The
kid
just
wants
to
be
like
Mike.
He's
got
the
tattoos
with
"M"
on
one
deltoid,
"J"
on
the
other.
He
plays
basketball
with
an
intense
passion.
Most
important,
his
shoes
are
Classic
Nike
Air
Jordans,
just
like
the
ones
dad
used
to
wear.
About
the
only
thing
Marcus
Jordan
doesn't
have
is
his
father's
game,
which
is
why
he
ended
up
at
the
University
of
Central
Florida
instead
of
following
Michael
Jordan's
large
footsteps
to
North
Carolina
or
signing
with
another
basketball
powerhouse.
That's
not
necessarily
the
younger
MJ's
fault.
A
lot
of
kids
have
problems
living
up
to
their
father's
accomplishments,
and
from
the
moment
Marcus
first
picked
up
a
basketball
he
was
destined
to
be
compared
to
his
very
famous
dad.
Something
else
isn't
his
fault,
either.
He's
not
the
one
who
cost
his
university
a
lucrative
equipment
contract
because
he
insisted
on
honouring
his
father's
legacy
by
lacing
up
his
Air
Jordans
in
an
exhibition
game
the
other
night.
Blame
the
pinheads
at
the
university
for
not
realizing
that
in
today's
world
of
big-money
college
athletics
this
was
a
bigger
deal
than
they
thought.
Blame
the
coach
for
giving
Jordan
a
scholarship
mostly
so
he
could
use
his
name
to
put
the
basketball
program
on
the
map.
Blame
Adidas
for
having
a
hissy
fit
over
something
it
could
have
easily
ignored.
But
don't
blame
Marcus
Jordan.
The
freshman
guard
who
bears
the
burden
of
living
under
his
father's
shadow
was
just
doing
what
he
said
he
would
do
from
the
moment
UCF
came
calling.
"When
I
was
being
recruited,
we
talked
about
it,"
Marcus
told
the
Orlando
Sentinel.
"They
said
they
had
talked
to
the
Adidas
people,
and
it
wasn't
going
to
be
a
problem.
I
think
everybody
understands
how
big
of
a
deal
it
is
for
my
family."
No,
everybody
doesn't
understand.
Browse
the
message
boards
on
the
Internet
and
the
younger
Jordan
is
being
savaged
as
greedy,
petulant,
stubborn
and
a
bad
teammate
for
refusing
to
wear
Adidas
shoes
like
the
rest
of
the
Knights.
They
see
no
reason
why
Jordan
should
be
allowed
to
wear
a
competitor's
shoes
when
Adidas
was
laying
out
a
reported
US$3
million
over
five
years
to
outfit
athletes
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