Episodes seven and eight of "The Last Dance" documentary showed us just how tough of a teammate Michael Jordan was during his playing days. From purposely trying to get a rise out of even-keeled Scott Burrell, to actually coming to blows with Steve Kerr.  Jordan chalks his "tough love" mentality up to a byproduct of success. In the ESPN-produced, 10-part documentary Jordan says:

"Winning has a price, and leadership has a price. So I pulled people along when they didn't want to be pulled. I challenged people when they didn't want to be challenged."

His leadership style was clearly successful, and he's got six reasons to prove it. However, all that trash talking and name calling wouldn't have been cool with Miami Heat veteran Udonis Haslem. During an Instagram Live session with Richard Jefferson, Haslem said he wouldn't let the name calling fly if he was playing alongside Jordan.

"Michael Jordan's approach might not have necessarily been my approach on certain things," Haslem said. "It was some name calling in there. I'm just saying if I'm one of them people Mike talking to like that I might put hands on Mike, that's all I'm saying. I might put hands on Mike. And I love Mike to death. Mike the greatest of all time. But you can't call me the b-word, and the h-word. Nah, alright Mike. We gonna have to square off."

Jordan's motivation and leadership style have been brought into question since the latest episodes of "The Last Dance" aired, and many have wondered if all that verbal -- and sometimes physical -- abuse was necessary to get what he wanted out of his teammates. While Haslem doesn't necessarily agree with all of Jordan's tactics, he does understand what it takes to be a champion and the amount of work that goes into it.

"It ain't for everybody, pushing to be a champion every day, and a lot of times you're gonna push people the way they don't want to be pushed or push people to the level they don't want to be pushed to," Haslem said. "They don't really understand what it takes to be a champion if they've never been there, so I can understand Jordan from that aspect of things."

There's a difference, though, between motivating teammates and berating them and denying them food because they had a bad game. Jordan and the Bulls won a lot in the '90s, but they likely still could've gotten all those titles without all the name calling.