A closer look at MJ’s 1988 DPOY award raises questions
It may be the most consequential Defensive Player of the Year award in NBA history.
In 1987-88, Michael Jordan became the first player ever to win the scoring title and the DPOY in the same season. To this day, the feat hasnât been duplicated.
The DPOY award represented a certain validation for the 25-year-old phenom. Before Jordan was crowned, he was crushed. Drafted by the Chicago Bulls 40 years ago this week, Jordan had developed a certain level of notoriety for being too focused on scoring at the expense of winning. Fanning the flames was the fact that Jordan led the NBA in scoring the previous season but was swept in the first round against the Boston Celtics for a second straight year. A scorer, they said, but not a winning player. The Defensive Player of the Year award, voted by the media, effectively quieted those questions.
âItâs one of the goals I set for myself,â Jordan told the AP after winning the award. âI wanted to show people that I am more than just a scorer. I am a complete player.â
The award also delivered generational power, with its profound impact being felt even today when debating the legends of the game. The DPOY gave Jordan something that LeBron James, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson never had: recognition for being the NBAâs best defender.
But a closer look at Jordanâs 1987-88 season reveals a substantial discrepancy between his home and road statistics, raising questions about the authenticity of his off-the-charts steals and blocks numbers that season â and shining a light on an era that seemed particularly vulnerable to the hidden hand of homer bias.
Considerable evidence â both statistical and corroborating video â suggests that Jordanâs Defensive Player of the Year award may not be as valid as we thought.
âIt just tees me offâ
In 1987, Michael Jordan felt he was snubbed after not being recognized as one of the NBA’s top defenders. (NBAE via Getty Images)
With a 6-0 record in the NBA Finals, Jordan finished his career with a rĂ©sumĂ© as shiny as any human being who has stepped onto the hardwood. He was a relentless two-way superstar from the guard position â soaring above the opponent and casting shadows across an era dominated by giants. There will never be another Michael Jordan.
Thereâs a notion that every fiber of Jordan was consumed by winning the game. However, the six-time NBA champion also deeply cared about something else â public recognition. It wasnât enough to be a great defender â he almost certainly was; he wanted to be known as a great defender. The man behind the and-I-took-it-personally meme was consumed by his detractors, no slight too small to turn into redemptive fuel.
In 1986-87, Jordanâs third season in the league, he was incensed that coaches left him off the All-Defensive teams even though Jordan became the first player in NBA history to register at least 200 steals and 100 blocks in the same season. In particular, it irritated Jordan that Michael Cooper of the Los Angeles Lakers won Defensive Player of the Year in 1986-87, garnering 25 of the 78 votes, while Jordan received just one.
Jordan made sure his discontent was known. In an 18-page Sports Illustrated feature in which SI writer Curry Kirkpatrick entrenched himself inside Jordanâs growing empire, the Chicago Bulls star expressed deep resentment about his lack of recognition. In particular, Jordan called out the voting contingency about its apparent disregard for box-score statistics like blocks and steals.
âMichael Cooper is great at ball denial,â Jordan told SI. âBut check his other stats. This league gives defensive awards on reputation. It just tees me off.â
The shot at Cooper set the tone for Jordanâs vengeful 1987-88 season. Determined to be known as the best defender in the game, Jordanâs DPOY campaign started off with a bang. On opening night, two days before the Sports Illustrated issue hit newsstands across America, Jordan tallied six steals and four blocks in a win against the Philadelphia 76ers. The Chicago Bull registered another six-steal game later that month. And another. In late January against the lowly New Jersey Nets, Jordan posted a career-high and franchise-record 10 steals. He didnât even play the fourth quarter.
Jordan walks off the court after a victory against the New Jersey Nets at Chicago Stadium in January 1988. (Raymond Boyd via Getty Images)
The mission consumed him. After the history-making Nets game, he openly admitted to hunting for steals so he could break the record.
âI knew I was close, and I asked to find out what the record was,â Jordan told the Chicago Tribune that night. âI was on a roll. I was going for it, reaching for everything.â
Jordan didnât stop reaching. By the end of the season, he led the league with 259 steals, displacing San Antonio guard Alvin Robertson, who topped the leaderboard in each of the previous two seasons. In 1987-88, Jordan also led all guards with a breathtaking 131 blocks. The next-highest total for a guard? Robertsonâs 69, almost half of Jordanâs total.
At seasonâs end, sportswriters looking at the statistical leaderboards were overwhelmed with gaudy per-game numbers next to Jordanâs name:Â 3.2 steals and 1.6 blocks. To this day, itâs never been matched.
The eye-popping stats propelled Jordan to his first Defensive Player of the Year award, earning 37 votes from writers, besting rim-protecting centers Mark Eaton (9) and Hakeem Olajuwon (7).
For almost four decades, Jordanâs lone DPOY has stood unquestioned. We took a deeper look after a recent discussion with a man named Alex Rucker, who pulled back the curtain on the complicated role of an NBA home statkeeper.
An NBA statkeeper blows the whistleRucker is currently the CEO of a Boys & Girls Club in Texas and was once a top executive for the Philadelphia 76ers in 2020. Before that, he was a former statkeeper for the Vancouver Grizzlies and was an employee during their inaugural season in 1995-96. In February, Rucker told me he was among a number of home scorekeepers in the 1990s who selectively juiced the numbers for their players. In our interview for Pablo Torre Finds Out, Rucker explained that, in his view, inflating certain box-score statistics for the home team was a common league-wide practice.
When Rucker landed the Vancouver job in 1995, he says he traveled to Detroit for a training session attended by other NBA professional scorekeepers who had held their positions for a number of years. Rucker, however, was just 19 years old while working for the expansion Vancouver franchise, the new kid on the block. He was eager to prove he could score a game as accurately as anyone in the room.
But then they reviewed a video clip of John Stockton getting an assist on a Karl Malone bucket, and things got weird. âThere was no causal connection between the pass and the basket,â Rucker told me on PTFO. âAnd the majority opinion by a mile was, âOh no, thatâs definitely an assist.ââ
According to Rucker, the scorekeepers told him in no uncertain terms that it was an assist because it was John Stockton. Rucker soon realized what was expected. In Ruckerâs view, it was inferred that part of the scorekeeperâs job was to give hometown stars the star treatment.
âI left there clearly understanding that, yes, we are supposed to present the most accurate representation that we can, but the NBA is also an entertainment business,â Rucker told me. âAnd itâs up to us, in very small part as statisticians, to support or reinforce stars and excitement and fun. And that message was definitely reinforced internally within the Grizzlies.â
When reached by Yahoo Sports, the league office declined to comment on Ruckerâs assertions. The Grizzlies, who moved to Memphis in 2001, declined comment for the story.
Rucker explained that, from his experience, subjective stats â primarily blocks, steals and assists, and sometimes rebounds â were a way to give star treatment. If a player tried to block a shot and the ball fell short, maybe give him the benefit of the doubt on a 50-50 play â block. If a pass was deflected by one defender and recovered by another, choose wisely as to which defender to award the steal. Assists were a thing of beauty, left to the eye of the beholder. To Rucker, it was an unspoken part of the NBAâs marketing machine, a way to get on âSportsCenterâ in front of a national audience and grab attention.
Jordan was one of the most marketable athletes in the world. (NBAE via Getty Images)
Zooming out, the numbers seem to back up Ruckerâs testimony. Vancouverâs young star, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, saw lopsided home/road splits in the blocks and steals columns during the time Rucker was a scorekeeper in Vancouver. But it wasnât just Vancouver; evidence of home bias showed up across the league, most dramatically in the ’80s and ’90s. In the ’80s, the home team annually registered about 800 more blocks and about 450 more steals than the road team leaguewide, per Basketball Reference tracking. Over time, those home/road disparities began to even out, significantly so in the Adam Silver era. This past season, the homer effect on blocks and steals disparities has all but disappeared, just 135 more blocks at home than on the road and a measly 13 more steals leaguewide.
According to the league office, in an effort to ensure the most accurate statistics, the NBA has used modern technology to apply real-time auditing of stats during games since the 2018-19 season. In todayâs environment, with more eyes on the game and a greater attention to detail in the legalized gambling era, the home/road disparity is now all but gone. The homer bias, at least statistically, seems to have been eradicated.
That doesnât mean accusations havenât surfaced. Last year, when a Redditor claimed that Jaren Jackson Jr.âs Defensive Player of the Year candidacy was propped up by homer-biased stats, the power of the Internet and access to video technology services allowed an army of NBA writers to instantly pull up Jacksonâs hundreds of blocks and steals and evaluate their validity. The verdict was delivered within minutes and it was unanimous: the blocks and steals were legit.
However, in the Jordan era, media members werenât able to put the microscope on home/road disparities, whether it was for Jordan or other star players. In the late â80s, there was no internet, no social media pressure to get things right, no public system of accountability.
The shadow looms large. If blocks and steals were heavily influenced by a hidden homer bias, the implications on the historical record can be significant. The damage of assist fudging, for instance, has a limited scope since there is no league-wide award given to the NBAâs best passer. However, the ripple effect of questionable block and steal accounting can create a reputational sea change because Defensive Player of the Year awards are heavily influenced by those very same statistics.
Jordanâs alarming home-road disparity
Michael Jordan defends against Michael Cooper in 1987 at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. (NBAE via Getty Images)
Fueled by the coachesâ and mediaâs non-recognition as an elite defender, Jordan took it personally and filled the stat sheet in 1987-88. Even Cooper, the reigning Defensive Player of the Year, took notice, telling the Los Angeles Times that Jordan deserved to be a candidate. âHe has the stats to back him up,â Cooper said in February 1988 that season.
What was considered a record-setting 1986-87 season paled in comparison to what happened in â87-88. But the underlying statistics fueling his DPOY-winning season were lopsided to an unnerving degree.
Breaking out his numbers into game location, we find that Jordan averaged a mind-boggling 4 steals and 2.1 blocks at home. But on the road, those numbers shrunk to a more normal rate of 2.1 steals and 1.2 blocks.
Put simply, Jordanâs steals and blocks nearly doubled at home compared to the road. To account for possible uneven playing time effects, we can look at per-36-minute numbers for a truer portrayal of the phenomenon. Jordanâs combined block and steals numbers (âstocksâ) were a whopping 82 percent higher at home (5.5 stocks per 36 minutes) than on the road (3.0).
It isnât unusual for the NBAâs top defender to exhibit a slight home/road disparity. Itâs common knowledge that players perform better at home in front of friendly confines (as Jackson Jr. showed last season).
But the size of Jordanâs 1987-88 gap is unprecedented.
Dating back to 1982-83 when the award was established, Jordanâs home-vs.-away disparity in combined blocks and steals represents the largest of any Defensive Player of the Year award winner in NBA history.
No other instance in the awardâs history has a player shown a disparity that touched 160 percent â except for Jordanâs 1987-88 season, which clocked in at 182 percent.
One might interpret the disparity as a reflection of a bygone era and perhaps not unique to Jordanâs Chicago Bulls. However, Jordanâs home/road disparities stood out even among his peers that season. According to Stathead.com, Jordan posted 165 steals at home (by far the most in the NBA) compared to just 94 on the road (tied for fourth). That gap of 71 steals blew away the competition, with the next largest gap among the top 15 league leaders in steals being 47.
Crucially, the additional home steals were instrumental in Jordan achieving the title as the league leader in steals. Jordan finished with the most steals at 259, speeding past Alvin Robertsonâs total of 243.
If we were to believe the official box score, Jordan was god-like at home and a mere mortal on the road. When looking at just road games, arguably a control group of impartial scorekeepers for every player, Jordanâs steal count placed not first, not second but tied for fourth with Denverâs Michael Adams. Jordanâs disparity in home steal numbers is illustrated below:
Though Jordan didnât lead the league in blocks, a similar trend emerges in that key defensive category. Jordanâs 84 blocks at home ranked eighth most in the league, a highly unusual place to find a guard. On the road, his total of 47 blocks fell all the way down to 21st (tied), a more reasonable rung on the ladder for someone his size.
A look at Jordanâs game log is telling. Of Jordanâs 10 games with at least four blocks that season, nine of them came at Chicago Stadium.
The phenomenon seems isolated to this particular season. Examining Jordanâs career, the six-time champion showed a disparity in home vs. road stats in his third season in 1986-87, but it doesnât hold a candle to the 1987-88 season surge shown in home stats.
Basketball Reference
Itâs important to note that after winning the Defensive Player of the Year award, Jordanâs home rates returned to normal and within the same range of his peers. Jordan would never even approach the 1987-88 home stats for the rest of his career, an outlier of outliers.
An NBA spokesperson said the league had not verified Jordan’s stats in the 1987-88 season and did not plan to do so.
If we assume that Jordanâs road stats were the more accurate measure and used those rates for his home games in 1987-88, it would mean that approximately 30 percent of Jordanâs steals and blocks would disappear from the record.
Err Jordan?Bob Ryan isnât shocked by the possibility that Jordan might have benefited from homer-biased statistics. Ryan, the longtime writer for the Boston Globe who was inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame for his basketball coverage dating back to the 1960s, says questionable statkeeping was an unfortunate stain on the game.
He remembers similar controversies surrounding Wilt Chamberlainâs and Bill Russellâs rebounding numbers in the 1960s. Their respective teams traded accusations that the opposing scorekeeper padded the stats to help their giant. Looking back, the numbers are indeed startling. Between them, Russell and Chamberlain registered 26 games with 40-plus rebounds. None of the 26 games were tabulated on the road, per Stathead.com tracking.
Did home statkeepers help pad the stats of the game’s early giants? (Bettmann via Getty Images)
In the 1980s, the league became less of a mom-and-pop organization and more of a buttoned-up corporation. For quality control, statkeepers needed to pass annual tests to assess their knowledge and application of arcane scorekeeping protocols. However, the league could do only so much. Computers werenât around for the better part of the â80s, which meant most everything was kept by hand on pen and paper. Teams could file complaints, but the system wasnât nearly as refined as it is today.
As such, in the early days, Ryan held a somewhat skeptical view of the stat leaderboards. Every year, Ryan filled out his NBA awards ballot as a card-carrying media member of the Boston Globe and tried not to lean too heavily on subjective statistics like assists, rebounds, steals and blocks.
Ryan didnât vote Jordan for MVP that year. The Globe writer was one of the 16 voters who sided with Bostonâs Larry Bird. As consolation, it turns out, Ryan named Jordan as his Defensive Player of the Year, writing the following blurb in his Pro Basketball notes column that Cooperâs injury that season held him back:
âIf heâs healthy, I know itâs Michael Cooper, but you canât give (Defensive Player of the Year) to him this year. Do you go for a shot blocker like Mark Eaton? A guy with steals who may or may not be a good defensive player? I donât know. Since Iâm not voting for Jordan (for MVP), who does steal the ball a lot but who is a good defensive player, anyway, Iâm giving him this one. Michael Jordan.â
As hard as it is to fathom now with fiery “First Take” debates and social-media wars of modern-day media, Ryan emphasized how insignificant the league-wide awards were back then â especially a second-tier award like Defensive Player of the Year. Voters back then almost certainly didnât fill out ballots with the same rigor as modern-day voters when a single vote can amount to tens of millions of dollars in a playerâs supermax extension because a player won Defensive Player of the Year.
âIt wasnât that big a deal,â Ryan says now in an interview with Yahoo Sports. âNobody focused much on it. This is pre-internet takeover. Itâs pre-talk-show dominance. I may be wrong, but for me, I donât remember anybody fretting about it ever. Ever.â
When I relayed Jordanâs stinging quotes about Cooperâs coronation as the leagueâs top defender in 1986-87, Ryan could only laugh.
âThat amuses me, that Michael Jordan would give a damn,â Ryan says. âThis is the same guy who got pissed off at [Chicago head coach] Doug Collins, who didnât keep score in a scrimmage. This is so classically Michael Jordan, getting pissed off about something that most people didnât give a s**t about. By the way, thatâs not a knock. Thatâs who he is. Thatâs his wiring.â
Michael Cooper and Pat Riley believed Jordan was deserving of recognition for his defensive play in 1988. (Focus On Sport via Getty Images)
Today, Ryan stands by his DPOY pick for Jordan, acknowledging that, with Bird getting his MVP vote, it was Ryanâs way of giving Jordan kudos for a remarkable season. Even if the stats were juiced, Jordan was still a feared defender.
Ahead of a matchup against the Bulls in 1988, Pat Riley, then the coach of the Los Angeles Lakers, remarked about Cooper and Jordanâs contrasting styles.
âCooperâs idea of defense is to shut a guy down with [ball] denial, cutting off passing lanes and containment by fighting through picks,â Riley told the L.A. Times. âMichael Jordan is more like a free safety in football, always gambling, blocking shots and looking for steals. Heâs so good at it because of his anticipation. People arenât going to believe it because heâs such a great offensive player, but his defense deserves more recognition than it gets.â
In his MVP expository in the paper that year, Ryan stressed the difficulty in rendering award verdicts in the technologically challenged era of the late â80s.
âOK, so who did have the best year?â Ryan wrote in the Globe. âThe truth is nobody knows for sure. Nobody can claim to have sat down and watched 82 Celtics videotapes and 82 Chicago videotapes.â
Theoretically, Jordan could have just been twice as good a player at home. Or maybe the road scorekeepers were unfairly stingy. But the videotapes point to something else. A man in Latvia has been watching film of ’80s and ’90s NBA games and noticed certain things werenât adding up.
The man in LatviaReinis LÄcis is the vice president of development at the European Youth Basketball League and assistant general manager for Latvian professional club Rigas Zelli. LÄcis has been obsessed about the NBA since he was a child. Growing up around the game, he became a fixture on the basketball scene and has helped with data analysis for the basketball associates surrounding Kristaps PorziĆÄŁis, a Latvian native.
LÄcis is also one of the first-known observers who spotted fishy statkeeping in the ’90s. The 29-year-old runs a basketball site called Lamarmatic â a mash-up tribute to two of his most beloved American celebrities, former NBA player Lamar Odom and rapper Nas, whose famous debut album was called âIllmatic.â
In 2016, LÄcis published âAn Unnecessary Breakdown of Van Exelâs Fudged 23 Assistsâ after he came across a 2009 Deadspin story about a then-unnamed Vancouver Grizzlies scorekeeper (Rucker) who admitted to padding stats, most notably in Lakers guard Nick Van Exelâs famous 23-assist game in 1997. Deadspin picked up the story from an eyebrow-raising post in the APBRMetrics message board by BobboFitos, a member and friend of the scorekeeper, who shared the scorekeeperâs explanation that he participated in Van Exelâs stat inflation âpartly because Iâm a Laker fan.â The confessional ignited a scavenger hunt for LÄcis. He wanted to dive deeper and investigate gaudy box scores of that era.
First, he needed the tape.
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For most fans, finding full-game film of â80s and â90s basketball is an impossible task. Luckily, LÄcis was uniquely equipped to get the job done. Like thousands of European NBA fans who envied American fans’ access to regular local and national TV games, LÄcis had collected old NBA digitized tapes from the â80s and â90s via underground online trading forums to quench his thirst for watching the best basketball players on the planet.
Van Exelâs Lakers-Grizzlies game had evaded LÄcis, so he logged on and, eventually, acquired a digitized VHS copy of the Van Exel game. (As it turns out, it had originally been recorded from an airing on Spanish television.)
He turned it on and couldnât believe what he saw.
His verdict, which he posted on his website, read: âNick Van Exel shouldnât have had more than 17 assists. You can make an argument for him deserving only 15.â
After being disillusioned by Van Exelâs 23-assist game, he posted the assist reel to his YouTube channel. LÄcis felt compelled to investigate other big stat-lines. LÄcis watched Shaqâs 15-block game of 1993 (more like 10). He broke down the Toronto Raptorsâ record-breaking 23-block night of 2001 (more like 17). On a certain level, it was crushing.
âThey ruined dreams,â he wrote.
But part of him thought it was important to seek the truth about his favorite sport. Thatâs how we met and embarked on our next scavenger hunt together.
Next on LÄcisâ list of games to acquire: any big defensive night during Jordanâs 1987-88 season.
Red flags emergeThe internet isnât stocked with Michael Jordan games from his marvelous 1987-88 season. However, fans may have stumbled upon a video posted to the NBAâs official channel in August 2022 titled âMichael Jordanâs Got 10 Steals In One Game!â
The four-minute highlight reel showed his brilliance from that record-setting game against the New Jersey Nets â his crown jewel of the 1987-88 season â but the video conspicuously shows only six steals. In the comment section, amid a chorus of Jordan praise, some discerning commenters raised their hands and expressed confusion. One commenter remarked: âStill waiting for the 10 steals.â
The game, it turns out, was played at home in Chicago. This only piqued our interest in finding game tapes. Luckily, LÄcis dug up five, all at Chicago, for our review, in addition to one found on YouTube. We dove in. It turns out the puzzling âJordan 10 Stealsâ video was only the tip of the iceberg.
The six full games we found tapes for from Jordanâs Defensive Player of the Year campaign:
Atlanta at Chicago: Nov. 20, 1987
Indiana at Chicago: Jan. 5, 1988
Denver at Chicago: Jan. 7, 1988
Detroit at Chicago: Jan. 16, 1988
Atlanta at Chicago: Feb. 15, 1988
Boston at Chicago: Mar. 18, 1988
LÄcis and I were most interested in the Feb. 15, 1988, game. The official box score indicates the Atlanta Hawks registered 10 turnovers and the Chicago Bulls tallied 10 steals. That detail immediately grabbed our attention. Turnovers fall into two categories: live-ball turnovers and dead-ball turnovers. By rule, dead-ball turnovers (i.e. traveling, out of bounds, 24-second violation, etc.) cannot be steals. For example, if, say, Atlantaâs Kevin Willis traveled on a play, a steal couldnât be credited to a Bulls defender.
Only live-ball turnovers â like an intercepted pass or a recovered loose ball â can be assigned to a defensive player for a steal. The more live-ball turnovers in a game, the more steals in a game.
The Bulls having 10 steals on 10 Hawks turnovers meant that none of the Hawks turnovers could have been dead-ball turnovers. No travels. No offensive fouls. No ball tossed out of bounds. No 24-second violations. For an entire game. Could it be?
And then we watched the film â independently, as to avoid influencing one anotherâs findings. We compared notes. Turns out, we both saw the same troubling series of plays.
A 24-second violation by the Hawksâ offense. Later, Atlanta reserve Chris Washburn dribbled off his foot out of bounds. An outlet pass to Dominique Wilkins bounces off his hands and into the scorerâs table. Three dead-ball turnovers â three plays that could not have been considered a steal opportunity. And, yet, the box score indicated zero such plays.
It also meant an opportunity to hand out three excess steals to Bulls players.
We compared notes again. We both saw only two legitimate steals by Michael Jordan. The box score credited him with five. An excess of three steals. (To be precise, we saw two Jordan steals, at best, but possibly only one â when he poked the ball, chased it down and saved it from going out of bounds before throwing it directly to the Hawks for a turnover. The other play â a transition deflection by Jordanâs teammate Mike Brown that was recovered by Jordan â could have gone either way.) There were three steals unaccounted for.
The incongruent turnover/steal columns presented a glaring red flag. In the other five games we watched, the live-ball turnovers and steals did not add up, either. In the Detroit game, eight Chicago steals on six Detroit live-ball turnovers. In the Denver game, 13 Chicago steals on just seven Denver live-ball turnovers. Again and again, the official steal counts were routinely outpacing the possible number of steal opportunities. Something was amiss.
All in all, by our count, the box score showed 59 steals on 41 live-ball turnovers, resulting in a whopping 18 excess steals.
Who benefited from all those extra steals? We brought our attention to Jordanâs accounting. In the six games, the box scores indicated that Jordanâs total steal count was 28. After comparing our notes from the film study, we each counted 12 steals. An astounding difference of 16 excess steals. Almost every excess steal was being allocated to Jordan.
A pattern emerged as the games began to pile up in our film review. It appeared that Jordan benefited from deflections being erroneously recorded as steals. In games where there was a surplus of Jordan steals, we noticed that the turnover/steal counts would closer align after we counted the defensive plays that Jordan poked the ball out of bounds or back into the hands of the opposing team â even if there was no change of possession.
Steals should not be awarded in these instances, but Jordan seemed to benefit from the apparent generosity. And hereâs the thing: when other players made the same deflections on both teams, their steal counts tended to be scored by the book â that is, correctly. Twelve steals in six games for Jordan (two steals per game) would be much more in line with his road average that season (2.3) rather than his official home average of four steals.
In the block category, it seemed that Jordan also benefited from some exceptional statkeeping. For instance, whenever Chicago Bulls forward Horace Grant blocked a shot but was whistled for the foul, he was, correctly, not credited with a block. But when Jordan did the same, his box score line tended to show excess blocks.
Something was going on. Which left only one thing to figure out: Who was the Chicago statkeeper?
âThe greatest statistical tenure in American team sportsâ
Chicago Stadium was home to the Bulls from 1967-94. (Getty Images)
They called him Rosie. A legend in the Chicago Bulls organization, Bob Rosenberg worked as the teamâs scorekeeper for the Bulls from their inaugural season in 1965-66 all the way to 2023. He was there for Jerry Sloanâs age-24 season, and he was there for Michael, and he was there for Ayo Dosunmu. In a story commemorating his retirement last year, longtime Chicago scribe Sam Smith, famed author of âThe Jordan Rules,â wrote about Rosenbergâs remarkable run, calling it âwhatâs probably been the greatest statistical tenure in the history of American team sports.â
Rosenberg was an employee of the Bulls, but his omnipresence made him seem more like a family member, as constant as the red paint on the Bullsâ floor and the hook of the Alan Parsons Project intro song. Rosenberg worked not just Bulls games, but also the games of the Chicago White Sox, Chicago Bears and Chicago Black Hawks. He is the scorekeeper of scorekeepers.
Two legends of the game, working in the same building for over a decade, Jordan and Rosenberg shared a strong kinship. On the side, Rosenberg made scrapbooks for Jordan to commemorate his achievements. In the opening lines of MJâs 1999 retirement column, Chicago AP writer Jim Litke didnât mention Phil Jackson or Scottie Pippen. Instead, he raised Rosenbergâs name and relayed a story about Jordanâs shared obsession with stats:
âThe first week Jordan played for the Bulls, scorer Bob Rosenberg looked up to find him studying the scorebook every time he reported to the table to re-enter the game. It didnât take long to figure out why. By knowing everybodyâs point and rebound totals, Jordan knew how the newspaper stories the next day would begin. Then he took the floor and made sure they always began the same way: âMichael Jordan âŠââ
The Rosenberg and Jordan dynamic was written about in the press, and reportedly at one point drew scrutiny from the league office. According to a 1989 report from the San Francisco Examiner, Rosenberg would flash hand signals to inform Jordan how close he was to a triple-double. The league reportedly stepped in and told Rosenberg to cut it out.
Rosenberg admitted to signaling to help Jordan chase stats during Chicagoâs 1988 All-Star Game, a game in which Jordan scored a game-high 40 points, just shy of matching Chamberlainâs then-record of 42. As the siteâs official scorekeeper, Rosenberg worked the game and remembered a postgame exchange he had with Jordan. In 2013, Rosenberg shared the following anecdote with the Chicago Tribune:
âWhy didnât you tell me I was two points short of Chamberlain?â Rosenberg recalled Jordan asking him.
âI said, âLook, every time you went by, I kept putting up two fingers. You didnât understand that?ââ
To our knowledge, Rosenberg has never been accused of padding statistics for Jordan. But he wasnât without controversy. In 1998, a Western Conference executive told Sports Illustrated that Dennis Rodman received phony rebounds from the Chicago stat crew. Rodman, like Jordanâs blocks and steals in the 1988 DPOY season, showed a statistical home/road disparity in the rebounding column. Rosenberg denied the claim. Multiple writers also made reference to claims that Rosenberg stat-padded Guy Rodgersâ assist totals in his first and only full season with the Bulls in 1966-67, in which he was named an All-Star. In 1990, Rosenberg was interviewed by the Chicago Tribune for a story commemorating the esteemed career of a local Chicago sportswriter Jerome Holtzman, and Rosenberg himself brought up a stat-padding allegation from Holtzman:
â[Holtzman] was always accusing me of padding the assist totals for [ex-Bull] Guy Rodgers,â Rosenberg told the Chicago Tribune in 1990. âEvery time, heâd introduce me to people with: âThis is the guy that made Guy Rodgers famous in the NBA.’â
In 1966-67, Rodgers barely edged out Oscar Robertson for the assist title that season. Rodgersâ assist averages that season: 12.4 at home, 10.1 on the road.
When reached by Yahoo Sports to address questions regarding Rosenbergâs statkeeping, the Bulls declined comment. Multiple attempts to reach Rosenberg and Jordan went unanswered.
The Bad Boy Pistons respond
The Pistons, who defeated the Bulls in the playoffs in 1988, were not impressed by Chicago’s reputation on defense. (Bill Smith via Getty Images)
Possibly juiced stats aside, the 1987-88 Bulls were a formidable team and finished with a 50-32 record, good enough to land the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference. Jordan and the Bulls clinched a 3-2 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs, setting up the highly anticipated matchup against the second-seeded Detroit squad led by Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer and the rest of the Bad Boy Pistons.
Jordan and the Bullsâ elite defense would be put to the test. In Game 1, the Pistons shut down the Bulls, winning handily 93-82. Jordan tallied 29 points, 11 rebounds and six assists. However, the defensive columns were noticeably bare. Jordan didnât register a single steal the entire game, the first time in over a month he didnât come up with a theft. The game, it should be noted, was played in Detroit.
The Bulls and Pistons split the next two games. Then, before Game 4, with the Pistons up 2-1, Jordan gathered with NBA officials at halfcourt for a momentous occasion in front of the raucous Chicago crowd. Jordan was being presented with the Defensive Player of the Year award, the first of his career and a crowning achievement for the scoring phenom.
After the ceremony in Game 4, however, it was the Pistons who put on a show on the defensive end, looking every bit the superior defensive team, holding the Bulls without a field goal in the final five minutes of the game. It was a devastating loss for the Bulls, getting outscored 96-77 on their home floor, despite Jordanâs six steals.
The next day, a bold headline blared atop the sports section of the Detroit Free Press: âPISTONS NOT TRICKED BY THE BULLSâ NUMBERS.â In the story, columnist Charlie Vincent wrote: âAnd that gurgling sound you heard coming from your TV set was not the Bullsâ choking. It was the Pistonsâ strangling them to within one loss of elimination.â
Jordan received his Defensive Player of the Year award before Game 4 against the Pistons at Chicago Stadium. (Bill Smith via Getty Images)
As the headline suggested, Vincent also took issue with Jordanâs coronation as the Defensive Player of the Year, arguing that the Bullsâ defensive standing was all smoke and mirrors, and Jordan didnât deserve the leagueâs top defensive award. The loudest crusader was none other than Laimbeer, the Pistonsâ center, who was ahead of his time in his discerning analysis.
Laimbeer argued for a nuanced approach to the Bullsâ stats, pointing out that the Bullsâ slow offensive pace artificially depressed the Bullsâ opponent scoring averages. Propping up Jordanâs candidacy, in Laimbeerâs view, was the fact that the Bulls allowed an NBA-low 101.6 points per game.
âBeing the best defensive team,â Laimbeer said, âdoesnât mean they have the best defensive team.â
Laimbeer wasnât moved by the Bullsâ first-ranked defense because he found the per-game numbers to be misleading. In a way, Laimbeer had unknowingly foretold the impending stats revolution that would take place across the sport, arguing for per-possession stats rather than ones that were influenced by slow offenses. (Indeed, the Bullsâ top ranking in traditional points per game would slide to third in possession-based Defensive Rating, slotting behind the Utah Jazz and Laimbeerâs Pistons, according to Basketball Reference.)
Laimbeer simply wasnât buying the Bullsâ lowest opponent scoring average as a proxy for defense.
âIt just means the other team scored less points,â Laimbeer told the Free Press. âThe Bulls run plays for Jordan and they take time to set them up, so that lowers the number of points scored. The best defensive teams are, oh, Boston is pretty good and Los Angeles and us when we play like we have the past two days.â
Three days later, Jordan and the Bulls were eliminated from the playoffs in Detroit, losing the series 4-1.
Jordanâs marks in the 1987-88 postseason: 3.8 steals and 1.5 blocks at home; 1.8 steals and 0.8 on the road.
LeBron James once said he was chasing a ghost who played in Chicago. (Kevin Mazur via Getty Images)
Despite the early exit in the playoffs, Jordan took home the defensive hardware he craved, bolstered by the eye-popping stats and the attention they stoked. All told, Jordan ranked first in steals and eighth in blocks at home in 1987-88, but his standing in the league plummeted on the road, falling to fourth in steals and tied for 21st in blocks in front of non-Chicago statisticians. Whether an adjustment to his totals would have changed the results of the ballot, we may never know.
With top ranks overall, Jordan cruised to his first defensive accolades of his NBA career. His reputation as a top defensive player was sealed. Plaques hang forever, the mystique endures. As LeBron once told Sports Illustrated, âMy motivation is this ghost I’m chasing. The ghost played in Chicago.â
For years, Jordanâs Defensive Player of the Year award has stood as an unassailable pillar in the GOAT argument. In May 2023, ESPNâs Stephen A. Smith published a video on the MJ vs. LeBron debate from his YouTube show arguing Jordanâs case, concluding:
âDid you know that Michael Jordan is the former Defensive Player of the Year in 1988? LeBron James has never won a Defensive Player of the Year. Weâre talking about what you do on both ends of the court. And weâre talking about Michael Jordan as the greatest.â
Smith isnât alone. Last year on ESPN, Jalen Rose held up Jordanâs DPOY as a primary reason he sides with the Chicago Bull over LeBron as well.
âWhen you talk about GOAT, the first word is greatest â and that means achieved more than somebody else,â Rose said. âAnd if weâre comparing Michael Jordan and LeBron â for example â Michael Jordan got 10 scoring titles; LeBron has one. Michael Jordan has been Defensive Player of the Year in the NBA; LeBron hasnât.â
James is still chasing that ghost, and all the underlying statistics that were registered without modern-day safeguards. The closest James came to winning the Defensive Player of the Year award was placing second in 2008-09 and 2012-13. James finished in the top-five four different times, but never won Defensive Player of the Year outright. He has been voted onto six All-Defensive teams to Jordanâs nine.
On a recent episode of âThe Shop,â James was asked if there was an award he wished he had won. âYeah,â James said. âDefensive Player of the Year. Thatâs the only award that I donât have in my house. It kinda stings.â
Once Jordan led the league in steals in 1987-88, he added the defensive hardware â Defensive Player of the Year and All-Defense â to his collection.
âIâm very happy,â Jordan told the Chicago Tribune in 1987-88 after being named to his first All-Defensive team. âAll season, Iâve been bringing it to peopleâs attention that I wanted to be recognized for my defense, too.â
Jordan, ever the closer, finished his quote with a dagger.
âLeading the league in steals certainly helped.â