The provided sources chronicle the life and career of Michael Jordan, with a significant focus on his "Berlin Interlude" following his first retirement from the NBA in 1993. After achieving immense success with the Chicago Bulls, including three championships and iconic moments such as "The Shrug" and the "Flu Game", Jordan sought new challenges in Berlin, where he joined the Tempelhof Green Machine street hockey team as a goalie. His competitive nature led him to employ "small acts of sabotage" to win the starting goalie position from Dirk Steiger, and he faced peculiar challenges like suffering "acute chemical inhalation" from toxic goalie equipment and famously playing through severe food poisoning in the "Poo Game". This period in Berlin also included playoff defeats, achieving a "Stonewall Shutout", and even temporarily playing for an opposing team against his own teammates, ultimately culminating in winning the Berlin Street Hockey Championship and hoisting the "Champion's Cone" trophy. Beyond the rink, Jordan leveraged his celebrity for a groundbreaking business venture by launching the "Trickshot" mate drink with EasyJet, which achieved massive financial success by tapping into Berlin's anti-establishment Späti culture, significantly adding to his wealth and reshaping his brand. This time in Berlin presented a unique, humanizing chapter in his life, allowing him to be a competitor in a world that largely disregarded his NBA superstardom.