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ESPN “THE LAST DANCE” TONIGHT AT 9pm

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  • #46
    Originally posted by PacerDude View Post
    https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/...oughest-game-7



    Good read. What could/SHOULD have been ……...
    Good article, thanks for posting.

    It’s often hyperbole when someone says “if x happened, it would’ve changed history”.......but if the Pacers would have won game 7, it WOULD HAVE CHANGED HISTORY.

    No Jordan shot in Utah if that happens. Instead of walking off a court as champion for the final time in a Bulls uniform, Jordan would have walked off his own court in defeat while the Pacers celebrated. It would have been a stunning scene.

    Reggie goes on Dan Patrick every Monday to discuss the previous day’s episodes. It’s must watch. It will be incredibly interesting to hear Reggie talk after the episode which discusses the Pacers-Bulls series (which Reggie was interviewed for).

    Reggie is still clearly haunted by that series. He knows how close the Pacers were to changing history.

    Comment


    • #47
      Originally posted by Sollozzo View Post
      Why is Steve Kerr in the official ESPN poster board alongside Jordan/Pippen/Rodman/Jackson? I don’t think his fame was quite up there with the other three at the time. That would be like putting Ron Harper or Luc Longley in it. Or putting Kurt Rambis on a poster with Magic/Kareem/Worthy/Riley. If anyone would deserve that spot it would be Kukoc because he was a pretty big contributor by that point. The poster makes it seem like Kerr former the Beatles with Jordan/Pippen/Rodman.
      Because of his current success with the Warriors he was part of two dynasties(so was Phil but at least him being featured makes way more sense than Kerr for the Bulls) plus I don't think Kukoc really has an interest in being part of this either.

      Comment


      • #48
        Originally posted by Basketball Fan View Post

        Because of his current success with the Warriors he was part of two dynasties(so was Phil but at least him being featured makes way more sense than Kerr for the Bulls) plus I don't think Kukoc really has an interest in being part of this either.
        I get it - he’s been a big name in recent years due to the success with the Warriors and is identifiable to younger fans. Still, it just looks really goofy to put him alongside Jordan/Pippen/Rodman/Jackson as if it was right up there with them in fame.

        Comment


        • #49
          Originally posted by Basketball Fan View Post

          Because of his current success with the Warriors he was part of two dynasties(so was Phil but at least him being featured makes way more sense than Kerr for the Bulls) plus I don't think Kukoc really has an interest in being part of this either.
          No way, they have to be saving Kukoc for tonight.

          he was easily Chicago’s 2nd best player by the time they got tot he finals. The only guy that was still playing well besides Jordan. They cannot do a 98 retrospective without him.

          It wasn't about being the team everyone loved, it was about beating the teams everyone else loved.

          Division Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 1989, 1990, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
          Conference Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 2005
          NBA Champions 1989, 1990, 2004

          Comment


          • #50
            This is funny lol


            https://twitter.com/hawk/status/1256...831518208?s=21
            @WhatTheFFacts: Studies show that sarcasm enhances the ability of the human mind to solve complex problems!

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by Kstat View Post

              No way, they have to be saving Kukoc for tonight.

              he was easily Chicago’s 2nd best player by the time they got tot he finals. The only guy that was still playing well besides Jordan. They cannot do a 98 retrospective without him.
              That may be so but Jordan had the final say in how this was done so if he wants to exclude Kukoc or Kukoc doesn't want to be a part of it well that can actually make this without him if they want it bad enough.

              Comment


              • #52
                https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/nba...feB?li=BBnb7Kz

                McCurdy: Here's a little-known Michael Jordan story you won't see on ESPN's documentary

                There's a part of Michael Jordan's story that likely won't make the cut in ESPN's 10-hour documentary "The Last Dance" that is holding America's attention captive each Sunday night this spring.

                We know Jordan is arguably the greatest basketball player of all time from his six championship seasons with the Chicago Bulls. We know he's a hard-wired competitor who hates to lose — at anything. We know he's the ultimate corporate pitchman and an iconic symbol from his long association with Nike and its Jumpman logo. We know he's a business mogul and is the first NBA player to be the primary owner a franchise, leading the Charlotte Hornets. We know he's among the most famous people walking Earth.


                But did you know Michael Jordan loved motorcycles and racing so much that he started a motorsports team that competed for a decade in America's top road racing series?

                Unless, you're an AMA Pro Road Racing fan going back two decades or you're a regular at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, probably not.

                Yet it's a fascinating story.

                Jordan grew up in NASCAR country in North Carolina, so like many from the South, he enjoyed watching racing and learned to appreciate it. Also as a kid, the Jordans had a little dirt bike for Michael and his brothers, and he loved the speed and freedom he felt from racing it around.

                But when he became a professional athlete, his contracts forbade him from riding.

                In the 1990s and early 2000s, there was an underground motorcycle culture in Chicago. Riders would get together in packs late at night and race around the city's avenues and freeways until the wee hours of the morning while traffic was light.

                One night one of those groups passed a guy riding a Ducati on the highway before they all exited for a gas station. When the Ducati followed them in and he took off his helmet, they knew it wasn't an ordinary rider.

                "It's an unbelievable story," Casmay said in 2004. "A guy from ESPN Magazine came to do a story, and the first thing he said was, 'You don't meet Michael Jordan at a gas station, so how do you meet him?' I said, 'Well, actually that's the way we met.' He couldn't believe it."

                Actually Casmay couldn't believe it either.

                "You want to meet him, but what do you say that's worth saying to him?" he said.

                One of the riders in the pack met Jordan years earlier when his uncle worked security for Bulls teammate Dennis Rodman. So he went over to Jordan and told him to ditch the Nike sweatsuit, sneakers and weight lifting gloves and start wearing real riding attire like leathers, boots and riding gloves to be safer. He also gave Jordan his card and told him to call if he ever wanted to go riding with the group.

                Two days later, the riders had a new member.

                "It became almost a nightly thing," Casmay said.

                Jordan was new at riding and told Casmay that he wanted to learn from the best. Casmay turned to his friend Montez Stewart, a street riding legend in Chicago who had just started a budding road racing career on the club circuits.

                "I rode on the streets with him for a little while, and he was impressed with the way I rode. I told him we needed to go to a race track and then you could see what we really do," Stewart said.

                In September of 2003, just months after his final basketball retirement with the Washington Wizards, Jordan rented Blackhawk Farms Raceway in Illinois.

                "I told him, 'I know people approach you with all sorts of craziness all the time, but what I know is you're stepping into my arena. This is what I do. I can teach you and show you what to do, but you've got to listen and take it serious because it's so easy to go out and hurt yourself,'" Stewart said.

                He found a willing pupil in Jordan.

                "I'm sure there are a lot of things he couldn't do because of basketball contracts. He's always loved motorcycles, and he's always wanted to ride. He was retired, so why not enjoy the fruits of his labor?" Stewart said.



                Video by TODAY
                He showed Jordan how to take a knee while cornering and even saw Jordan spring up after laying down the bike.

                "The bug bit him and he was ready to go after that," Stewart said.

                Not long after that adventure, Stewart got a call from Jordan asking for a meeting where they discussed Stewart's racing career and the constant search for money to do it competitively.

                Afterward, Stewart called Casmay and asked for his help in drafting a proposal for Jordan's people since Casmay had a business background as a manager for Nestle Chocolate and as an owner of his own investment company. Within a month, they were in business.

                Michael Jordan Motorsports was born.

                Stewart moved up to the highest ranks of professional motorcycle road racing in America; Casmay was living his dream by heading up the new racing enterprise; and Jordan's brand and his associated sponsors had a chance to reach a new market and demographics.

                However, finding success on the track proved elusive.

                Normally it takes a year to start a team from scratch. Jordan did it in less than two months. Stewart was a 31-year-old rookie going against legacies and kids who literally started riding as soon as they could walk. And being a novice in a paddock filled with factory-backed outfits, well-funded satellite teams and seasoned privateers didn't help the cause.

                At the Honda Super Cycle Weekend hosted by Mid-Ohio in July of 2004, Stewart went one lap in the Superstock race before a mechanical problem ended his ride. That was more than he got out of the Supersport race where he crashed out in the first turn.

                "I think there's pressure on any guy with any sponsor because they want their stuff to shine," Stewart said before that long ago race weekend. "The one thing (Jordan) told me is, 'Tez, you're the underdog so go out there and shock some people and do what you can do.'"

                At the 2004 season opener in Daytona, Jordan showed off his new enterprise to his agent David Falk, old Bulls teammate Charles Oakley and officials with Nike and Gatorade who were on board with the venture.

                "He said he wished he'd gotten into this a long time ago. When we rode back on the plane, he said that was one of the best experiences he's ever had," Stewart said.

                By the next year, Jordan's competitive nature got to him and he became serious about the venture.

                "Last year, Michael had no idea what he was getting into. He was just helping a buddy out and having some fun," veteran rider Josh Hayes said. "He went to a lot of races, listened to everybody, picked their brains for information and realized this is a great sport."

                Jordan dumped the underperforming Yamahas for Suzuki, the dominant manufacturer during that time. He also brought in seasoned road racing pros Jason Pridmore and Steve Rapp to add to Stewart.

                Over the next several seasons, former champions like Aaron Yates, Ben Bostrom and Jake Zemke plus younger stars like Roger Lee Hayden and Danny Eslick would also ride in the Jumpman leathers, enjoying podium finishes and race wins. Yates brought a Superstock championship to the team in 2008; Corey Alexander earned a SuperSport East title in 2013; and Zemke gave MJM its first Superbike win in 2010 — the highest level of the series.

                If not for the unsettled nature of American road racing in the mid-2010s, Jordan might still be competing. Instead, with crowds waning and TV broadcasts fleeting, he shuttered the team in 2014.

                It may not match what he did on the basketball court, but nevertheless, Jordan left a lasting legacy in motorcycle racing.

                And to think it all came to be because of a chance encounter at a Chicago gas station. It's a fascinating story worthy of an 11th hour.

                Comment


                • #53
                  Originally posted by Basketball Fan View Post

                  That may be so but Jordan had the final say in how this was done so if he wants to exclude Kukoc or Kukoc doesn't want to be a part of it well that can actually make this without him if they want it bad enough.
                  Except there is no way Jordan wanted to exclude Kukoc. The idea makes no sense. No one had any personal grudge against him, he was just their means to taunt Jerry Krause in 1992.

                  Even if Jordan did want that, he's not stupid. He'd know how bad taking Kukoc out of this would look for him. He didn't produce this, anyway. He merely gave legal permission to use footage from 22 years ago that he had rights to.

                  You think he allowed Isiah Thomas to have a role in this, but not Kukoc? No way.
                  Last edited by Kstat; 05-03-2020, 04:41 PM.

                  It wasn't about being the team everyone loved, it was about beating the teams everyone else loved.

                  Division Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 1989, 1990, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
                  Conference Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 2005
                  NBA Champions 1989, 1990, 2004

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Isiah is looked upon in a negative light by most people. Toni Kukoc wasn't someone most people had an issue with. Unless Toni waxes poetic about Jordan in some capacity he won't be in it.

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Wow. Toni didn’t wax poetic about Jordan, and he was in it. Shocker.

                      It wasn't about being the team everyone loved, it was about beating the teams everyone else loved.

                      Division Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 1989, 1990, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
                      Conference Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 2005
                      NBA Champions 1989, 1990, 2004

                      Comment


                      • #56
                        I thought Kobe would have a bit more air time than he did. That was a bit disappointing unless there is more to come later.

                        Hope we get more behind the scenes stuff from that 97-98 season since we are now at the start of the playoffs. Feels like they’ve gone from the pre-season in Paris to the end of the regular season without showing too much in between. So far it’s been way more focused on being a historical recap of Jordan’s entire career than it has been showing the unique footage. And we aren’t even to the first retirement, baseball, or first two titles of the second three-peat yet. That’s a lot to cram into just four more episodes.

                        Great documentary but it’s constantly jumping around.
                        Last edited by Sollozzo; 05-04-2020, 09:39 AM.

                        Comment


                        • #57
                          This is a great documentary. I did think there would be more of a focus on the 98 season, but I appreciate everything else it shows.

                          A few things I appreciated are below

                          I was 11 year old during this time so I was watching NBA basketball and I was a pacers fan, but I don't remember much so watching this now is great. I've never realized how much of a beast Dennis Rodman was on the boards. Is Dennis Rodman the best rebounder of all time. I understand that rebounding is all about positioning, timing, but mostly a willingness to go up and get the ball. If Dennis wasn't so out there I feel like he could tutor a lot of young big men on the fundamentals of rebounding. Maybe Myles should give Dennis a call JK. Looking at his numbers now he averaged 15-18 rpg. That is crazy

                          I wish someone would release the whole dream team scrimmage. Listening to Barkley talk about it this morning on Get up was very interesting. He mentioned that Him and Malone were going at it. Magic was going at it with Mike and Scottie. David Robinson and Ewing were going at it. I would love to watch that now.

                          This documentary should motivate a lot of young NBA players to get better. MJ was a guy that truly just worked harder than everyone. He was an athletic freak and he combined that with a crazy work ethic.

                          Comment


                          • #58

                            Sam Amico✔@AmicoHoops
                            Michael Jordan referred to teammate Will Perdue as Will “Vanderbilt” because Perdue wasn’t good enough to be named after a Big Ten school... and other tales from the dynasty era #Bulls reserves, as told to SI. #NBA https://www.si.com/nba/cavaliers/nba-amico/chicago-bulls-bench-players-michael-jordan …
                            Bulls Bench Players Recall 1990s Dynasty With 'Iconic Frontman' Jordan

                            Coming off the bench for the MJ-led Bulls was viewed as an honor, former players tell Sports Illustrated.
                            si.com

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                            • #59
                              Can you imagine being Adidas watching this documentary?

                              Comment


                              • #60
                                Originally posted by LilSean320 View Post
                                Is Dennis Rodman the best rebounder of all time. I understand that rebounding is all about positioning, timing, but mostly a willingness to go up and get the ball. If Dennis wasn't so out there I feel like he could tutor a lot of young big men on the fundamentals of rebounding. Maybe Myles should give Dennis a call JK. Looking at his numbers now he averaged 15-18 rpg. That is crazy
                                Let's not get crazy here. Dennis Rodman was a great rebounder, no doubt about it, but he was not the best rebounder of all-time.

                                Rodman averaged 13.1 rebounds per game for his career including 2 years where he averaged over 18.

                                Mel Daniels averaged 14.9 per game with 1 season at 18.0. Just to throw a Pacer into the mix.

                                Then there are the heavy weights.

                                Bill Russell. 22.5 per game..career.
                                Wilt....22.9 per game...career.
                                Nate Thurmond..15 rebounds per game...career.

                                And don't forget Andre Drummond....13.8 rebounds per game for his career. His best year so far has "only" been 16.0, but he has been consistent.

                                Rodman ranks right there with Drummond but he isn't even close to Wilt or Russell.

                                Comment

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