Either people didn't actually take the time to read what wilbon said, or they didn't comprehend it. He did NOT say Rose is the new Jordan. He did NOT say Rose is as good as jordan.
Ehhh, I think you're at once giving his (Wilbon's) fence sitting a bit too much credit here, and not giving our readers (and myself, as I started the piece) enough.
First off, just simply saying "you either didn't read, or didn't comprehend" is a bit of an offensive implication that you ought to be able to back up. I don't think anyone here is under the assumption that Wilbon is implying any more than he says outright.
The byline, under the article's title:
Rose is shouldering the load the way Jordan did, and so far he's met every challenge
A hyperbolic qualifier followed by a hyperbolic refutation:
You look at the Chicago Bulls struggling with the Indiana Pacers and you know they could use another scorer, that they have nobody on the roster for whom an open shot is automatic. You keep thinking that the Bulls rely so much on one player to score, to pass, to rally and to lead that it's all going to fall apart at some point in these playoffs, which is why some folks keep picking Miami or Boston in the East.
And then you see him do it again and again and again, even into the NBA playoffs, and you start to wonder if anything in basketball is beyond the kid.
Another direct comparison:
But once again it was Rose who carried the Bulls to playoff victory the way Michael Jordan used to: 36 points two nights after he scored 39, 12 of 13 free throws two nights after making 19 of 21, eight rebounds, six assists.
Half-hearted conditional qualifier (a pretty good sign someone is going to say something ridiculous:
OK, I'm about wander into territory I swore for the past 13 years I wouldn't wander into, because whenever a sportswriter has dared to compare a guy -- even Kobe Bryant -- to Jordan, my head explodes, because it's completely irresponsible … but here goes anyway.
The ridiculous thing that's being said:
This is so much like early Jordan it's scary. You couldn't have followed the '90s Bulls and not remember the nearly identical questions about the Bulls being too dependent on Jordan's scoring, about whether the team was really a contender if he had to average 40 in the first round against Cleveland, about whether any of his teammates were going to take the pressure off of him in the fourth quarter. We wondered and wondered until it was clear that Jordan was virtually infallible on the basketball court, particularly in pressure situations.
In that way and to this point, only, Rose reminds me absolutely of Jordan.
The Half-hearted attempt to distance himself from that statement:
Yes, Rose has a long, long, long way to go before he compares favorably with the 1990 Jordan, who was by then the best player in the league and on the cusp of winning a championship. Rose is only halfway to winning his first playoff series, and trust me, the games in Indianapolis are going to be a war, because the Pacers are certain they can still win this series.
There are lots, and I repeat LOTS of people who have done what Derrick Rose is doing up until this point in his career. Tracy McGrady rings a bell. This statement is utterly and completely hyperbolic and ridiculous, because frankly, you don't compare someone to Michael Jordan because they're doing things other people have also done. You didn't say "That Deke Mutombo is a heck of a shot blocker, he's just like Bill Russell." You don't say "That guy sure is a heck of a hitter, just like Lou Gerhig", or "Wow, look..that infielder hasn't missed a game all season. Just like Cal Ripken."
You compare someone to Jordan in the frame of a career, because up until Jordan started winning championships, what he was doing wasn't in fact special in the context of league history. Ask Nique, or Mitch Richmond, or Paul Pierce prior to 2008. Lots of people have been able score at will in the regular season and first round of the playoffs (and against an 8 seed with suspect defense, no less).
Michael Wilbon knows exactly the images and emotions he's eliciting by comparing someone to Jordan, and that's the reason why it took Kobe Bryant 5 championships just to get to the point where people don't spontaneously break out into violent bursts of rage when people compare him to Jordan. And, all he gets is "Yeah, I guess...kinda."
I don't know if its the same where you guys are (I imagine its not, because it seems like a distinctly canadian thing..maybe Minor league baseball would be a good comparison), but this reminds me of when I used to go watch my friend play in Junior A hockey games in Canada. A kid, usually around 15 or so would swing the stick and get a shot off, and someone would say, "Wow...kid's got a slapshot just like Gretzky."
And then someone would laugh.