Michael Jordan is widely accepted as the greatest basketball player who has ever lived, but his journey to the pinnacle of NBA success didn’t come without its share of racial strife.
In a new biography called Michael Jordan: The Life, the NBA Hall of Famer reveals personal encounters as a youth growing up in North Carolina which created a deep-seeded resentment within him against his white peers.
“I considered myself racist at the time, ” Jordan told author Roland Lazenby, while describing his reaction to a white female classmate who called him the N-word. Jordan says he threw a soda at the woman who called him the racial epithet.
“Basically, I was against all white people.” said Jordan.
Jordan’s latest revelations have taken on added weight in the wake of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling’s controversial race-related remarks.
Sterling has been banned for life from the NBA and the league is the midst of trying to force him to sell his franchise after an audio recording of the Clippers owner leaked in which he urged his alleged girlfriend, V. Stiviano, not to bring black people to his games.
“There’s no racism here. If you don’t want to be… walking… into a basketball game with a certain… person, is that racism?” said Sterling.
Jordan was among the many prominent NBA voices who came forward to condemn Sterling when the scandal broke.
“I look at this from two perspectives — as a current owner and as a former player. As an owner, I’m obviously disgusted that a fellow team owner could hold such sickening and offensive views,” Jordan said in a statement.
However, for most of his career, Jordan has made a very public point of sidestepping issues of race.









