A wise man once said those famous words 'to air is not human'.  Again and again the ageless Michael Jordan continues to make that statement stronger, his 45 point effort - including 22 straight Wizards points - against the suprisingly powerful New Jersey Nets following up his 51 point performance against Charlotte.  

The back-to-back effort against two of the East's stronger teams reinforced the point that he is not only the greatest of all-time to play the game, but at 38 years young and three years removed from the NBA he is still one of the best today.

Jordan had a chance to break 50 yet again, but coach Doug Collins put an end to his chances by removing him from the game with 2 minutes 52 seconds remaining and the Wizards up by 21.  Jordan said he was hoping to go for 60 against the Hornets.

"My legs are coming back," Jordan said. "This is how I was playing all summer, before I broke my ribs and I got off rhythm. If I can keep that tendinitis away, I'm pretty sure you can see that type of game again."

This spells bad news for Washington's next opponent, which coincedentially is the team which Jordan used to build his legacy, the Chicago Bulls.  Need more ammo for a motivated Jordan?  He only needs 15 points to reach 30,000 in his career, and now he has a chance to achieve this against Chicago.