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One Last Shot: The Story of Michael Jordan's Comeback (Hardcover)

by Mitchell Krugel (Author) "MICHAEL JORDAN WON'T SUCCUMB TO TIME, TO AGE, TO PAIN, TO HIS OWN management gambles of the past eighteen months, and definitely not to expectations..." (more)
Key Phrases: final playoff spot, ten rebounds, basketball operations, Michael Jordan, Doug Collins, Eastern Conference (more...)
3.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
As the author of two previous books on basketball legend Jordan, sportswriter Krugel (Michael Jordan: A Biography) has shown himself to be perhaps the most knowledgeable current observer of the life and times of the basketball great. This third look focuses on "the drama within Michael Jordan's Third Coming," when the superstar came out of his second not-so-happy retirement in 2000 to become president of operations for the Washington Wizards, and his subsequent return in 2001 to the court as a player. For fans of Jordan as well as anyone who loved basketball during the 1990s, when Jordan's Chicago Bulls won six championships, this is an insightful depiction of Jordan's attempt "to recapture that endorphin of being the ultimate winner" in a new era. Krugel has done his homework, offering insider reports with much new information on Jordan's initial negotiations with the Wizards and his super-secret preseason practices. The author also presents excellent accounts of key games and even includes an appendix featuring a game-by-game review of Jordan's 2001-2002 season. But Krugel's access and insight also unintentionally produce some of the book's problems: while Krugel deftly analyzes Jordan's desire to be the sole arbiter of what will be his "last shot"-not the sports media world-his attempts to present the inner world of Jordan's comeback year are too often uncritical and awkward ("Something about pain attracted Michael, even tempted him"). Overall, this is an excellent look at an aging superstar's struggle "to find other places besides the basketball court to define his worth."
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
In his third book on Michael Jordan, New Jersey sportswriter Krugel concentrates on the athlete's most recent comeback. Perhaps owing to this narrow focus, the book does not lack for detail-Krugel chronicles nearly every game of Jordan's return season with the Washington Wizards-but as a result the text feels overcrowded and becomes heavy and unclear. Good sportswriters know how to vary the tempo of their writing-offering detail or "the big picture" as required. Krugel gives so much space to the minutiae that we never understand why we should know how many points Jordan scored in a mid-season game against a bad team. Furthermore, in his efforts to deify Jordan (he refers to his "First Coming," his "Second Coming," etc.), Krugel makes sweeping generalizations about basketball's high-profile players not being worth much because they aren't Michael Jordan, which is unfair and inaccurate. Among the crowded field of Jordan studies, readers would be better served by David Halberstam's Playing for Keeps. Recommended for diehard Jordan fans only.
James Miller, Springfield Coll. Lib., MA
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books; 1st edition (November 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312303548
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312303549
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,405,158 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #43 in  Books > Biographies & Memoirs > People, A-Z > ( J ) > Jordan, Michael

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Successes, failures, and questions answered, November 16, 2004
By retrowens (Alabama, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Like thousands if not millions of other people around the globe, Michael Jordan is easily my favorite athlete of all time - nobody else is even in the same galaxy. When I started watching NBA games on television, it was Michael Jordan's game that I found I enjoyed watching the most. These days, nearly two years after his final retirement, I'm like I'll always be until I die: I'm such a Michael Jordan fan that I have several of his highlight videos, videos of taped games, and a few books that are about him. I'm such a big fan that a few of my friends and family members have asked me, "Is Michael Jordan your role model?" Well no, I don't really have a role model but there would certainly be nothing wrong with that if he was. I just LOVE watching him play the game of basketball and I enjoy reading what others have to say about him. Oh yeah, and I don't hesitate to tell and show people that Michael Jordan answered one of my e-mails on his official site!

One Last Shot - The Story of Michael Jordan's Comeback is very satisfying for the latter. As mad as I was that he called it quits in 1998 and as thrilled as I was to see him make yet another comback in 2001 at age 38, I always asked, "Why?" Why, after having 9 out of 10 say he's the greatest player the game has ever seen and about a year after being named the greatest athlete of all time in ANY sport by ESPN's Sportscentury, would he return as an old man (by NBA standards) to risk his legacy by not even making the playoffs, missing dunks, and not even being named to any All-NBA teams?

The author of One Last Shot, Mitchell Krugel, really has done his homework. Jordan quotes are scattered throughout the entire book like leaves that descend from trees in the fall; you'll read about why MJ ultimately decided to come back for the "third coming", hear details about his wife filing for divorce at the worst possible moment, read about Michael's executive life with the Wizards, and probably best of all, read and learn about how close he came to doing the unthinkable: furthuring his legend, and how it didn't quite happen.

If you followed Jordan's latest comeback via watching games on television and listening to a lot of ESPN and other sports shows, you'll find yourself remembering and nodding in agreement to A LOT of what you'll read in One Last Shot. I know I certainly recall being one of those people that were sitting on the edge of my seat as MJ received the pass in the 2002 All-Star Game en route to a ......MISSED dunk, but did you know that this game brought Ali and Frazier back together for the first time since the Thrilla in Manila? Do you remember when several sports anchors were predicting the Wizards just may be the team to beat in the Eastern Conference? How many game-winning shots did he have? What did Michael Jordan do that he hadn't done since the '92 season? Who all was invited to the scrimmage games leading up to this final comeback, and who didn't ever show up??

Even with all you know from watching and reading about MJ's latest comeback, you'll get even more detailed insight to things that happened that you would've never known before. When you're done enjoying your reading and learning of the ups and downs of the greatest player of all time's final comeback, you're treated to an "Aferword" that's all about the 2002-2003 (final) season of his career. And if that wasn't enough, the "Appendix" consists of a game-by-game analysis of the 2001-2002 season. It tells the day the game was played, where, what the final score was, and has two sections: The Game Story and On This Date In MJ History. Awesome!

Learning all the more about MJ's comeback isn't all that's good in One Last Shot. The author is obviously a good writer - he writes in a way that keeps you interested from beginning to finish, and he has a sense of humor along with seeming to choose just the right statistics and quotes to include most of the time. There are even eight pages of photographs with captions included. The only thing I didn't like about reading One Last Shot is that at (many) times it seems disorganized. The author tends to jump around a bit. You'll read about a game mid-ways into the 2001-2002 season and then be transported back to a long memory of the Chicago Bulls seasons or back to the beginning of the Wizards season. That's not TOO offsetting, but I didn't particularly like having to reread certain parts to find out what part of MJ's career it's talking about now.

But I won't mind rereading the entire book in the future at all. One Last Shot is a liftime keeper for any major Michael Jordan fan or even for a casual fan that's interested in learning why he made this latest comeback. It has more to do with ego and how he was thrusted out of Chicago before he wanted to be than you would ever think.

Scroll to the top of this page and check out the price. With what you get (8 pages of photos, 320 pages, and game-by-game analysis), it makes me wonder why this wasn't a New York Times Bestseller and why it doesn't have at least 50 reviews up already.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mrs.Cox project, March 16, 2004
By wendy shaw (Springfield, Ohio United States) - See all my reviews
Bam jordan hits the game winning shot from the top of the key.If you haved watched jordan before this is regular event.This new book shows jordans new will to win and his fire inside that brought him back to the game he loved at 40.

All though this book was a bit repeating i thought it should what jordan thought.He was such an allstar and will always be.In this book you will see the personal battles (his wife wanting a divorce) to his physical battles(his knee injury).The book doesnt only explain his physical battles.It also shows his struggle switching from owner to player and playing with a team that had his posters on his wall.

I thought the author did a good job through out the book keeping the readers attetion and keeping him wanting more.This book shows a side of jordan you have never seen.Overall this was a very good book.I would recomend this to everyone.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars In depth look of the greatest basketball player, June 7, 2004
By Leo Lim (Collierville, TN USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Author chronicles Jordan's first season on a playoff mission with the Washington Wizards, something which happened when this franchise was still known as the Bullets.

The book opens with Jordan sinking that picture perfect shot against Utah then to his foray as a Wizard executive, practicing with the Wizards players then to his experiences in the court with teammates not named Scottie or Dennis but Kwame, Brendon. Krugel paints a Jordan looking for that one last shot, that one last roll of the dice no matter how many times over he has beaten the house.

I really loved this book for it gave us an in depth look of Jordan at his lowest point - from there you could begin to grasp how he won all those championships. The book also explains why there was a comeback attempt and why it ultimately failed. As proof, the author compares Jordan's best performance as a Bull compared to Jordan's best performance as a Wizard.

In the end, it was Jordan's body that let him down but not his indomitable will. Though there were times when he could hold his own against a new generation led by Kobe, Pierce and Iverson, he failed miserably when measured against the standard to which all other future basketball players will be measured - his former incarnation.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars GOOD BUT NOT GREAT
ONE LAST CHANCE IS ABOUT THE 3RD COMEBACK BY FORMER NBA GREAT MICHAEL JORDAN. AFTER BEING AWAY FROM THE GAME FOR 3 YEARS, JORDAN RETURNS AT AGE 38 TO TRY AND TAKE THE WIZARDS TO... Read more
Published 9 months ago by COOL JEWEL

3.0 out of 5 stars one last shot
This book One Last Shot was a good book.It wasn't the best book writen about Jordan but,it had its good points.The book I think tells it good detail most of the time. Read more
Published on May 23, 2007

3.0 out of 5 stars I really did go to school with this guy. Really.
I was writing stories before MJ was shooting hoops. I was published before he warmed the bench at Laney High School. Read more
Published on August 27, 2006 by Michael LaRocca

1.0 out of 5 stars NOT GOOD AT ALL, no real inside sources, copy paste effort.
This book is just bad, little inside info on what was going on, bar a few quotes that are hardly "inside info". Read more
Published on August 25, 2006 by R. almeida

1.0 out of 5 stars Very very disappointing book
This book looks like the author took some newspaper and magazine clips from others and cobbled them together in a sloppily written book devoid of insight. Read more
Published on February 6, 2005 by mark thompson

4.0 out of 5 stars I liked this book
Bam jordan hits the game winning shot from the top of the key.If you haved watched jordan before this is regular event. Read more
Published on March 16, 2004 by wendy shaw

4.0 out of 5 stars Pretty Good!
Although i liked this book, i peed! You are a poopstick!
Published on October 11, 2003

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