Washington Wizards' Michael Jordan, right, rubs teammate Richard Hamilton's head after Hamilton scored against the Sacramento Kings during the third quarter of the Wizards' 108-101 win, Thursday, Feb. 7, 2002, at the MCI Center in Washington. Hamilton led the Wizards with 33 points and Jordan had 25 points. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Rip Hamilton opened up about how Michael Jordan helped him improve his mid-range game.

 Hamilton recalled Jordan challenging him to implement one of Jordan’s more advanced moves.

“That was a kid getting the opportunity to play with the GOAT, the guy you looked up to as a kid. One that sticks out for me is playing against him in practice. People look at my mid-range game and say I have one of the best of all time, but a lot of that came off of being in the practices with MJ.

I remember one time I was playing against him and he took two hard dribbles to the basket and pulled up and he was like ‘Rip, add that to your game’. That’s the hardest play in the game of basketball to guard. And I was like, why? And he was like, because as a defender they are backpedaling so he can’t jump to the highest point to block your shot.

He’s always off-balance and you’re always on-balance. People all across the league kept hitting me up like, ‘How did you get your medium-range game so good?’ From the tools of Michael Jordan. From the opportunity to be around him for the two years I was in Washington,” Hamilton said during an AMA with Bleacher Report.