Charles Barkley seems increasingly willing to talk about Michael Jordan, but that hasn’t served as an icebreaker for their decade-old feud.
In 2012, Barkley criticized Jordan’s ownership tenure, claiming the six-time NBA champion surrounds himself with too many yes-men. The analysis effectively ended their friendship after Jordan took Barkley’s criticism personally.
During a recent appearance on 60 Minutes, Barkley claimed there was no resolution in sight, saying “he got my number,” seemingly leaving it up to Jordan to break their long-running feud. Friday morning, Barkley joined The Dan Patrick Show and said he still hasn’t head from Jordan.
“No,” Barkley said with a laugh after Patrick asked if he heard from Jordan after his 60 Minutes appearance. “You know what’s funny? I’ve never had more people ask me about two dudes, they act like we’re Prince William and Prince Harry. I love Michael like a brother. He’s doing great, I’m doing great. He got mad at me, it’s no big deal. It’s unfortunate, but I wish him nothing but the best.”
Barkley and Jordan are two of the most recognizable figures in the NBA, which is why their feud is covered like Prince William and Prince Harry. And as long as Barkley is willing to keep offering quotes about Jordan, the media will keep asking him for updates and comments.
Barkley may have claimed “it’s no big deal” on The Dan Patrick Show, but speaking to Tom Brady last year, the Basketball Hall-of-Famer and NBA analyst referred to his feud with Jordan as the biggest fallout of his media career. That sounds like a pretty big deal. Still, Barkley has no regrets about criticizing Jordan the NBA owner.
“One of the reasons I hate reporters, guys like Skip Bayless and people like that, you can tell the guys they like and dislike,” Barkley told Patrick. “That ain’t right. You should be fair. Just because me and Michael are great friends, I’m not gonna give him a hall pass.”
More than ten years after criticizing Jordan’s management style, Barkley has been proven right. Jordan’s ownership tenure with the Charlotte Hornets franchise proved to be a great business investment, but in terms of overseeing a successful product on the court, it was an abject failure with just two playoff appearances in 12 years.
About Brandon Contes
Brandon Contes is a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. He previously helped carve the sports vertical for Mediaite and spent more than three years with Barrett Sports Media. Send tips/comments/complaints to bcontes@thecomeback.com
Recent Posts
Jaylen Brown drops F-bomb on ESPN following win over Pistons: ‘Ball don’t f*cking lie’
The Celtics survived following a foul call on a three-point attempt.
Dave Portnoy, Barstool Tate get personal over Michigan-Ohio State livestream snub
"I don’t like you and I’m too old to spend time with people I don’t like."
Fox replay shows Matt LaFleur late on timeout call after false start
"Oohh, he did not get it."
Tom Brady ‘sorry not sorry’ for drilling pass at kid during Fox segment
"Catch the damn ball."
ESPN content head ‘not that concerned’ about Stephen A. Smith overexposure
"As long as the quality and level of his work on First Take is to the degree it’s always been, which it is as we sit here today, I’m not that concerned about overexposure."
Kalshi facing class action lawsuit alleging ‘unlicensed sports betting’
"By operating unlicensed sports betting, Kalshi has violated gambling laws, engaged in illegal deceptive activity, and unjustly enriched itself at the expense of tens of thousands of consumers."