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Chicago Bulls (6x NBA Champions)

What other 10 hour series of greatness could live up to that? To mix in the characters of Rodman, Pippen, Phil, Dream Team?

Tiger has the greatness factor. And the pyscho athlete/competitor factor. Maybe some wild stories too, but Nike wouldn’t let those out.

Kobe would/will be good. Same with LeBron. Tyson? Snooze on anything NFL (Tom Brady? No).

Jordan is still Jordan. Not sure he can be matched as a global icon/story.
A true expose that touched on the entire career, ups, downs, perceptions, political maneuvering, crash and burn, and comeback of Tiger Woods could...could...approach that, if everything was on the table. Beyond that...I can’t think of many. Ali‘s full story maybe. Or Jackie Robinson.
 
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What other 10 hour series of greatness could live up to that? To mix in the characters of Rodman, Pippen, Phil, Dream Team?

Tiger has the greatness factor. And the pyscho athlete/competitor factor. Maybe some wild stories too, but Nike wouldn’t let those out.

Kobe would/will be good. Same with LeBron. Tyson? Snooze on anything NFL (Tom Brady? No).

Jordan is still Jordan. Not sure he can be matched as a global icon/story.
Tyson is a good one, I read his book...dude is fucking fascinating.
 
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The Last Dance starts on ESPN tonight. Hate the network but they do independent documents very well.

Grew up on the 90s Bulls (and Pacers/Knicks).

Former Ohio State players saw Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls from the inside

Like much of the sports world, Dennis Hopson watched every episode of “The Last Dance.”

With the NBA and all other sports across the world at a standstill, ESPN’s 10-part documentary on Michael Jordan’s pursuit of a sixth NBA championship with the Chicago Bulls proved to be a must-watch binge of basketball nostalgia.

“I think it’s been pretty good,” Hopson, now the head coach at Lourdes College in northwest Ohio, told The Dispatch. “I think there were some things said about other players that I don’t think should’ve been said.

“They show Michael doing X, Y and Z, but they don’t show the other guys doing X, Y and Z back to Michael.”

The documentary, which primarily focuses on Jordan while telling the story of the final season of the Bulls dynasty, details Jordan’s competitive nature and seemingly eternal quest to gain an edge on his competitors or teammates.

It wasn’t always kind — his continual ribbing of teammate Scott Burrell stands out, as does the time he traded blows with Steve Kerr — but Jordan and others acknowledged that his attitude helped him climb to the top of the sport.

Another former Buckeyes player who had an up-close view of Jordan’s skills and ethic was Brad Sellers, who spent three pre-championship seasons with the Bulls but was traded after the 1988-89 season.

And like most, Hopson enjoyed what he saw. But having lived it as a member of the first Bulls team to win a title, Ohio State’s all-time leading scorer said he would’ve liked to have seen a little bit more.

Now the mayor of Warrensville Heights, a Cleveland suburb, Sellers averaged 17.8 points per game in two seasons with the Buckeyes, then was the No. 9 overall pick in the 1986 NBA draft. That was to the chagrin of Jordan, who wanted the Bulls to select Duke guard Johnny Dawkins, who like Jordan played in the Atlantic Coast Conference and with whom he shared an agent.

But while Jordan might not have wanted Sellers on the roster, general manager Jerry Krause had a vision.

“He says to me, ‘Listen, I drafted you because this game is about to change. You’re going to be the prototypical small forward in this league. You’re going to be the first 7-foot small forward in this league,’” Sellers said. “Which is crazy, right? Now here’s a guy (Krause) who they maligned (in the documentary). Here’s his vision in ’86, saying this thing is about to change.”

Sellers would not be around for the title that Hopson, his roommate at Ohio State, helped bring home to Chicago.

Hopson shared that season with another former Buckeye, assistant coach Jim Cleamons, a Linden product who played at OSU from 1969-71 and then was an assistant coach for the Buckeyes from 1983-87. Now living back in Columbus, Cleamons joined the professional ranks in 1989 and would spend his first seven years working under Bulls coach Phil Jackson.

He was responsible for the team’s perimeter players.

″(Jordan), when he got there, he was known as a scoring guy, but could he win?” Cleamons said. “He had to take his scoring ability and give up a little bit of scoring to win some games, and once he saw that was working, that was a nice formula.

“You didn’t have to tell him anything else because winning is what it’s all about. Every offseason, he came back with something else in his package. That’s the brilliance of him as an athlete.”

Upon his arrival for the 1990-91 season, Hopson said he had to adjust to a new locker-room mentality after three seasons with the New Jersey Nets that saw them post a record of 62-184. It helped that he was already familiar with Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant, having been part of the same draft class.

He also had to adapt to the reality that it was Jordan’s show, not his.

“They had a goal there, man, and that was to win an NBA championship, and they were very, very focused on getting that done,” Hopson said. “I knew that going to Chicago was going to stunt my growth as a player because ... no matter what, Mike was going to play. No matter if I went in and knocked down 10 jump shots in a row or missed 10 jump shots in a row, Michael was going to play.”

Hopson and Sellers said the documentary has rekindled relationships with their former teammates. Hopson had former Bulls guard B.J. Armstrong speak to his team via a Zoom call last Monday, and Sellers said he’s reconnected with Gene Banks, who was in his final NBA season when Sellers was a rookie.

None of the former Buckeyes is quoted in the documentary, but Sellers’ place in history is immortalized. It was the future mayor who threw the inbounds pass to Jordan when he hit his iconic jumper over the outstretched arms of Craig Ehlo to eliminate the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the 1989 Eastern Conference playoffs.

Entire article: https://www.buckeyextra.com/sports/...-bulls-from-inside?utm_campaign=snd-autopilot
 
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Sources: Bulls' Lonzo Ball picks up $21.4M option for 2024-25​

After missing the past two-plus seasons with a knee injury, Chicago Bulls guard Lonzo Ball has exercised the $21.4 million option on his contract for the 2024-25 season, sources told ESPN on Saturday.

Ball has undergone three surgeries on his left knee, the most recent a cartilage transplant in 2023. There remains some guarded hope that he could return next season, but there are no assurances that the damaged knee will allow for him to play again.
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His inactivity has caused his contract to become a blight on the Bulls' salary cap.

Just sayin': That sure was "no brainer" for Ball...... :nod:
 
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Sources: Bulls' Lonzo Ball picks up $21.4M option for 2024-25​

After missing the past two-plus seasons with a knee injury, Chicago Bulls guard Lonzo Ball has exercised the $21.4 million option on his contract for the 2024-25 season, sources told ESPN on Saturday.

Ball has undergone three surgeries on his left knee, the most recent a cartilage transplant in 2023. There remains some guarded hope that he could return next season, but there are no assurances that the damaged knee will allow for him to play again.
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His inactivity has caused his contract to become a blight on the Bulls' salary cap.

Just sayin': That sure was "no brainer" for Ball...... :nod:

Lonzo Ball wonders if his father's Big Baller Brand shoes caused his career-threatening knee injuries

Ball wore the shoes, which were the creation of his father, LaVar Ball, during his rookie season​

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Ball has thoughts on that, and his father, LaVar Ball, who constructed one of the all-time hype machines around his three sons, isn't going to like where Lonzo's finger is pointing. What did Spike Lee say to the great Michael Jordan? It's gotta be the shoes!

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From ESPN:

Did Lonzo actually want to wear Big Baller Brand shoes?

"I was an Adidas kid since high school, so I was thinking that was going to be the route," Ball said. "But what was told to me, I guess, wasn't what really happened. I was told that nobody wanted to partner with me, so my dad was like, 'Just rock the brand.' And I was like,

'All right.'"

The problem, Ball said, was that the first shoes his dad had made for him to wear at NBA summer league in 2017 were unwearable.

"They were like kickball shoes," Ball said. He wore them just twice that summer. He and his manager, Darren Moore, went out to Foot Locker stores in Las Vegas to buy a different pair of high-end shoes for each game. Ball played one game each in the Air Jordan XXXI, Nike Kobe A.D., Adidas Harden LS and Under Armour Curry 4 en route to winning summer league MVP.

Eventually, Big Baller Brand set up an arrangement with Skechers to manufacture its shoes, which Ball wore for his entire rookie season. But Ball said he wasn't happy with those shoes either and believes they could have contributed to the first meniscus injury he suffered as a rookie in January 2018.

"I think it's a possibility for sure, to be honest with you," Ball said. "I wasn't really getting hurt like that until I started wearing them."


Obviously nobody could ever say whether these shoes, which were selling for an outrageous $495 despite being a clearly inferior product, had any part in Ball's injury troubles.

But if Lonzo isn't ruling it out, I guess nobody should.
 
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