Who said this? And if you know the answer, do you agree with the statement?
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Who said this? And if you know the answer, do you agree with the statement?
I'm guessing it was one of the Bad Boy Pistons players, and although I somewhat agree, you have to admit their '89 championship run was one of the easiest ever, they played teams that were without their best player.
I don't agree, MJ was the most devastating with Curry as a close second.
[QUOTE=warriorfan]I don't agree, MJ was the most devastating with Curry as a close second.[/QUOTE]
gave up finals mvp to a roleplayer. fluke MVP
[QUOTE=1987_Lakers]I'm guessing it was one of the Bad Boy Pistons players, and although I somewhat agree, [B]you have to admit their '89 championship run was one of the easiest ever[/B], they played teams that were without their best player.[/QUOTE]
How ironic coming from 1987 Lakers.
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival]
Who said this? And if you know the answer, do you agree with the statement?
[/QUOTE]
Mark Aguirre said this during the Pistons documentary - he said the Pistons were the most devastating team in the most devastating era (the 80's)
I agree with him.
While MJ was the most devastating individually, the Pistons were the most devastating team, just based on who they beat - they beat a prime Magic, prime Bird, and prime Jordan.. No other team in history has beaten such a high level of talent, or FACED such high level of competition consistently - every year from 1987-1991, there was an epic battle between Pistons and either MJ/Larry/Magic, or all 3.
In today's game, that would be like beating Kobe, Durant, and Lebron - Dallas did this in 2011, but they weren't facing these guys in epic battles every year, nor did they employ a physically-intimidating, [I][COLOR="Navy"]era-defining[/COLOR][/i] style of the Pistons.. That was an advantage of a 20-team league - the best players faced each other more often, which resulted in more legendary battles that stand the test of time.
The Pistons' era-defining, physical style is another reason they were the most devastating - they used a physically bruising style of play and tactics like the "Jordan Rules", which were [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double teams and hard fouling.. This gave them an aura of toughness that is STILL unmatched in the history of the game.. Accordingly, a big reason why the Pistons were the most devastating is that they devastated opponents mentally more than any team in the history of the game.
There is no better example of the Pistons mental intimidation then what they did to Scottie Pippen - in the 1989 ECF, they scared him into 10/7 on 40%... In 1990 ECF, they held him to 17/6/3 on 42%, including one of the biggest chokes ever in Game 7.. Bill Laimbeer [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s]described it perfectly[/url]: "[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen... It was MJ and the Jordannaires, and you can't win with just 1 player like that[/I]"... The Piston's ownage of Pippen is a great example of how devastating they could be.
.
Thought Rodman said this, guess not.
is the answer Jason Terry
[QUOTE=3ball]Mark Aguirre said this during the Pistons documentary - he said the Pistons were the most devastating team in the most devastating era (the 80's)
I agree with him.
While MJ was the most devastating individually, the Pistons were the most devastating team, just based on who they beat - they beat a prime Magic, prime Bird, and prime Jordan.. No other team in history has beaten such a high level of talent, or FACED such high level of competition consistently - every year from 1987-1991, there was an epic battle between Pistons and either MJ/Larry/Magic, or all 3.
In today's game, that would be like beating Kobe, Durant, and Lebron - Dallas did this in 2011, but they weren't facing these guys in epic battles every year, nor did they employ a physically-intimidating, [I][COLOR="Navy"]era-defining[/COLOR][/i] style of the Pistons.. That was an advantage of a 20-team league - the best players faced each other more often, which resulted in more legendary battles that stand the test of time.
The Pistons' era-defining, physical style is another reason they were the most devastating - they used a physically bruising style of play and tactics like the "Jordan Rules", which were [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double teams and hard fouling.. This gave them an aura of toughness that is STILL unmatched in the history of the game.. Accordingly, a big reason why the Pistons were the most devastating is that they devastated opponents mentally more than any team in the history of the game.
There is no better example of the Pistons mental intimidation then what they did to Scottie Pippen - in the 1989 ECF, they scared him into 10/7 on 40%... In 1990 ECF, they held him to 17/6/3 on 42%, including one of the biggest chokes ever in Game 7.. Bill Laimbeer [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s]described it perfectly[/url]: "[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen... It was MJ and the Jordannaires, and you can't win with just 1 player like that[/I]"... The Piston's ownage of Pippen is a great example of how devastating they could be.
.[/QUOTE]
:applause: :applause: :applause:
Nice read, loved watching the Pistons destroy teams.
[QUOTE=3ball]Mark Aguirre said this during the Pistons documentary - he said the Pistons were the most devastating team in the most devastating era (the 80's)
I agree with him.
While MJ was the most devastating individually, the Pistons were the most devastating team, just based on who they beat - they beat a prime Magic, prime Bird, and prime Jordan.. No other team in history has beaten such a high level of talent, or FACED such high level of competition consistently - every year from 1987-1991, there was an epic battle between Pistons and either MJ/Larry/Magic, or all 3.
In today's game, that would be like beating Kobe, Durant, and Lebron - Dallas did this in 2011, but they weren't facing these guys in epic battles every year, nor did they employ a physically-intimidating, [I][COLOR="Navy"]era-defining[/COLOR][/i] style of the Pistons.. That was an advantage of a 20-team league - the best players faced each other more often, which resulted in more legendary battles that stand the test of time.
The Pistons' era-defining, physical style is another reason they were the most devastating - they used a physically bruising style of play and tactics like the "Jordan Rules", which were [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double teams and hard fouling.. This gave them an aura of toughness that is STILL unmatched in the history of the game.. Accordingly, a big reason why the Pistons were the most devastating is that they devastated opponents mentally more than any team in the history of the game.
[B]There is no better example of the Pistons mental intimidation then what they did to Scottie Pippen - in the 1989 ECF, they scared him into 10/7 on 40%... In 1990 ECF, they held him to 17/6/3 on 42%, including one of the biggest chokes ever in Game 7.. Bill Laimbeer [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s]described it perfectly[/url]: "[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen... It was MJ and the Jordannaires, and you can't win with just 1 player like that[/I]"... The Piston's ownage of Pippen is a great example of how devastating they could be.[/B]
.[/QUOTE]
Mental intimidation?????? Sure if you call them literally karate chopping him in the head, elbows, and hits that would make Ronnie Lot cringe.
I don't see how a guy playing with pain should be considered a.choke.
I also find it funny that you constantly blame Pippen for the Bulls losing then say how worthless he was during their title runs. Which is it.
That quote is irrelevant to the overall career of Pip. Im positive that the Pistons players would say something totally different today.
[QUOTE=97 bulls]Mental intimidation?????? Sure if you call them literally karate chopping him in the head, elbows, and hits that would make Ronnie Lot cringe.
I don't see how a guy playing with pain should be considered a.choke.
I also find it funny that you constantly blame Pippen for the Bulls losing then say how worthless he was during their title runs. Which is it.
That quote is irrelevant to the overall career of Pip. Im positive that the Pistons players would say something totally different today.[/QUOTE]
Your Pippen fandom continues to shine through. Did you watch the 30 for 30 Bad Boys documentary? If you didn't, you need to watch it because even Pippen himself admitted he choked.
His game 7 in the 1990 ECF is the single worst choke job ever in a game 7 for a "second fiddle" star. 1-10 from the field for 2 points. He checked out mentally and Pip even admitted it. Why can't YOU accept this fact if the guy himself admitted it?
[QUOTE=3ball]Mark Aguirre said this during the Pistons documentary - he said the Pistons were the most devastating team in the most devastating era (the 80's)
I agree with him.
While MJ was the most devastating individually, the Pistons were the most devastating team, just based on who they beat - they beat a prime Magic, prime Bird, and prime Jordan.. No other team in history has beaten such a high level of talent, or FACED such high level of competition consistently - every year from 1987-1991, there was an epic battle between Pistons and either MJ/Larry/Magic, or all 3.
In today's game, that would be like beating Kobe, Durant, and Lebron - Dallas did this in 2011, but they weren't facing these guys in epic battles every year, nor did they employ a physically-intimidating, [I][COLOR="Navy"]era-defining[/COLOR][/i] style of the Pistons.. That was an advantage of a 20-team league - the best players faced each other more often, which resulted in more legendary battles that stand the test of time.
The Pistons' era-defining, physical style is another reason they were the most devastating - they used a physically bruising style of play and tactics like the "Jordan Rules", which were [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double teams and hard fouling.. This gave them an aura of toughness that is STILL unmatched in the history of the game.. Accordingly, a big reason why the Pistons were the most devastating is that they devastated opponents mentally more than any team in the history of the game.
There is no better example of the Pistons mental intimidation then what they did to Scottie Pippen - in the 1989 ECF, they scared him into 10/7 on 40%... In 1990 ECF, they held him to 17/6/3 on 42%, including one of the biggest chokes ever in Game 7.. Bill Laimbeer [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s]described it perfectly[/url]: "[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen... It was MJ and the Jordannaires, and you can't win with just 1 player like that[/I]"... The Piston's ownage of Pippen is a great example of how devastating they could be.
.[/QUOTE]
:applause:
Correct. Personally, the Bad Boys documentary is my fav basketball documentary of all time. And I also agree with Aguirre's comments. They were the most devastating in the most devastating era.
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival]Your Pippen fandom continues to shine through. Did you watch the 30 for 30 Bad Boys documentary? If you didn't, you need to watch it because even Pippen himself admitted he choked.
His game 7 in the 1990 ECF is the single worst choke job ever in a game 7 for a "second fiddle" star. 1-10 from the field for 2 points. He checked out mentally and Pip even admitted it. Why can't YOU accept this fact if the guy himself admitted it?[/QUOTE]
And you're worse than he is. At least he readily admits hes Jordans side bitch.
I watched that video and I don't remember Pippen saying that. Either way calling what the Pistons did as getting into someones head is an understatement to the highest degree. They were thugs plain and simple.
[QUOTE=3ball]Mark Aguirre said this during the Pistons documentary - he said the Pistons were the most devastating team in the most devastating era (the 80's)
I agree with him.
While MJ was the most devastating individually, the Pistons were the most devastating team, just based on who they beat - they beat a prime Magic, prime Bird, and prime Jordan.. No other team in history has beaten such a high level of talent, or FACED such high level of competition consistently - every year from 1987-1991, there was an epic battle between Pistons and either MJ/Larry/Magic, or all 3.
In today's game, that would be like beating Kobe, Durant, and Lebron - Dallas did this in 2011, but they weren't facing these guys in epic battles every year, nor did they employ a physically-intimidating, [I][COLOR="Navy"]era-defining[/COLOR][/i] style of the Pistons.. That was an advantage of a 20-team league - the best players faced each other more often, which resulted in more legendary battles that stand the test of time.
The Pistons' era-defining, physical style is another reason they were the most devastating - they used a physically bruising style of play and tactics like the "Jordan Rules", which were [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double teams and hard fouling.. This gave them an aura of toughness that is STILL unmatched in the history of the game.. Accordingly, a big reason why the Pistons were the most devastating is that they devastated opponents mentally more than any team in the history of the game.
There is no better example of the Pistons mental intimidation then what they did to Scottie Pippen - in the 1989 ECF, they scared him into 10/7 on 40%... In 1990 ECF, they held him to 17/6/3 on 42%, including one of the biggest chokes ever in Game 7.. Bill Laimbeer [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s]described it perfectly[/url]: "[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen... It was MJ and the Jordannaires, and you can't win with just 1 player like that[/I]"... The Piston's ownage of Pippen is a great example of how devastating they could be.[/QUOTE]
Goddamn, a legitimately good, non-obnoxious 3ball post. :applause:
[QUOTE=97 bulls]And you're worse than he is. At least he readily admits hes Jordans side bitch.
I watched that video and I don't remember Pippen saying that. Either way calling what the Pistons did as getting into someones head is an understatement to the highest degree. They were thugs plain and simple.[/QUOTE]
You watched the documentary and didn't see the parts I was talking about? You are a worse Pip fan than I thought.
The Lakers were the best team of the '80's and its a joke to compare the Pistons to them. They did have their minute of fame in the Magic/Bird era. Magic won in '87 and '88 as Kareem's role died out. So a person can say in '89 the Piston's won once in the '80's. They did win the next year which was far from the most competitive year in the 80's. 1982 thru 87 had a few all time great teams in them. Better teams than in '87 to '90. Detroit probably was the roughest, true. Era's are not three years.
I am surprised that people here are hyping the Pistons of that time and never talking about Isiah in these top PG discussions or as being top 20.
Had they gone soft by '91 when Malone intentionally almost killed their best player with no retaliation?
[QUOTE=24-Inch_Chrome]Goddamn, a legitimately good, non-obnoxious 3ball post. :applause:[/QUOTE]
aside from the obligatory shot at pippen
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival]You watched the documentary and didn't see the parts I was talking about? You are a worse Pip fan than I thought.[/QUOTE]
Its not there. He never said he choked. He said (and im paraphrasing) "I woke up in the morning with a headache I had never expierenced in my life. As the pressure grew (im assuming the magnitude of the game) it got worse. And I couldn't answer the bell."
Dont see how that could be interpreted as he choked. Unless you feel he was lying. Which would make you a despicable individual.
[QUOTE=chips93]aside from the obligatory shot at pippen[/QUOTE]
Exactly.
[QUOTE=chips93]aside from the obligatory shot at pippen[/QUOTE]
Yeah, but it wasn't as bad as he usually is. I let it slide.
Dennis Rodman biography from 1996
[I]We'd target Pippen and make sure Michael didn't have a lot of help.[/I]
[I]Scottie impressed me when I first got to Chicago. He's better when you're playing with him than against him.[/I]
[I]I pushed Scottie from the back and he landed on his chin in the first row. He has a nasty scar. I don't expect Scottie to forgive me or forget about that.[/I]
[I]Scottie took himself out of the game after that incident. He got freaked out by me. All of the sudden he had a migraine headache. A lot of people think he was faking, but I think it was real. Maybe he had Rodman on the brain.[/I]
[I]I was doing my job, making Scottie think about what he had to do tomorrow to make up for his mistakes today.[/I]
[QUOTE=97 bulls]Its not there. He never said he choked. He said (and im paraphrasing) "I woke up in the morning with a headache I had never expierenced in my life. As the pressure grew (im assuming the magnitude of the game) it got worse. And I couldn't answer the bell."
Dont see how that could be interpreted as he choked. Unless you feel he was lying. Which would make you a despicable individual.[/QUOTE]
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlbpMlJqA3I[/url]
1:08.00 to 1:10.45.
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival][url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlbpMlJqA3I[/url]
1:08.00 to 1:10.45.[/QUOTE]
Where did he say he choked?????
You guys need to read up on the effects of a migrane. Ive seen people thag have them and it puts them on their knees. And being in that type of environment can only make it worse. Bright lights, loud noise, do make it worse thus why he used the word pressure when talking about how it was effecting him. Then go out and play 42 minutes against guys who are cheapshotting you all night.
Did he have an awful game? Obviously. But how is that a "choke"
[QUOTE=97 bulls]
[B]Im positive that the Pistons players would say something totally different today.
[/B]
[/QUOTE]
[B]The quote where Laimbeer said the Pistons "[I]didn't even think about Pippen[/I]" was made [COLOR="Red"]THIS YEAR[/COLOR] - it's from the Bad Boys documentary - I already posted the link - here it is again:[/B]
BILL LAIMBEER:
[INDENT]"[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen. It was Michael Jordan and the Jordannaires - and you can't win championships like that with only 1 player[/I]."
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s[/url][/INDENT]
So you were DEAD WRONG - you weren't "positive" about shit.. Accept you're wrong on this - Pippen was nothing in 1989 (10/7 on 40% in ECF), and cost the Bulls the championship in 1990 with his choke in Game 7 of ECF (remember, the Bulls likely beat Blazers in Finals, since Pistons only needed 6 to beat Blazers, but needed 7 and Pippen choke to beat Bulls).
[QUOTE=3ball][B]The quote where Laimbeer said the Pistons "[I]didn't even think about Pippen[/I]" was made [COLOR="Red"]THIS YEAR[/COLOR] - it's from the Bad Boys documentary - I already posted the link - here it is again:[/B]
BILL LAIMBEER:
[INDENT]"[I]We didn't even think about Scottie Pippen. It was Michael Jordan and the Jordannaires - and you can't win championships like that with only 1 player[/I]."
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC74bv46Z8&t=1h07m33s[/url][/INDENT]
So you were DEAD WRONG - you weren't "positive" about shit.. Accept you're wrong on this - Pippen was nothing in 1989 (10/7 on 40% in ECF), and cost the Bulls the championship in 1990 with his choke in Game 7 of ECF (remember, the Bulls likely beat Blazers in Finals, since Pistons only needed 6 to beat Blazers, but needed 7 and Pippen choke to beat Bulls).[/QUOTE]
He was talking about that point in time you simpleton. You continue to take that quote and use it as if it held true throughout Pippens career. Im the first to say Pippen wasnt ready to take on the Pistons at that time. But he eventualy came into his own and after that...the rest is history. Funny thing is the "Jordan rules", it seems to me that Pippen got the same treatment.
[QUOTE=97 bulls]
He was talking about that point in time you simpleton.
[/QUOTE]
Exactly... At that point in time - 1988, 1989 and 1990 - the Pistons "[I]didn't even think about Pippen[/I]"... Those were the 3 years the Pistons beat the Bulls.
And no, Pippen never faced the Jordan Rules... You must be literally 11 years old if you think that flies... Pippen never got double-teamed - and that's what the Jordan Rules were: [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double-teams.
Isaiah played in a game with a broken foot. That would never happen in today's soft era.
[QUOTE=3ball]Exactly... At that point in time - 1988, 1989 and 1990 - the Pistons "[I]didn't even think about Pippen[/I]"... Those were the 3 years the Pistons beat the Bulls.
And no, Pippen never faced the Jordan Rules... You must be literally 11 years old if you think that flies... Pippen never got double-teamed - and that's what the Jordan Rules were: [url=http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=386210]every-possession[/url] double-teams.[/QUOTE]
You obviously don't knw what the Jodan rules were. If Jordan drove to the baskets he was to get put on his ass. The same held true for Pippen.
[QUOTE=97 bulls]You obviously don't knw what the Jodan rules were. If Jordan drove to the baskets he was to get put on his ass. The same held true for Pippen.[/QUOTE]
Pippen never faced the Jordan Rules.... Apparently, you have no idea how ridiculous that is.
And anyone can read the posts on the previous page and see how wrong you were about every single point, beginning with you being "positive" that Laimbeer didn't say Pippen sucked recently... When he said it this year..
[QUOTE=97 bulls]Where did he say he choked?????[/QUOTE]
"....I don't know if it was the pressure of the game. But as the pressure grew, the migraine grew."
"I wasn't able to answer the bell."
Really? :oldlol:
Like I said, worst choke job ever by a 2nd fiddle star in a game 7. 1-10, 2 points. He mentally checked out. What more can I guy say than the above to prove it? Pip did grow up starting in 1991 and MJ wins no rings without Pip but let's call the 1989-90 Pip in game 7 for what it is. He choked. The stats prove it and so do his comments.
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival]
but let's call the 1989-90 Pip in game 7 for what it is. He choked. The stats prove it and so do his comments.
[/QUOTE]
Pippen didn't just choke in 1990 playoffs.
He was MIA in 1988 ECSF vs. Pistons (9 ppg on 45%) and 1989 ECF (10 ppg on 40%)
Jordan MADE this guy... Anyone who knows basketball knows this (i.e. Pippen, the Bulls team, Shaq, Laimbeer, isiah, Dumars, Mahorn, the entire Pistons team).
The Jordan Rules were pretty unique in that Detroit tried to funnel MJ to the middle of the court instead of the baseline. When trying to stop a great wing scorer, most defenses want to funnel guys to the baseline because their options are more limited than the middle of the court but MJ was so devastating on the baseline that Detroit decided to funnel him to the middle instead. MJ's ability to finish on either side of the basket made Detroit do that. No player has ever been close to MJ's ability to jump on one side of the basket and either finish on the same side or hang in the air long enough to easily finish on the other side of the basket. You also add in his explosive jumps off one or two feet along with the speed at which he was able to get to the basket and Detroit chose to give MJ the middle of the court instead, where MJ had more options.
[QUOTE=3ball]Pippen didn't just choke in 1990 playoffs.
He was MIA in 1988 ECSF vs. Pistons (9 ppg on 45%) and 1989 ECF (10 ppg on 40%)
Jordan MADE this guy... Anyone who knows basketball knows this (i.e. Pippen, the Bulls team, Shaq, Laimbeer, isiah, Dumars, Mahorn, the entire Pistons team).[/QUOTE]
Lol. MJ didn't make Pippen. Did MJ have a hand in showing him what being an alpha was all about along with some confidence? Of course. But Pip was a great player in his own right once he matured. Even the Pistons knew that once Pip played up to his potential, they couldn't beat Chicago. Like Aguirre said of Pip in the 1991 ECF, "Pippen grew up."
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival]
[B]The Jordan Rules were pretty unique in that Detroit tried to funnel MJ to the middle of the court instead of the baseline.[/B] When trying to stop a great wing scorer, most defenses want to funnel guys to the baseline because their options are more limited than the middle of the court but MJ was so devastating on the baseline that Detroit decided to funnel him to the middle instead. MJ's ability to finish on either side of the basket made Detroit do that. No player has ever been close to MJ's ability to jump on one side of the basket and either finish on the same side or hang in the air long enough to easily finish on the other side of the basket. You also add in his explosive jumps off one or two feet along with the speed at which he was able to get to the basket and Detroit chose to give MJ the middle of the court instead, where MJ had more options.
[/QUOTE]
That's nice and everything, but the Jordan Rules were also every-possession double-teams, particularly in the 4th quarter - watch the last 7-8 minutes of ANY Bulls-Piston playoff game from 1989 or 1990... MJ was doubled literally every time he touched it (of course there are always rare exceptions, but 10+ consecutive double-teams is easy to find from the 4th quarter in ANY of those games).
People act like there was such thing as the "Shaq Rules"... Or the "Kobe Rules".... Or the "Lebron Rules".... There were never ANY of these things... Only the Jordan Rules... Btw, hack-a-Shaq is an excuse NOT to double team Shaq - being able to foul Shaq is one of the reasons he wasn't doubled as much as 80's MJ (in addition to never being a 1-man team like 80's MJ was).
.
[QUOTE=ClipperRevival]"....I don't know if it was the pressure of the game. But as the pressure grew, the migraine grew."
"I wasn't able to answer the bell."
Really? :oldlol:
Like I said, worst choke job ever by a 2nd fiddle star in a game 7. 1-10, 2 points. He mentally checked out. What more can I guy say than the above to prove it? Pip did grow up starting in 1991 and MJ wins no rings without Pip but let's call the 1989-90 Pip in game 7 for what it is. He choked. The stats prove it and so do his comments.[/QUOTE]
Do you even know what a choke is????? A 90 percent shooter missing two FTs in the waining moments of a game is a choke. A guy having a bad game due to an injury isnt.
Let me ask you a question. Do you believe he really had a migrane or was he lying
Pistons game planned around stopping Pippen, stop trying to say otherwise
[QUOTE=3ball]That's nice and everything, but the Jordan Rules were also every-possession double-teams, particularly in the 4th quarter - watch the last 7-8 minutes of ANY Bulls-Piston playoff game from 1989 or 1990... MJ was doubled literally every time he touched it (of course there are always rare exceptions, but 10+ consecutive double-teams is easy to find from the 4th quarter in ANY of those games).[/QUOTE]
In simple terms, the Jordan Rules pretty much meant we send a whole lot of help against #23. No wing player has ever instilled such fear against opponents. And the Bad Boy Pistons are one of the best teams ever and they still worried about one guy that much.
[QUOTE=97 bulls]Do you even know what a choke is????? A 90 percent shooter missing two FTs in the waining moments of a game is a choke. A guy having a bad game due to an injury isnt.
Let me ask you a question. Do you believe he really had a migrane or was he lying[/QUOTE]
I think Pip might've had some minor headache but he let the pressure affect him mentally, meaning he wasn't focused and on point. To me, that's a choke. And like I said, his stats and comments prove this.