Michael Jordan sent Ben Affleck a wish list for the biopic “Air,” which included a big part for an assistant coach on Team USA and Viola Davis playing his mother

Ben Affleck may be one of the world’s foremost movie stars and the proud owner of two Academy Awards, but he’s no Michael Jordan.

Before embarking on his latest project – “Air,” which tells the story of a young Jordan signing an industry-altering shoe deal with Nike – the actor and filmmaker sat down for lunch with the NBA legend to get his feedback and permission to make the movie.

“Michael Jordan, who’s the most cool, intimidating guy in the world, came and said, ‘I’ll sit down with you,'” Affleck told audience members after an advanced screening of the film in New York City. “And I went and sat down and had lunch and I said, ‘First of all, I won’t do this movie if you don’t want me to do it, just to start with, because it’s just a show of reverence and respect for you.’

“‘I have to change some details and stuff, but I think there’s more to the story than this,'” he added to Jordan. “‘And I don’t want to do anything that feels fundamentally wrong to you, obviously.'”

That’s when the GOAT chimed in, offering Affleck a short but significant list of “what I care about” making the final cut.

George Raveling was at the top of the list.

The former college basketball player – who was an assistant coach for the Team USA squad Jordan won gold with at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles – was so crucial to his decision that Jordan told Affleck, “I wouldn’t be at Nike without him.”

His Airness felt similarly about Howard White, the NBA draft pick who embarked on a career at Nike after knee injuries derailed his professional career. The former Maryland Terrapins point guard developed a relationship with Jordan as he weighed the deals that various brands – Adidas, Converse, and Nike – laid at his feet, and eventually went on to become the Vice President of Jordan Brand.

“I was like, ‘Maybe I can get Chris Tucker [to play White]. I’ve always wanted to work with Chris Tucker,'” Affleck recalled telling Jordan. “And he was like, ‘I know Chris.'”

That settled that.

Then came the matter of casting Jordan’s parents, who were central to the story of their son’s shoe deal. When the five-time NBA MVP told Affleck his father, James, “had the best personality out of everyone I ever knew,” Affleck assured him that he’d already found “the right guy for that matter” – Julius Tennon.

Conveniently, Tennon is married to the legendary Viola Davis – Jordan’s only true casting demand for the film. The Chicago Bulls icon wanted the EGOT winner to play his mother, Deloris.