I think the key differentiator right now, is simple this:
Between 1990-91 and 1997-98 seasons, let's call it "peak Jordan", he:
* Won 6 titles
* Averaged over 63 wins per season
* Lost one playoff series, after joining a 31-31 team (Semifinals vs Orlando & Shaq)
* Had multiple titles with < 4 total postseason losses
No one player has ever dominated a decade like that- for 8 years literally nobody beat a Jordan team except Shaq (in 6 games when Jordan hadn't played in 1.5 years).
Sure... and if we're looking at LeBron at the same age, he's got 3 more years until he reaches the end of Jordan's 1998 peak. So far he has 3 titles in 6 straight appearances with two different teams (incredible). I doubt he wins 3 more over the next 3 years, but who knows.
Also, Jordan's Bulls went from a 57 win team to a 55 win team when he retired in 1994. Kinda interesting.
Not quite as interesting if you consider that they went from 31-31 (w/o Jordan) to 154-27 (with) in the following 3 seasons.
You must mean Dennis Rodman.
ha jk
Rise of the Bulls coincides well with the arrival of Pippen
Jordan's first year - 38 wins (no Pippen)
Jordan's second year - 30 wins (no Pippen)
Jordan's third year - 40 wins (no Pippen)
Jordan's forth year - 50 wins (PIPPEN!!!)
Then eventually they started rollin. Third championship they win 57 games. Next year, Pippen leads them to 55 games wins without Jordan.
Even after they retired, Jordan leads Wizards to back-to-back losing seasons while Pippen helps Houston finished 3rd in the West and then helps Portland win 59, 50, 49 and 50 games in his next 4 seasons.
.