While Jason Whitlock respects and celebrates Michael Jordan, he believes the six-time NBA champion is currently doing more harm than good to the league.
“Jordan is the black shadow that hovers over the NBA like a dark cloud, and he’s a constant reminder of how things suck right now,” Whitlock says.
Jordan, who has mostly stayed out of the public eye since his 2003 retirement, recently re-entered the NBA as a special contributor. His new show, *MJ: Insights to Excellence*—a prerecorded miniseries of interviews where Jordan shares basketball wisdom and personal reflections with host Mike Tirico—airs weekly during select NBA games in the 2025-2026 season.
Fans and players alike have been soaking in Jordan’s wisdom and the personal tidbits he shares. However, Jason argues that this focus on the NBA’s “good ol’ days,” when Jordan was the face of the league, isn’t helping the already struggling association.
If anything, Jordan’s show serves as a reminder of how “lazy” today’s NBA players are.
On Tuesday night, during the postgame show following the New York Knicks vs. Milwaukee Bucks game, episode two of *MJ: Insights to Excellence* aired. Tirico asked Jordan his thoughts on “load management”—the strategic practice of resting healthy players during games or limiting their minutes to prevent injuries, manage fatigue, and extend careers.
Jordan, notorious for playing through injury and fatigue all 82 games of a season, didn’t hold back:
“[Load management] shouldn’t be needed. I never wanted to miss a game because it was an opportunity to prove.”
“You have a duty that if [fans] are wanting to see you, and as an entertainer, I want to show,” he added.
While Jordan’s work ethic and commitment to the game will forever be admirable, the fact that it remains unmatched over two decades later only highlights how far the NBA has fallen.
“This is not a criticism of Michael Jordan. It’s really a criticism of Adam Silver and the executives and ownership in the NBA. They can’t come up with a solution for what’s wrong with the NBA, and so they’re allowing Michael Jordan and the media to mostly drive the discussion about what’s wrong with the NBA,” says Jason.
NBC, which recently inked an 11-year, $76 billion media rights deal to broadcast NBA games, is “using the greatest player of all time to basically subtly take a dump on the NBA,” he explains.
“Fearless” contributor and basketball aficionado Jay Skapinac agrees that Michael’s words ring true—load management reflects how soft NBA players have become—but the league’s highlighting of this issue is only “undermining the current product.”
If the NBA wants to move into a new era defined by grit and passion, it needs to ditch LeBron James, who Skapinac says “is the only player that has left the game worse than the one that he inherited,” and “move forward with these new, bright, rising young stars in the NBA” instead of “focusing on the greatest player that ever existed in sports history.”
To hear more of the conversation, watch the episode above.
https://www.theblaze.com/shows/fearless-with-jason-whitlock/hot-take-michael-jordans-new-show-is-hurting-the-nba