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"Jordan got up and immediately just turned around and hauled off" - Will Perdue on what led to Michael Jordan punching him during practice

"Jordan got up and immediately just turned around and hauled off" - Will Perdue on what led to Michael Jordan punching him during practice

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"Jordan got up and immediately just turned around and hauled off" - Will Perdue on what led to Michael Jordan punching him during practice originally appeared on Basketball Network.
One of Michael Jordan's infamous practice outbursts was when he punched Will Perdue — or tried to.
In Jordan's mind, every practice, every screen, every moment had to be championship-level.
That day, Perdue found himself on the wrong end of a hand.
It wasn't unusual to go at full speed in practice, especially if the goal was to show Jordan that one belonged in the fight. But that particular day, the screen Perdue set was a bit too aggressive, knocking Jordan off his feet.
What followed became one of the lesser-known but emblematic stories of Jordan's ruthless standard-setting behind closed doors.
"[Jordan] got up and immediately just turned around and hauled off and swung at me," Perdue recalled. "And I was able to duck just enough, so he didn't get a square shot to the face, but kind of hit me just across the side of the temple. But it wasn't like it turned into a debacle."
The moment didn't begin with hostility but with physicality, a hallmark of Jordan-era practices where intensity was the only language spoken.
Perdue, a 7-foot center from Vanderbilt University, had spent the early part of his Chicago Bulls career trying to carve out respect from a team dominated by one of the most demanding leaders in sports.
There was no bench-clearing chaos, no exaggerated fallout. The shot landed, the moment passed and practice went on. Because that was the code, iron sharpens iron — and Jordan demanded the same fire from teammates that he carried in himself.
Perdue wasn't targeted out of malice but was simply caught at the intersection of Jordan's unrelenting expectations and his own efforts to push back, to show he belonged.
Perdue had joined the Bulls in 1988 as a first-round pick, selected 11th overall. A big man with a soft shooting touch and solid rebounding instincts, he was expected to develop into a dependable role player behind Bill Cartwright.
In those formative Bulls years, particularly from 1988 through 1993, he was a quiet but significant presence in the rotation, averaging 5.5 points and 5.6 rebounds during the 1990–91 championship season.Production wasn't the only barometer of value in those days. What counted most, especially to Jordan, was whether a player could handle the emotional heat of the practice court, the unfiltered competitive furnace where reputations were built.
For someone like Perdue, facing daily scrutiny from both Jordan and coach Phil Jackson, the margin for error was small.
And when the screen sent Jordan to the floor, it was less about the physical act than the symbolic line that had been crossed. In Jordan's world, one had to own every second or be ready to be tested for it.
"Once I realized what happened, I started to step towards him," Perdue recalled. "Eddie Neely, who was on the team at the time, grabbed me from behind and said, 'Oh, big boy, that's probably not a good idea.'"
That warning may have been equal parts concern and common sense. By then, Jordan had already built a reputation not just as a scorer or closer but as a boundary enforcer of what it meant to win. And while Perdue could've escalated the moment, it was also clear that it wasn't personal.
It was the Jordan tax, paid in full by anyone who dared to compete with the same edge.
The mid-90s Bulls had their share of internal sparks. Steve Kerr, another future champion, famously absorbed a punch from Jordan during a heated scrimmage. Even Scottie Pippen, Jordan's closest ally, had been on the receiving end of intense disagreements.
These were manifestations of a dynasty under construction. Every man on that roster bore scars, verbal or otherwise, from the crucible of Jordan-led practices.
Perdue stayed with the Bulls through their first three-peat, earning rings in 1991, 1992 and 1993. By the time he was traded to the San Antonio Spurs in 1995 in exchange for Dennis Rodman, no less, he had become the quintessential role player: reliable, level-headed and tougher than many realized.
He would win another championship with the Spurs in 1999, bookending his career with four titles earned alongside two of the game's most demanding leaders, Jordan and Tim Duncan.This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jun 16, 2025, where it first appeared.

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