in the nation in the Associated Press poll in 57 of his 101 games as a Tar Heel.
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Jordan's teams went 11-1 against top-10 opponents.
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Carolina was not ranked in the top 20 in the AP poll in only two of his 101 games (against Texas-Pan America and Chattanooga in December 1982).
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Carolina finished his three seasons ranked No. 1 in 1981-82, No. 8 in 1982-83 and No. 1 in 1983-84.
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Jordan scored in double figures in 90 of 101 games (63 of 67 games as a sophomore and junior).
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Scored a career-high 39 points against Georgia Tech on Jan. 29, 1983.
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Made a career-high 13 field goals against Duke as a sophomore and Chattanooga as a junior.
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The most points he scored against any team were 159 against Duke. He scored 19-11-32-32-18-25-22 in his seven games against the Blue Devils (22.7 ppg).
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Jordan's 149 points against Georgia Tech are the most by any Tar Heel ever against the Yellow Jackets.
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Jordan led the team in scoring as a sophomore and junior. As a freshman, he was the third-leading scorer behind junior James Worthy and sophomore Sam Perkins.
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Jordan's 16 points against Georgetown in 1982 are the most by a Tar Heel freshman in a national championship game.
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Jordan led Carolina with nine rebounds in the 1982 NCAA title game vs. the Hoyas.
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Jordan is one of six Tar Heel players who were elected to the Naismith Hall of Fame as a player with Billy Cunningham, Bob McAdoo, James Worthy, Charlie Scott and Bobby Jones.
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ESPN named Jordan the Greatest Athlete of the 20th Century. He was one of 11 basketball players in the top 100. The next highest-ranked basketball player was Wilt Chamberlain at No. 13.
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Jordan (1984) is one of four Tar Heels who earned consensus National Player of the Year honors with Phil Ford (1978), Antawn Jamison (1998) and Tyler Hansbrough (2008).
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Jordan is one of two Tar Heels to win National Player of the Year honors in two seasons (1983 and 1984). George Glamack is the other (1940 and 1941).
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Jordan is one of six Tar Heels who earned consensus first-team All-America honors in two or more seasons.
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In 2004, a blue-ribbon panel selected Jordan as the Greatest Male Athlete in the first 50 years of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Greatest Female Athlete was Carolina soccer player Mia Hamm.
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Jordan was first-team All-ACC in 1983 and 1984. The only other player to earn first-team All-ACC honors in those seasons was his Tar Heel teammate, Sam Perkins.
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Jordan is one of nine Tar Heels to win ACC Rookie of the Year honors.
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Jordan scored 1,788 points as a Tar Heel (17.7 per game).
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He averaged 20.0 points as a sophomore and 19.6 as a junior.
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Jordan shot 44.7 percent from three-point range in 1982-83 when the ACC experimented for that one season with a 17-feet, 9-inch line.
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Carolina went 88-13 overall and 42-4 in ACC regular-season play in Jordan's three seasons.
Carolina was unbeaten against two ACC teams in Jordan's three seasons – 8-0 vs. Clemson and 7-0 vs. Georgia Tech.
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Jordan led Team USA to a gold medal in the 1984 Summer Olympics after his junior season at Carolina. He led Team USA in scoring with 137 points in eight games (17.1 ppg), including a game-high 20 points in the gold medal game against Spain.
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Jordan's coaches at UNC included head coach Dean Smith and assistant coaches Bill Guthridge, Eddie Fogler and Roy Williams. All four earned National Coach of the Year honors as head coaches.
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Jordan was listed as Mike Jordan in the 1981-82 media guide and was introduced to the crowd in his first game against Kansas as freshman guard Mike Jordan.
Â
Jordan named Walter Davis and Magic Johnson as his favorite players.
Â
The last player to wear No. 23 prior to Jordan was Ged Doughton, a guard from Winston-Salem, N.C., who played for Carolina from 1975-79.
Â
A Raleigh Times column the day after the 1981 NCAA championship game identified Jordan as Michael "Magic" Jordan among the next season's incoming freshmen.
Â
Jordan was the fourth freshman to start his first college game for head coach Dean Smith, following Phil Ford, Mike O'Koren and James Worthy.
Â
Jordan scored 12 points against Kansas in Charlotte on Nov. 28, 1981, in his first game as a Tar Heel.
Â
Carolina was ranked No. 1 in the nation in the Associated Press poll in 57 of his 101 games as a Tar Heel.
Â
Jordan's teams went 11-1 against top-10 opponents.
Â
Carolina was not ranked in the top 20 in the AP poll in only two of his 101 games (against Texas-Pan America and Chattanooga in December 1982).
Â
Carolina finished his three seasons ranked No. 1 in 1981-82, No. 8 in 1982-83 and No. 1 in 1983-84.
Â
Jordan scored in double figures in 90 of 101 games (63 of 67 games as a sophomore and junior).
Â
Scored a career-high 39 points against Georgia Tech on Jan. 29, 1983.
Â
Made a career-high 13 field goals against Duke as a sophomore and Chattanooga as a junior.
Â
The most points he scored against any team were 159 against Duke. He scored 19-11-32-32-18-25-22 in his seven games against the Blue Devils (22.7 ppg).
Â
Jordan's 149 points against Georgia Tech are the most by any Tar Heel ever against the Yellow Jackets.
Â
Jordan led the team in scoring as a sophomore and junior. As a freshman, he was the third-leading scorer behind junior James Worthy and sophomore Sam Perkins.
Â
Jordan's 16 points against Georgetown in 1982 are the most by a Tar Heel freshman in a national championship game.
Â
Jordan led Carolina with nine rebounds in the 1982 NCAA title game vs. the Hoyas.
Â
Jordan is one of six Tar Heel players who were elected to the Naismith Hall of Fame as a player with Billy Cunningham, Bob McAdoo, James Worthy, Charlie Scott and Bobby Jones.
Â
ESPN named Jordan the Greatest Athlete of the 20th Century. He was one of 11 basketball players in the top 100. The next highest-ranked basketball player was Wilt Chamberlain at No. 13.
Â
Jordan (1984) is one of four Tar Heels who earned consensus National Player of the Year honors with Phil Ford (1978), Antawn Jamison (1998) and Tyler Hansbrough (2008).
Â
Jordan is one of two Tar Heels to win National Player of the Year honors in two seasons (1983 and 1984). George Glamack is the other (1940 and 1941).
Â
Jordan is one of six Tar Heels who earned consensus first-team All-America honors in two or more seasons.
Â
In 2004, a blue-ribbon panel selected Jordan as the Greatest Male Athlete in the first 50 years of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Greatest Female Athlete was Carolina soccer player Mia Hamm.
Â
Jordan was first-team All-ACC in 1983 and 1984. The only other player to earn first-team All-ACC honors in those seasons was his Tar Heel teammate, Sam Perkins.
Â
Jordan is one of nine Tar Heels to win ACC Rookie of the Year honors.
Â
Jordan scored 1,788 points as a Tar Heel (17.7 per game).
Â
He averaged 20.0 points as a sophomore and 19.6 as a junior.
Â
Jordan shot 44.7 percent from three-point range in 1982-83 when the ACC experimented for that one season with a 17-feet, 9-inch line.
Â
Carolina went 88-13 overall and 42-4 in ACC regular-season play in Jordan's three seasons.
Carolina was unbeaten against two ACC teams in Jordan's three seasons – 8-0 vs. Clemson and 7-0 vs. Georgia Tech.
Â
Jordan led Team USA to a gold medal in the 1984 Summer Olympics after his junior season at Carolina. He led Team USA in scoring with 137 points in eight games (17.1 ppg), including a game-high 20 points in the gold medal game against Spain.
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Jordan's coaches at UNC included head coach Dean Smith and assistant coaches Bill Guthridge, Eddie Fogler and Roy Williams. All four earned National Coach of the Year honors as head coaches.
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