The Pacers series was a surprise. No one thought they were going to beat the Bulls during the season. The Bulls were overwhelming favorites to win it all throughout the year.
#Clueless
The pacers took the 98 Bulls to seven games.
The Pacers series was a surprise. No one thought they were going to beat the Bulls during the season. The Bulls were overwhelming favorites to win it all throughout the year.
I don't remember it that way at all. Chicago had tons of injury problems with Pippen and Rodman that season and everyone was wondering the Bulls could pull one more le out or if they were getting ready to break down. They were still favorites, but pretty far from certain. Then there was all the drama with that team. Everyone knew it was the last year you ever see Jackson on the sidelines and the last year you'd see Pippen and Jordan in Bulls uniforms, since they all hated Krause and Reinsdorf.
I remember the Bulls having some injury problems, but I recall no doubt that they would win it all. I know I had none personally, and saw none in the media. That 98 team was probably the weakest they fielded, but there were no other strong contenders. When you add that to the fact that they had the NBA's own personal messiah, it was pretty much a lock.
fact is there has never been any single year where you only had one contender. the game is full of uncertainty and before the playoff whistle is blown, you have 3-4 or even more teams every year who could possibly end up winning the championship. miami were also the favorite to win in 11 and you didn't know which team would come out as the blackhorse. there's only one team favorite to win the championship but there's no guarantee it'll actually win it tbh
$129 million
If the Lakers re-sign Dwight Howard this summer, the franchise is looking at a significant luxury tax payment for next season.
Luxury taxes stand to be a significant issue next season as the rates go up progressively as part of the new collective bargaining agreement. If the team's payroll hovers around $100 million to $110 million, the Lakers could be paying $70 million to $119 million in taxes.
The bill for this season is $129 million, including tax (for a team struggling to make the playoffs). It's far-fetched to expect the Lakers to s out $170 million to $229 million on essentially the same roster next season.
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