Michael Jordan is widely regarded as the greatest player in NBA historyāand one of the most iconic athletes of all time. With a career as decorated and intense as his, itās only natural that it would be filled with unforgettable, and at times hilarious, stories. Former Chicago Bulls teammate Craig Hodges recently added another one to the legend.
Appearing on the All The Smoke podcast, Hodges claimed that Jordan once dropped 30 points in a gameāwhile tipsy. āWe were playing in Miami, and we were rolling at this time,ā Hodges said. āThe system was really running itself. You just show up to games and let it flow.ā
According to Hodges, after a morning shootaround, Jordan asked to be dropped off at a local bar instead of heading back to the hotel. When the team picked him up later on the way to the game, something felt⦠off.
āMJ says, āDrop me off here,ā and we leave him at the bar. He says heās going to have some beers,ā Hodges recalled. āHe tells us to pick him up on the way to the arena. When we do, heās still in his sweats.ā

Guard Craig Hodges of the Chicago Bulls looks on.
āYou know MJ always comes to games suited and booted. This time, he gets on the bus in his sweats and says, āYeah man, Iām feeling good.ā You could smell the beer on him. Then he scores 30 by halftime. He goes through warmups and says, āIām seeing three rimsāIām shooting at the one in the middle.āā

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Jordanās mythology: From the flu game to bar-time buckets
The ātipsy gameā joins a long list of near-mythical Michael Jordan stories. Chief among them is the legendary Flu GameāGame 5 of the 1997 NBA Finalsāwhere a visibly ill Jordan poured in 38 points to lead the Bulls to victory over the Utah Jazz. While some later attributed the illness to food poisoning, the image of Jordan leaning on Scottie Pippen in exhaustion has become an indelible moment in sports history.
There are also tales of Jordan manufacturing motivationālike the time he allegedly took offense to LaBradford Smith or when George Karl didnāt acknowledge him at dinnerāusing even the smallest slights to unleash dominance. Whether the provocation was real or imagined, Jordan always found a way to turn it into fuel.
Confidence as a competitive edge
What unites these stories is Jordanās unmatched self-belief. While other stars played within the rhythm of the game, Bulls star dictated it. He didnāt just believe he was the best player on the floorāhe knew it, and so did everyone else.
Whether ill, overlooked, or slightly buzzed, Jordanās mentality never wavered. His confidence wasnāt arroganceāit was a combination of preparation, mental toughness, and a refusal to settle for anything less than greatness.

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Scoring 30 points while tipsy might sound like a funny footnote, but in the broader context of Jordanās career, itās another example of how his mindset often mattered just as much as his physical gifts.





