Ranking the Best Players Phil Jackson Has Ever Coached

Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson at O'Neal's Lakers statue ceremony
Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson at O'Neal's Lakers statue ceremony / Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Phil Jackson still holds the all-time record for most championships won by a head coach. With 11 rings combined in Chicago and LA, the Zen Master is atop the basketball coaching pantheon. While he's been lucky enough to coach some of the greatest basketball players history has ever seen, he's also tremendous at managing personalities and bringing a team together.

Combining his Bulls and Lakers career, here are the seven best players Jackson's ever coached.

7. Dennis Rodman

Phil Jackson and Dennis Rodman at Rodman's Hall of Fame induction
Phil Jackson and Dennis Rodman at Rodman's Hall of Fame induction / Jim Rogash/Getty Images

One of the original Bad Boys from the championship Pistons, Rodman brought the same attitude and energy to his time with Jackson and the Bulls. In his career, Rodman won five championships, led the league in rebounds seven years in a row, won two Defensive Player of the Year awards, and was an eight-time selection to the All-Defensive team.

6. Gary Payton

Gary Payton with the Lakers in 2004
Gary Payton with the Lakers in 2004 / Kirby Lee/Getty Images

GP is not the first name you think of as a great player coached by Phil, but his Hall of Fame resume speaks for itself. Before playing for Jackson’s Lakers during the back end of his career, The Glove was a Defensive Player of the Year, nine-time All-NBA selection, nine-time All-Star, and nine-time First Team All-Defense selection. Payton also won two Olympic gold medals and an NBA championship on the 2005-06 Miami Heat.

5. Karl Malone

Karl Malone on the 2004 Lakers.
Karl Malone on the 2004 Lakers. / JEFF HAYNES/Getty Images

An older Malone also played alongside Payton on the 2003-04 Lakers. The Mailman does not have championships like every other player on this list, but his individual resume speaks volumes. Along with being a two-time MVP, 14-time All-Star, 14-time All-NBA selection, four-time All-Defense selection, and Dream Team gold medalist in ’92, Malone ranks second all-time in total points scored in league history. He's also on the NBA’s 50 Greatest Players list.

4. Scottie Pippen

Scottie Pippen on the Bulls.
Scottie Pippen on the Bulls. / JEFF HAYNES/Getty Images

Some call him the greatest No. 2 of all time, but that does not say enough about how great Scottie Pippen truly was? Six championships in Chicago with Phil, seven All-Star appearances, seven All-NBA selections, and 10 All-Defensive team selections are what made Pippen truly special. He was a Dream Team member and won gold again in 1996. Another one of the league's 50 Greatest Players, Pippen’s prime years came with Jackson as his coach.

3. Shaquille O'Neal

Shaquille O'Neal and Phil Jackson after winning the NBA Finals
Shaquille O'Neal and Phil Jackson after winning the NBA Finals / HENNY ABRAMS/Getty Images

After only four years in the league, Shaq already made the list of the 50 Greatest Players in the league history. He's got four rings (three with Jackson in LA), a Rookie of the Year, three NBA Finals MVPs, 15 All-Star Game appearances, 14 All-NBA teams, three All-Defensive teams, two scoring titles, and Olympic gold in ’96, O’Neal is in the conversation for greatest center of all time.

2. Kobe Bryant

Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant
Phil Jackson and Kobe Bryant / Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images

The late, great Kobe Bryant will always be attached to having Jackson as his head coach. The duo won five championships together and Bryant also won two Finals MVPs in 2009 and 2010. A league MVP in 2008, 18 All-Star selections, 15 All-NBA teams, 12 All-Defense, two Olympic gold medals, and two scoring titles also on his resume makes Bryant arguably the second-best shooting guard ever behind No. 1 on this list.

1. Michael Jordan

Michael Jordan and Phil Jackson following the NBA finals
Michael Jordan and Phil Jackson following the NBA finals / JEFF HAYNES/Getty Images

The GOAT himself. Six championships with Jackson and Pippen, six Finals MVPs, 5 league MVPs, Defensive Player of the Year, Rookie of the Year, 14 All-Star games, 11 All-NBA selections, and nine First-Team All-Defense selections, Jordan did and won everything imaginable. Also on the league’s 50 Greatest Players list, MJ was a two-time Olympic gold medalist in 1984 and with the Dream Team in 1992. With Phil Jackson retired, Jordan is forever the Zen Master GOAT.