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Photo by Bongarts/Getty Images Robert Parish is best known as a Boston Celtics legend, but the Hall of Fame center once joined the Chicago Bulls and became one of the few teammates willing to push back against Michael Jordan. The story has resurfaced through Parish’s new memoir, ‘The Chief’, with fresh attention on his brief but memorable spell in Chicago. It also offers another reminder that even on Jordan’s Bulls, not everyone stayed quiet.

Basketball player Robert Parish, the number one draft choice of the Golden State Warriors. Parish would later go on to play for the Boston, Celtics and win three NBA championships. Robert Parish says he was the one Bulls teammate who talked back to Michael Jordan As highlighted by EssentiallySports from Robert Parish’s new memoir ‘The Chief,’ the Celtics icon recalled how unusual it was for anyone in Chicago to answer back when Jordan started talking trash.

“He wasn’t accustomed to anyone talking back to him. He’d talk s___ all day to the team, but no one would talk back except me,” Parish revealed. That fits with other stories Parish has told about his lone Bulls season, including a heated practice exchange when Jordan threatened to kick his b___ and Parish told him to come and get some.

Parish’s point was clear. Jordan was used to controlling the tone, but the veteran center had already won titles and was never going to be intimidated at that stage of his career. Robert Parish spent one season with the Bulls and had other tense Michael Jordan moments Parish joined the Bulls as a free agent before the 1996-97 season and finished his career there, appearing in 43 games with three starts as a veteran backup center on Chicago’s 69-win championship team.

He was not brought in to be a star. He was there for experience, depth, and leadership, which made his willingness to challenge Jordan stand out even more. Parish has also spoken in other interviews about how heated Bulls practices could become, saying Jordan did not always handle resistance well when teammates talked back or the second unit pushed the starters.