The long-standing animosity between Michael Jordan and Isiah Thomas, a rivalry often reignited by documentary clips and podcast soundbites, has officially reached a three-decade milestone of silence.
During an appearance on The Beat with Ari Melber, Thomas provided a rare look at the timeline of their fractured relationship, revealing that the two legends have not shared a conversation since the early 1990s.
While fans often point to the 2020 release of The Last Dance as the final nail in the coffin for any hope of a reconciliation, Thomas clarified that the bridge was burned long before Netflix cameras began rolling.
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When asked by Melber to pin down the last time he and Jordan spoke as peers, Thomas did not point to a recent All-Star game or a chance meeting at a league event. Instead, he identified a definitive turning point in basketball lore.
“It was right before the Dream Team,” Thomas admitted, signaling that their communication ceased nearly 34 years ago.
This revelation left the studio in a state of disbelief, as it suggests that one of the most significant personal feuds in sports history has remained entirely frozen in time since the George H.W. Bush administration.
The 1991 walk-off and the infamous 1992 Olympic snub
The epicenter of this bitterness remains the 1992 U.S. Olympic “Dream Team,” a squad that Thomas was famously excluded from despite his Hall of Fame credentials. While Magic Johnson later suggested in his book When the Game Was Ours that a collective lack of chemistry led to the snub, Thomas has consistently placed the blame on Jordan’s doorstep.
“You got to give me that one, right? You got to give me that one,” Thomas urged Melber, referencing the widespread belief that Jordan issued an “it’s him or me” ultimatum to selection committee member Rod Thorn.
However, the silence actually pre-dates the Barcelona Games by a year. The true catalyst for the 34-year freeze was the 1991 Eastern Conference Finals, a series that saw Jordan’s Bulls finally sweep the Pistons after years of physical and psychological warfare.
With 7.9 seconds remaining in the final game, Thomas led his teammates off the court without shaking hands, a breach of sportsmanship that Jordan later described in The Last Dance as the moment he lost all respect for his rival. Jordan noted that while the Bulls had “shook their hands when they beat us” in previous years, the Pistons‘ refusal to reciprocate was a “certain respect to the game” that was never mended.








