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Wilt Chamberlain Once Told Michael Jordan: They Changed The Rules To Stop Me... They Changed Them To Help You
Manny Rubio-Imagn Images

During the 1997 NBA All-Star Game luncheon, a legendary moment unfolded between two of the greatest basketball players ever: Wilt Chamberlain and Michael Jordan. According to numerous reports, Wilt leaned in and said something to MJ that struck like a thunderbolt of historical truth. 

"Just remember, Michael, when you played, they changed the rules of basketball to make it easier for you to dominate. When I played, they changed the rules to make it harder for me."

That wasn't just a bold claim, it was a fact rooted in decades of basketball history.

Wilt Chamberlain, one of the most physically dominant athletes the sport has ever seen, faced an NBA that scrambled to level the playing field during his reign. In contrast, Michael Jordan played in an era where several rules were adjusted in ways that coincidentally or not enhanced perimeter scoring and protected stars like him from physical punishment.

Let’s start with Wilt. The NBA literally altered the rules because of his dominance. First, the lane was widened from 12 feet to 16 feet in 1964, the infamous “paint” to push Wilt further from the basket. It was informally called the "Wilt Rule." Before that, he would simply park himself near the rim and score at will. 

Second, offensive goaltending was strictly enforced to prevent him from tipping shots off the rim, something he excelled at. 

Third, the league revised the inbounding rule: when the ball was being thrown in from the baseline, Wilt was banned from leaping over defenders to grab it mid-air and dunk it. And finally, they even created rules preventing free-throw shooters like Wilt from leaping over the line, since he used to take a step and dunk the free throw. These rules didn’t just slow Wilt, they rewrote the geometry of the game to limit his impact.

Now contrast that with the Jordan era. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the NBA began enforcing hand-checking rules more strictly, particularly on the perimeter. This gave guards like Jordan more space to operate and less physical resistance from defenders. 

By the mid-90s, hand-checking was almost entirely eliminated above the free-throw line, making isolation scoring easier. Illegal defense rules also helped Jordan: defenders were restricted from playing zone or cheating too far off their man, meaning that true one-on-one matchups were enforced, tailor-made for a superstar like MJ. 

While Wilt had to battle through triple teams in the post, Jordan often got to attack defenders one-on-one in space.

Jordan’s game also benefited from the evolution of flagrant foul rules and heightened focus on protecting offensive players. The league clamped down on hard fouls and made examples of overly physical teams like the "Bad Boy" Pistons,  a group that had famously roughed up Jordan in the late '80s. 

By the time Jordan hit his peak, the game had been reshaped to highlight finesse, speed, and perimeter scoring, all strengths of his.

Wilt wasn’t wrong. While Jordan is rightfully celebrated as the GOAT by many, Wilt Chamberlain lived through an NBA that feared his dominance so much, they changed the rules to hold him back. Jordan? He soared in a league that cleared the runway for takeoff.

This article first appeared on Fadeaway World and was syndicated with permission.

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