
San Francisco Giants Barry Bonds is treated by Willie Mays after hitting home run number 756 off Washington Nationals pitcher Mike Bacsik breaking Hank Aaron's all-time Major League Baseball career home run record of 755 on Aug. 7, 2007 at AT&T Park in San Francisco, CA becoming the career all-time home run record holder. / Jack Gruber / USA TODAY NETWORK
Barry Bonds was the biggest player in the MLB from the late 1980s until the mid-2000s.
He won seven MVPs but he still took a backseat to NBA great Michael Jordan. Bonds recently detailed what it was like to hang with Jordan in Chicago. He discussed it on an appearance on the All The Smoke podcast with Stephen Jackson and Matt Barnes.
"Jordan and I kind of came up together," Bonds said. "When I first came into the league, we used to hang out in Chicago all the time when he was with the Bulls and the stuff. We went out just to grab a bite to eat and I ain't never a line of people that wanted to just talk to this guy."