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Charles Barkley Explains How One On-Air Comment Ended His Friendship With Jordan

Charles Barkley Explains How One On-Air Comment Ended His Friendship With Jordan

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Charles Barkley is opening up about the precise moment his relationship with Michael Jordan fractured for good, describing a fallout that stemmed from a blunt assessment delivered on television and never repaired afterward.

Barkley said the break occurred after he publicly evaluated Jordan’s time running the Charlotte Hornets while working as an NBA analyst. The critique, he explained, was rooted in his responsibility to speak honestly about basketball decisions, even when they involved someone he considered a close friend. Jordan, however, did not take the comments lightly.

“He called me that night and went ballistic on me,” Barkley said. “He said, ‘You supposed to be my best friend and you’re going to do that bullsh*t?’”

According to Barkley, the disagreement highlighted an unavoidable tension between personal loyalty and professional integrity. He felt that shielding Jordan from criticism would have undermined his role as a commentator, especially given the widespread scrutiny surrounding the Hornets’ draft record, roster moves, and lack of sustained playoff success during Jordan’s leadership.

“I told him I have to do my job and you haven’t been a good GM,” Barkley said.

That response did not calm the situation. Barkley recalled that the conversation quickly spiraled, turning from a disagreement into a permanent rupture between two men who once shared a deep bond.

“He cursed me out up and down,” Barkley said. “And we have not spoken since that night.”

For years, the end of their friendship remained largely unexplained. Barkley’s account now offers a clearer picture of how a relationship forged during the NBA’s most influential era quietly dissolved. Once united by competitiveness, trust, and shared experiences that helped elevate the league in the 1990s, Barkley and Jordan ultimately found that honesty on television carried a personal cost neither was willing to absorb.