He came to Chicago when Jordan was whiffing at curveballs. So plenty of scoring opportunities that year. How did he do in 94-95? I'll wait.
He came to Chicago when Jordan was whiffing at curveballs. So plenty of scoring opportunities that year. How did he do in 94-95? I'll wait.
96 Rodman>>>>>98 Rodman which is what I referenced
https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/...-chicago-bulls
Once again Pippen was more a 1b than a 2.
Pacers would have defeated the Jazz in 1998. But would have been a of a series
Last edited by FrostKing; 05-16-2020 at 12:17 PM.
That Pacer team never gets talked about it. They were highly underrated.
Great point. Wade was non-negotiable to Lebron.
I do not think Michael's father would have allowed him to quit on Chicago. Why would MJ anyway, he was already arguably the best player in the League. You don't tuck tail and run
This is an important part: I think MJ enjoyed beating his rivals (and embarrassing them) more than he did winning and all the social hoopla that comes with that. Lebron is the opposite he loves the media shows and parties that come from winning.
I know what you referenced. Just'ing that you think he fell off the cliff.
He came to Chicago to sacrifice stats and be a role player, not an all star.
He was 37 years old in 98 and coming off the bench.
And still pulling down 15 boards a game like a beast.
Yeah, if Lebron somehow doesn't win in Miami, which seemed impossible considering it was the most talented team in in the league, would have been interesting to see if he ever even makes the Cleveland return. My guess is he just keeps forming super teams all over the place until he finally gets one.
Defense fell off in the 2nd half of the season. Not saying he sucked or anything but the dip was noticeable. Spent a lot of time in foul trouble. fouled out of 2 ECF games in 1998 and in foul trouble vs Utah the entire series.
Also,
Rebound average in the 1996 finals vs Seattle - 14.4
Rebound average in the 1998 Finals vs Utah - 8.3
He's still basically doing that so thats a safe assumption tbh. I mean even when he went back to Cleveland it was never really about Cleveland but just about forming a new super team.
Still salty about Jordan's dominance after all these years![]()
rodman pistons>rodman bulls>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>rodman spurs = rodman mavs/lakers etc whatever team he played at the end of his career...
Had no idea Leonardo DiCaprio was at that game 6.
Well...back to watching clips of old games on YouTube now.
Excellent docuseries. 5 stars.
Always suspected food poisoning and not the flu. I think the same happened to the Lakers in Sacramento.
Lebron can take solace now, in knowing that catching Jordan was never even a option for anyone, realistically. He's probably irate after watching this trying to get Pelinka to get him 5 more all stars so he can win a few more and try and wiggle his way back into the conversation![]()
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Last edited by Dirks_Finale; 05-17-2020 at 10:56 PM.
They should have opened a criminal investigation into the food poisoning if that’s really what it was.
Rusty was one of Tim Duncan’s teammates at Wake Forest and a rookie on the 1998 Chicago Bulls.
Decent doc. I'm gonna miss looking into those baby yellow eyes.
at the Utah State A&M Community College Astrology Club
Not necessary
Jordan beat the same pizza delivery boys in both Finals
"Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen eliminated the most 60-Win teams in the postseason in NBA History"
Seven teams![]()
Episode 9. I understand this was "Kerr's episode" but not one single clip of Kukoc scoring his 21 points in Game 7? Toni was 1 point short of Reggie for the games 2nd highest scorer
I also think they should have shown Michael's failed drive in Game 6 with Bob Costa's famous "The Bulls and Pacers are going to the limit!" to even more set the moment. It was shown for a few seconds in the background of a Sportscenter clip
But there was a-lot packed into this episode.
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