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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
I still can't believe the '98 Finals game 6.
Sooooooooooo damn delicious.
[IMG]http://mrwgifs.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/So-Good-James-Franco-In-Spider-Man-3.gif[/IMG]
I literally couldn't even write it any better. To finish that third threepeat like that, I couldn't ask for anything better.
My favorite thing about it is there's that famous shot of Jordan about to hit the game winning shot and if you look in the background, you will see like 98% of Utah fans in the background, but you'll see this ONE typical looking Chicago dude with his son on his shoulders who has this giant goofy smile on his face, as if he knows exactly what's coming.
So funny.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
some great perspective to the 98 finals:
[quote][B]But if Pippen's defensive performance in Game 3 didn't convince you that he's worthy of being named MVP of the Finals, then what he did on both ends of the court in the Bulls' 86-82 Game 4 victory should have clinched the vote.[/B]
Pippen impressed Jerry Sloan.
"He was sensational," said the Jazz's coach.
After scoring just 10 points in Sunday's record-setting shellacking, Pippen was even more efficient offensively than Jordan Wednesday at the United Center. [B]He scored 28 points on 9-of-18 shooting overall and went five-for-eight from beyond the arc. Jordan needed 27 shots from the floor and 15 from the free-throw line to get his total.[/B]
[B]Pippen, who is much healthier now than he was a year ago in the Finals, carried the Bulls' offensive yolk for much of the first half. In the first quarter, he scored six of the Bull's first eight points by swishing two 3-pointers. He also crashed the glass early on, grabbing three offensive rebounds in the first three minutes. At one point, Pippen had three offensive boards while the Jazz were still waiting for their first rebound to fall in their hands.[/B]
[B]He ended the first quarter and opened the second with a personal 8-0 run by nailing a trey, hitting an inside shot and then drilling another 3-pointer to give Chicago a 26-19 lead.[/B] Bryon Russell interrupted his scoring exhibition with a three, but Pippen kissed a banker off the glass on the Bulls' next possession. That concluded his one-man shooting show.
At that point, with 9:32 left in the second quarter, [B]Pippen had scored 16 points and grabbed four rebounds - and he threw in one steal for good measure.[/B]
"He did a terrific job getting in the open court, pulling up and taking the 3-point shots, and got in a great rhythm," [B]Sloan said. "We had a difficult time trying to guard him."[/B]
And that was just half the court.
[B]"Defensively, he puts tremendous pressure on you. . . . He caused us a lot of problems, I think everybody is aware of that. We're aware of it," Sloan said. "We have trouble with him every time we play. And I don't know what more you can say. You can put him on any player on the floor, and he's going to do a terrific job defensively."[/B]
That versatility amazes ESPN basketball expert Dr. Jack Ramsay, a longtime coach in the NBA. Ramsay ranks Pippen among the outstanding defenders in the history of the game. Right there with K.C. Jones, Mel Hutchins, Satch Sanders and so on.
[B]"I can't conjure up anybody who does all the things that Pippen does as a defender. I mean, he can defend anybody," Ramsay said. "We've seen him defend point guards and take them out of their game, two guards and deny them a shot, small forwards, big forwards. The only player that I haven't seen him defend well is the opposing center. I think he'd have a hard time with Shaq."[/B]
But the Jazz obviously don't have Shaq. And, for that matter, they don't have a dominating player right now - not even Malone, in part because of the suffocating defensive pressure the gangly, athletic 6-foot-7 Pippen and his teammates have been applying.
[B]"Scottie has done a lot in terms of relieving some of the pressure off of me," said Jordan. "Defensively, he's the key component for us. He's a recovery. And we give him the authority to do whatever he wants on the defensive end . . . He can disrupt anybody's offense, really. And tonight was a great example of that."[/B][/quote]
pippen taking the bull by the horns :bowdown:
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=mehyaM24]its more than just stats. perkins also shot 40% in the finals, missing key looks from magic. vlade's defense was very poor and basically let BOTH jordan and pippen waltz in the lane AT WILL (also remember hearing a radio broadcast from stu lantz and chick hearn, via youtube, where they criticied vlade's defense saying he wasn't playing any).
unlike most people here, ive watched the series. neither of them could replace the chemistry and intangibles kareem provided.
4/5 of the games in the 91 finals were close. a healthy scott/worthy(missed each a game) and 88 - 89 kareem would be great.[/QUOTE]
It would have been interesting. Kareem took a big drop from the 86/87 season to 87/88, and then 88/89. He did still made some big plays in 88', particularly making those two FTs in game 6 after the controversial foul on Laimbeer. That showed the confidence they had in Kareem to go to him in that situation despite him having an awful shooting game.
I still think we missed out on a potential classic finals in 89' due to injuries. While on one end, it seemed like it may have been that "this is the Pistons' year" feel to it, the Lakers were on fire on their 3-peat quest and went 11-0 in the WC playoffs.
Apparently, going into the finals, Riley held practices that was basically a short mini-camp, and they were so intense and grueling that their bodies couldn't take it and led to key injuries. Obviously they weren't gonna win it without Magic, and yet games 2 and 3 still went down to the wire.
Just to add, 3 out of the 5 games in 91' were close. Games 1, 3 (OT), and 5. Games 2 and 4 turned into routs in the 3rd quarter.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[IMG]http://www.kicksonfire.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/air-jordan-14-xiv-original-og-final-last-shot-black-black-varsity-red-10.jpg[/IMG]
You can see the Chicago guy clutching his son to the left of MJ, I think they're literally the only Bulls fans in the shot, but he's got this giant hopeful look on his face and all the other fans look like they're about to get shot. :oldlol:
I love the Utah fans that know what's coming too. So good.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
Many thought the Suns would win in '93.
Also, some had Portland in '92. That lasted all of one half. :oldlol:
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=JohnnySic]Many thought the Suns would win in '93.
Also, some had Portland in '92. That lasted all of one half. :oldlol:[/QUOTE]
It was soooooo funny the day after that game, all the people who had been licking Drexler's balls for months trying to say they were just kidding. :oldlol:
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=Stringer Bell]It would have been interesting. Kareem took a big drop from the 86/87 season to 87/88, and then 88/89. He did still made some big plays in 88', particularly making those two FTs in game 6 after the controversial foul on Laimbeer. That showed the confidence they had in Kareem to go to him in that situation despite him having an awful shooting game.
I still think we missed out on a potential classic finals in 89' due to injuries. While on one end, it seemed like it may have been that "this is the Pistons' year" feel to it, the Lakers were on fire on their 3-peat quest and went 11-0 in the WC playoffs.
Apparently, going into the finals, Riley held practices that was basically a short mini-camp, and they were so intense and grueling that their bodies couldn't take it and led to key injuries. Obviously they weren't gonna win it without Magic, and yet games 2 and 3 still went down to the wire.
Just to add, 3 out of the 5 games in 91' were close. Games 1, 3 (OT), and 5. Games 2 and 4 turned into routs in the 3rd quarter.[/QUOTE]
the lakers were at their very best in 89.
we as fans got robbed though. you're right about that.
anyway. here are some highlights to pippen's masteful game 4. easily the best player in this game:
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3FNYoY2kaE[/url]
dude was a shoe-in for FMVP if not for his damn back. shame.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE]yup. old, but still elite kareem, via 87-89.
i think the bulls STILL beat the lakers without kareem and healthy scott/worthy in 7 games.
with kareem those years? not a chance. kareem is the GOAT bigman.[/QUOTE]
I assume you meant KAJ from 1982-1986, when he was past his prime but still an elite player (he was all-NBA first team over Hakeem, Moses and Ewing in 86' while being top 5 in MVP voting--all at ages 38/39 :bowdown: ). Yeah, if you add KAJ circa 1982-1986 to Magic, who was runner-up MVP that year (remember, the Lakers collapsed to 43-39 and losing in the first round without Magic there to make the players better--look at their shooting percentages with and without Magic) it probably goes 7 games. I would bet on the Lakers' experience relative to the young Bulls in 91' if you add 82'-86' KAJ and a healthy Worthy/Scott.
[QUOTE]The '93 Knicks
The '93 Suns (mega hype as the team of destiny and all that BS)
The '95 Magic.
[B]
The '96 Magic.[/B]
The '98 Pacers.
The '98 Jazz.
[/QUOTE]
The Magic were the one team I feared during the 72-10 season. The Bulls would have won anyway, but Grant going down made the ECF a cakewalk. The Magic had so much talent with Shaq, Penny, Grant and even Anderson, Scott they had a puncher's chance in any series.
[QUOTE]^someone that watched 90s ball. with their CORE still intact, from 91-on, they were favored in every series they played in. '98 was shaky for the bulls because pippen played on a bad back, but going into the playoffs, they were very much favored.[/QUOTE]
The only series they were clear underdogs were:
91' Finals
98' Finals
That is it. Even in 91' it was more because of the mystique of Magic and the inexperience of the Bulls. In retrospect it was absurd because the Bulls were the better team all year and showed that in the series.
The series in which they were slight favorites/slight underdogs were:
93' ECF
94' ECSF
95' ECSF
They were favorites going into the 93' ECF, nominal underdogs in the 94' ECSF. The 95' ECSF was split. As noted, they had closed the year 21-6 (a 62 win pace--Orlando won 60 that year). People want to re-write history but a lot of people at the time thought the Bulls would win. They finished the year strong (13-4 with MJ), added the GOAT to a 5th-6th place team and the Bulls the previous year were contenders. So, among major changes, you lose Grant and add the GOAT. It was perfectly logical to assume that the Bulls with MJ, without Grant would have more playoff success than the Bulls with Grant, without MJ did. Many people make that assumption. It didn't happen, for reasons noted earlier, but the idea that the Bulls were expected to get trounced by Orlando is convenient revisionism.
[QUOTE]35 in 15 minutes on him? Out shooting the 3 ball that Clyde spoke, and considered himself better at? Missing half the second quarter putting up 6x 3's in a half in a total blow out? Yea. MJ squashed that lunacy within the first half.[/QUOTE]
MJ did but Drexler was playing on a bum knee so it isn't as if Drexler could respond. MJ, though, performed at a level that Drexler could not at any point in his career reach.
[QUOTE]The '93 Suns (mega hype as the team of destiny and all that BS)[/QUOTE]
They barely got out the WCF (7 games to a Sonics team with a young Payton and Kemp), though.
[QUOTE]Knicks had a lot of hype in '93. When they went up 2-0 in the series, everyone wrote Chicago off.[/QUOTE]
That is true--but what team that takes a 2-0 lead does not then become the expected winner? Going into the series the Bulls were favored.
Hype is a key word. The Knicks were the #1 seed in the East (60 wins) but let's remember that same crew won 57 in 94' and 55 in 95'. At no point were they ever viewed as dominant or heavy favorites. Even the following year against the MJ-less Bulls they were only slight favorites and they had 7 games series against Indiana in both 94' and 95' and against Chicago in 94' (as well as a 7 game Finals in 94'). They weren't as good as the hype they got because of where they played.
[QUOTE]Much is made of Jordan being rusty from baseball, and not enough about their weakness at the 4 spot. Grant provided rebounding and interior defense. You didn't get that from Kukoc. You got offense from him.
Jordan shot poorly during the 17 games of the regular season, but he picked it up during the postseason. People often forget how athletic and explosive Jordan still was in the 95' playoffs.[/QUOTE]
Great points. They actually toyed with putting Larry Krystowiak (however you spell his name) as the starting PF in desperation. By the end of the Orlando series Pippen was moved to PF because Grant was going off, not just by rebounding and playing defense but by scoring. Phil Jackson believed Grant was a choker under pressure and defended him lightly; Grant was averaging around 20 ppg :oldlol: as a result until Pippen was switched onto him.
[QUOTE]
He is said to have not been in "basketball shape" as he fatigued in games. That might have been true, but he also didn't have an extra 65 regular season games on his legs. He fatigued in other games in future postseasons. It happens, especially when you are in your mid 30s.[/QUOTE]
Great points. Pippen also was getting fatigued at the end of those same games. They simply had to do too much--they were the team's top rebounders :lol among their other responsibilities. The "rust" argument was always odd. MJ played as much in 95' as he did in 86' and we know what MJ did in the playoffs in 86'. In 95' he put up 32/7/5 on 48%--numbers superior to what he did in each of the next 3 postseasons.
[QUOTE]Jordan made some key turnovers late in games 1 and 6.[/QUOTE]
True--and to be fair the entire team had a meltdown in the final 3 minutes of Game 6 (they had an 8 point lead). I remember MJ making some key mistakes but Pippen missed a close tip in and Longley a key lay up.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=Soundwave]It was soooooo funny the day after that game, all the people who had been licking Drexler's balls for months trying to say they were just kidding. :oldlol:[/QUOTE]
Yep. :oldlol: The "shrug" game. And Drexler was never the same after that series.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
Orlando honestly didn't know how good they were. That's what scared me about them.
Their coach was a moron too.
The 96 Magic would wreck the NBA today.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=JohnnySic]Yep. :oldlol: The "shrug" game. And Drexler was never the same after that series.[/QUOTE]
The sh*t Jordan did in the Finals was ridiculous. It doesn't even seem real, it's like a movie script that someone wrote, things aren't supposed to work out that perfectly in real life.
Every ... single ... time in the 90s where I thought "well OK, maybe MJ isn't going to bring it this year" he'd exceed my expectations.
After 95 I thought it would be nice if they could win one more title for old time's sake, lol.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
speaking of the 91 finals, check out the defensive clamps, scottie put on magic:
[IMG]http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/media/bulls/pippen_magic_1991.jpg[/IMG]
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf1KPq0yi40[/url]
oh and also dropped 20pts/10ast :bowdown:
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=Soundwave]The sh*t Jordan did in the Finals was ridiculous. It doesn't even seem real, it's like a movie script that someone wrote, things aren't supposed to work out that perfectly in real life.
[/QUOTE]
The 1993 playoffs and Finals were rediculous. Remember the "if I could be like Mike" commercials? They were literally releasing one after every game, with Jordan's highlights from that very game. It was more like a running sitcom rather than a sports event.
I guess it was easy to find highlights given that MJ averaged something like 41 ppg in those finals.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
Mj took a dump on drexler that whole series.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
Bulls were legit underdogs:
'91 Finals
'93 ECF
'93 Finals
'98 Finals
Bulls were doubted:
'92 ECSF
'92 Finals
'98 ECF
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=JohnnySic]The 1993 playoffs and Finals were rediculous. Remember the "if I could be like Mike" commercials? They were literally releasing one after every game, with Jordan's highlights from that very game. It was more like a running sitcom rather than a sports event.
I guess it was easy to find highlights given thatMJ averaged something like 41 ppg in those finals.[/QUOTE]
I have to kinda admit I kinda wanted the Suns to win that series, just because I had a friend who was super annoying about the threepeat stuff.
Of course there was no way of knowing that Jordan would retire after that season. That was stunning.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=mehyaM24]some great perspective to the 98 finals:
pippen taking the bull by the horns :bowdown:[/QUOTE]
Loved Pip's defense throughout that postseason (and just in genera).
Pippen's performance of game 1 against Indiana like the best example of stats not truly showing a player's value.
His stat-line was awful. Watch the game and you see how much of an impact he made with his defense.
Also gotta give him much props for having the guts to take charges on the fast break from Karl Friggin Malone.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
Bulls could've beat Orlando in 1995, without Horace even if MJ had been there building rapport with the squad the entire season. He raised his game significantly from 27 ppg on 41% to like 32 ppg on 48% in the post season. Was the last season he had true explosion too. Multiple dunks on Orlando's bigs. He just had a bit of rust, and wind issues sustaining pretty spectacular performances v.s. Orlando for the entire game. Series was still close regardless. MJ gift wrapped a layup for Longely in game 6 he blew that could've extended the series to 7 games.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=Soundwave]It was soooooo funny the day after that game, all the people who had been licking Drexler's balls for months trying to say they were just kidding. :oldlol:[/QUOTE]
:oldlol: at the idea of Drexler being Jordan's equal.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=SamuraiSWISH]Bulls could've beat Orlando in 1995, without Horace even if MJ had been there building rapport with the squad the entire season. He raised his game significantly from 27 ppg on 41% to like 32 ppg on 48% in the post season. Was the last season he had true explosion too. Multiple dunks on Orlando's bigs. He just had a bit of rust, and wind issues sustaining pretty spectacular performances v.s. Orlando for the entire game. Series was still close regardless. MJ gift wrapped a layup for Longely in game 6 he blew that could've extended the series to 7 games.[/QUOTE]
If he had come back around the time of the All-Star break of pre-trade deadline and the Bulls had the option of adding an extra rebounding big ... yeah they probably beat Orlando that year.
Jordan's timing was just a little off, so was his conditioning. Sometimes he would explode for a monster dunk ala pre retirement MJ (dunked on Shaq pretty good) but other times you could see he wasn't getting his usual lift. Especially late in games.
The Magic were pretty damn good though.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE=Roundball_Rock]I assume you meant KAJ from 1982-1986, when he was past his prime but still an elite player (he was all-NBA first team over Hakeem, Moses and Ewing in 86' while being top 5 in MVP voting--all at ages 38/39 :bowdown: ). Yeah, if you add KAJ circa 1982-1986 to Magic, who was runner-up MVP that year (remember, the Lakers collapsed to 43-39 and losing in the first round without Magic there to make the players better--look at their shooting percentages with and without Magic) it probably goes 7 games. I would bet on the Lakers' experience relative to the young Bulls in 91' if you add 82'-86' KAJ and a healthy Worthy/Scott.
[/QUOTE]
Maybe I'm just being too stats-based as I didn't follow the 85/86 season when it happened (I have seen many of the playoff games but not regular season), but how did Kareem make first-team All-NBA center that season? Did they just get so used to Kareem making it that they voted for him again?
Kareem put up 23.4 pts, 6.1 rebs, 3.5 asst, 1.6 blk per game, on 56.4% FG, while playing alongside the best PG in the game in Magic, who finished 3rd in MVP voting. [B][SIZE="4"]6[/SIZE][/B] rebounds a game for a starting center.
Hakeem averaged 23.5 pts, 11.5 rebs, 2 asst, 2 stl, 3.4 blk on 52.6% FG.
[QUOTE=Roundball_Rock]
Hype is a key word. The Knicks were the #1 seed in the East (60 wins) but let's remember that same crew won 57 in 94' and 55 in 95'. At no point were they ever viewed as dominant or heavy favorites. Even the following year against the MJ-less Bulls they were only slight favorites and they had 7 games series against Indiana in both 94' and 95' and against Chicago in 94' (as well as a 7 game Finals in 94'). They weren't as good as the hype they got because of where they played.
[/QUOTE]
Yes, I agree with the Knicks getting overhyped because of the big city, New York-factor. Even now, when people look back on the 90s Knicks, we often hear the "they would have won titles but had the bad luck of being around the same with with Michael Jordan & the Bulls".
The only Knicks team that the Bulls eliminated that were championship-quality was 93', and MAYBE, 92'. It's far from a guarantee that they beat Phoenix in the finals. I wouldn't pick either team with any confidence.
1989: Knicks aren't getting past the Pistons. I doubt the Cavs (the year of Jordan over Ehlo) would have gotten past Detroit either.
1991: Knicks were a .500 team, 8th seed.
1992: MAYBE the Knicks could have gotten past the Cavs and then beaten Portland in the Finals. I wouldn't have bet on it. The Knicks would have been underdog.
1996: Not a championship-caliber team.
[QUOTE=Roundball_Rock]
Great points. They actually toyed with putting Larry Krystowiak (however you spell his name) as the starting PF in desperation. By the end of the Orlando series Pippen was moved to PF because Grant was going off, not just by rebounding and playing defense but by scoring. Phil Jackson believed Grant was a choker under pressure and defended him lightly; Grant was averaging around 20 ppg :oldlol: as a result until Pippen was switched onto him.
[/QUOTE]
That reminds me, Krystowiak's career went downhill after a serious knee injury because of that POS Bill Laimbeer. I've never seen the play, but Krystowiak claims that Laimbeer pushed him which led to him falling and tearing his knee. An article in Sports Illustrated (I think the one with Laimbeer on the cover with that whiny 'what do I do?' face), says that he actually just panicked because he figured Laimbeer would do something dirty, and then he fell and tore his knee.
Anyway, in one book I read (I think Second Coming by Sam Smith), Larry was giving guys advice during a practice scrimmage. Jordan screams at him "What do you know? You have no legs and never play, who are you to give advice!!!"".
I was rewatching some games during the 95' playoffs, Horace Grant had that mid-range jump shot down. He killed Chicago in a couple of games with it and kept Orlando in a couple of the games against Houston with it too.
[QUOTE=Roundball_Rock]
Great points. Pippen also was getting fatigued at the end of those same games. They simply had to do too much--they were the team's top rebounders :lol among their other responsibilities. The "rust" argument was always odd. MJ played as much in 95' as he did in 86' and we know what MJ did in the playoffs in 86'. In 95' he put up 32/7/5 on 48%--numbers superior to what he did in each of the next 3 postseasons.
[/QUOTE]
There is a noticable difference in his explosiveness and leaping ability from when he first came back, to just 2 months later. It's interesting, in his first game back against Indiana, and then 3rd game against Orlando, it almost looked like he was struggling to get high enough to dunk. Two months later it was quite a change. During one instance against Orlando in the playoffs, I think the 3rd game, Jordan had the ball and was getting pressured by the defense, I think he was doubled. He went back to nearly half-court, split the defense, and drove and soared high for a dunk.
I think Jordan made the conscious decision in the summer of 95' to strengthen up some more and be more post-oriented. He already had the post-game and fadewaway in his arsenal for years, but he tweaked and refined it a bit as I'm sure he knew he'd have to rely on it more.
[QUOTE=Roundball_Rock]
True--and to be fair the entire team had a meltdown in the final 3 minutes of Game 6 (they had an 8 point lead). I remember MJ making some key mistakes but Pippen missed a close tip in and Longley a key lay up.[/QUOTE]
Yeah, that Longley one was pretty bad. One of the books, I think "Second Coming" which I mentioned above, said that Jordan would always tell Longley to dunk on those close shots instead of laying it in. Then here you see why.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
The Knicks had the best record in the East in '93 and were basically supposed to be the second coming of the Bad Boy Pistons. Plus they were coached by Riley who most people considered to be the GOAT coach.
That and they almost did beat the Bulls in '92.
The refs also IMO let them get away with a lot of questionable defence ... lets just put it that way. You wouldn't be able to do some of that stuff against a superstar player today.
When they went up 2-0 in '93, everyone thought the Bulls were done for.
Jordan was also playing with an injured shooting wrist throughout the 93 playoffs.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
[QUOTE]Pippen's performance of game 1 against Indiana like the best example of stats not truly showing a player's value.
His stat-line was awful. Watch the game and you see how much of an impact he made with his defense.
[/QUOTE]
Yeah his defense during the 98' playoffs reached a level of dominance that has probably never been matched by a perimeter defender. :bowdown:
[QUOTE=SamuraiSWISH]Bulls were legit underdogs:
'91 Finals
'93 ECF
'93 Finals
'98 Finals
Bulls were doubted:
'92 ECSF
'92 Finals
'98 ECF[/QUOTE]
Look at the team records in those series.
1991 Finals: CHI 61-15, LAL 58-24
1992 ECSF: CHI 67-15, NYK 51-31
1992 Finals: CHI 67-15, POR 57-25
1993 ECF: NYK 60-22, CHI 57-25
1993 Finals: PHX 62-20, CHI 57-25
1998 ECF: CHI 62-20, IND 58-24
1998 Finals: CHI 62-20, UTA 62-20
The Bulls had the better record in nearly every series. When they didn't, they were close. They were only 3 off of NY in 93' and 5 off of PHX--and this was as the defending two-time champs. They were never big underdogs.
The only series where the 1991-1993/1996-1998 Bulls did not go in with the better record were the 93' ECF and 93' Finals. That is it. Two series in six years.
[QUOTE]Maybe I'm just being too stats-based as I didn't follow the 85/86 season when it happened (I have seen many of the playoff games but not regular season), but how did Kareem make first-team All-NBA center that season? Did they just get so used to Kareem making it that they voted for him again?[/QUOTE]
It wasn't because they were used to voting for him. KAJ was on the second team the previous year behind Moses and was behind Moses in other years in the 80's. He was just that good. KAJ's numbers were not indicative of how good he was because he was on a stacked team. Yeah, he put up 23.4 ppg on "Showtime" but it would have been more on most teams.
[QUOTE]Even now, when people look back on the 90s Knicks, we often hear the "they would have won titles but had the bad luck of being around the same with with Michael Jordan & the Bulls".
The only Knicks team that the Bulls eliminated that were championship-quality was 93', and MAYBE, 92'. It's far from a guarantee that they beat Phoenix in the finals. I wouldn't pick either team with any confidence.[/QUOTE]
Exactly. They were contenders in 94', 95', 97', 99' and 00' and lost to a team other than the Bulls. The 1992-1995 team was different than the 1997-2000 team, though, but the fact is the 90's Knicks were the 90's Pacers: perennial contenders who could never win. The difference is one played in New York and the other in Indianapolis. In every era there will be several perennial contenders who ultimately never win (i.e. the Kings or Suns for the 2000's). In the 90's it was the Knicks, Pacers, Jazz and Sonics.
[QUOTE]1989: Knicks aren't getting past the Pistons. I doubt the Cavs (the year of Jordan over Ehlo) would have gotten past Detroit either.
1991: Knicks were a .500 team, 8th seed.
1992: MAYBE the Knicks could have gotten past the Cavs and then beaten Portland in the Finals. I wouldn't have bet on it. The Knicks would have been underdog.
1996: Not a championship-caliber team.[/QUOTE]
I agree. They were not a championship caliber team in 89', 91', 96' or, for that matter, 90' and 98'. People always point to 92' but I highly doubt they would have won that year. They were a 51 win team in 92' and would have had to beat a 57 win Cavs team in the ECF and then the 57 win Blazers. They also had no relevant playoff experience at the time. It is hard to win a title without significant playoff experience.
[QUOTE]That reminds me, Krystowiak's career went downhill after a serious knee injury because of that POS Bill Laimbeer. I've never seen the play, but Krystowiak claims that Laimbeer pushed him which led to him falling and tearing his knee. An article in Sports Illustrated (I think the one with Laimbeer on the cover with that whiny 'what do I do?' face), says that he actually just panicked because he figured Laimbeer would do something dirty, and then he fell and tore his knee.
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Yeah the 80's Pistons were a disgrace. It is disgusting they get lionized these days.
[QUOTE] Larry was giving guys advice during a practice scrimmage. Jordan screams at him "What do you know? You have no legs and never play, who are you to give advice!!!"".[/QUOTE]
Now [I]that[/I] is [I]real[/I] leadership. :bowdown:
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I was rewatching some games during the 95' playoffs, Horace Grant had that mid-range jump shot down. He killed Chicago in a couple of games with it and kept Orlando in a couple of the games against Houston with it too.
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Yeah he was great in the playoffs that year. Against Chicago was on a mission. :oldlol: His teammates carried him off in celebration when Orlando won.
[QUOTE]The Knicks had the best record in the East in '93 [/QUOTE]
By 3 games. That is like saying the Suns in 07' were better than the 07' Spurs because the Suns won 3-4 more games. Look at the Heat in the 11' and 14' ECF's. They had the inferior record, but due to their championship pedigree and their top players, they were favored over the Bulls and Pacers.
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Re: Was there ANY point during any of the Bulls' 6 Finals series where..
By virtue of having the best player in the game you are automatically going to be the favorite in a lot of match ups, that's usually the first thing most people look at.
The "Bulls are slipping" narrative was a fairly popular one though for both of their threepeat years.