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Jordan vs. Bird: One on One is a 1988 basketball video game developed by Electronic Arts. It was released for the Commodore 64, DOS, Game Boy, Sega Genesis and NES. [1] It was also available as a Tiger Handheld Electronic Game. It is the sequel to One on One: Dr. J vs. Larry Bird.
The Jordan Rules were an instrumental aspect of the rivalry between the "Bad Boys" Pistons and Jordan's Chicago Bulls in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This style of defense limited players including Jordan from entering the paint and was carried out by Dennis Rodman and Bill Laimbeer.
One on One: Dr. J vs. Larry Bird, commonly known as One on One, is a basketball video game written by Eric Hammond for the Apple II and published by Electronic Arts in 1983. It was initially ported to the Atari 8-bit computers , ColecoVision , Commodore 64 , and IBM PC compatibles (as a self-booting disk ).
In One on One: Dr. J vs. Larry Bird, Bird plays opposite Julius Erving in a game of one-on-one. A sequel, Jordan vs Bird: One on One, was a 1988 basketball video game. In 2011, Bird was featured on the cover of NBA 2K12, alongside Magic Johnson and Michael Jordan. Bird is also a playable character in the revamped NBA Jam. [139]
Jordan vs. Bird: One on One: 1988 NES Commodore 64 Game Boy MS-DOS Genesis 1992: Electronic Arts: Electronic Arts: Magic Johnson's Fast Break: 1988 Arcade Amiga 1989 Commodore 64 1989 MS-DOS 1989 Amstrad CPC 1990 NES 1990 ZX Spectrum 1990 MSX: Arcadia Systems: Arcadia Systems: Advanced Basketball Simulator: 1988 Commodore 64: Sculptured ...
Jordan vs. Bird: One on One (1988) Michael Jordan in Flight (1993) Michael Jordan: Chaos in the Windy City (1994) Space Jam (1996) NBA 2K11 (2010) NBA 2K12 (2011) NBA ...
Jordan vs Bird: One on One (1989) for the NES; Marble Madness (1989) for the NES; Spitfire Attack (1983) for the Atari 2600; Survival Run (1983) for the Atari 2600; Time Lord (1990) for the NES; World Games (1989) for the NES
Michael Jordan was offered a co-captainship but he deferred to Bird and Johnson. USA Basketball asked the NBA to supply players for its 1992 roster; [15] the league was initially unenthusiastic about this idea. [8] In early 1991, Sports Illustrated labeled the forthcoming American roster as the "Dream Team" on the cover of its February 18 issue ...