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"An hour later, 2,000 girls showed up" - The night women flocked to a Washington club to chase Michael JordanMichael Jordan‘s 2001 NBA return with the Washington Wizards was the biggest story in sports. But before long, the story shifted from the comeback itself to the man behind it.Now that he was back, everyone wanted a piece of the action before the moment passed.One night in Washington captured it perfectly. The buzz around Jordan took off. Women especially got into it. Roughly 2,000 of them.Jordan's pullJordan’s return to the Wizards wasn’t your ordinary roster tweak. It changed the whole story for the franchise. It also showed the league why his name still packed such a punch.Washington scraped by before he got there. The season prior, they averaged just 15,577 fans a game. Dead last in attendance.Jordan, then in his late 30s, hit the court. Things turned quickly.The Wizards sold out every home game at the 20,674-seat MCI Center. Average bumped up a third. Over 20,600 per game.Fans piled in to see the iconic guard in a Wizards jersey. Tickets weren’t just hot for games. They lit up the city. Restaurants packed. Lots full. Downtown streets buzzing on game nights.That vibe hit the nightlife hard, too, with women lining up to meet the NBA legend."ESPN’s 30 for 30: Broke" breaks down just how crazy things got.“For women, there is this thing you can apply to — you got all this blogging sites and stuff — and it’s called ‘Baller Alert,’” former NFL player Bart Scott said.“Our slogan is ‘For women who want to live the Ballerific life.' When Michael Jordan was playing for the Wizards, at the time, I was VIP coordinator for one of the hottest clubs, block away from the MCI Center, we had a radio broadcast at the time, and we shouted out that Michael Jordan was in the club and maybe an hour later, 2000 girls showed up,” Robin “Boss” Lyon said.“This is how serious this thing is. When a baller shows up, you receive a text on your phone so you can get nice and cute and go out and try to catch you a baller,” Scott added.That pull doesn’t come around often. Jordan owned the 1990s with the Chicago Bulls. Face of a dynasty. Global icon. Yet, even years after the six rings, his presence turned any night into an event.Denver Nuggets head coach David Adelman brought it up recently. He said that Jordan had an aura that today’s stars simply can’t match.Related: "I can't believe what I'm seeing from this kid" - Stephen A. Smith explains why Kon Knueppel is his Rookie of the YearHidden trapsThe “Broke” documentary doesn’t dwell too much on Jordan. It still shows the world he helped build. One where money and fame draw trouble in as fast as they draw crowds. Interviewees lay it out straight. Attention latches onto cash and stardom. Things get messy quickly. Especially for young athletes, figuring out life away from the game.Nobody can say for sure why that many women showed up in Washington when Jordan walked in. Maybe just the music and vibe. Either way, attention flows where money and fame go. It hits fast, and some pros are always at risk of falling into that honey trap.Jordan understood that better than most. Long before his Wizards comeback, he talked about the careful way he built trust and friendships, saying, “Friends are built over time. It’s not built over short periods of time where gradually my trust in you has increased.”