Post#387 » by HomoSapien » Mon Apr 20, 2020 9:56 pm
Leave it to Michael Jordan, in true Space Jam fashion, to save sports fans everywhere when basketball was taken away from us in the most surreal way.
Lot's of random thoughts, but I'll start by saying that I think this is stunning. I read a review of this that said it was the Citizen Kane of sports documentaries, and I can already see why. I've always been aware of how much of a void the breakup of the dynasty left in my life, but watching this documentary simultaneously made me feel like a child again while also making me incredibly sad. There were so many moments where I got chills and so many moments where I felt upset.
- I felt so much anger when Reinsdorf mentioned in episode one that after the fifth championship he felt like much of the team outside of Michael were declining. We were coming off a 69-win season! We should have kept going past 6 and it was his job to help retool the team while we were winning. Reinsdorf has gotten a pass far too long for this, but he's completely complicit in the team's demise. I don't understand how he had the foresight to leave Krause out of contract negotiations with Jackson after the 5th championship but did nothing to stop him from telling the public that this would be Jackson's final season with the team. Why close the door? By 1997, Krause should have been moved to a scouting role until Jordan retired. Maybe we extend the dynasty if Tim Stack is promoted or John Paxson comes in sooner.
- A lot of debate going on about Pippen's contract. Yes, he signed that contract and Reinsdorf didn't owe him anything, but the Bulls had become so damn profitable that it really wouldn't have hurt them that much to at least make Pippen the second highest paid player on the roster over Ron Harper.
- It bums me out that there was no one on the Bulls that could have gotten Krause and Jordan/Pippen/Jackson in a room and tried to mend the relationship. You wonder how far a simple apology could have gotten. It's hard to blame Pippen for feeling unappreciated when his name is rumored in trades after helping you win 72 games.
- So many great small moments. Jordan denying Scott Burrell a hug. MJ asking David Stern how his wife was. Jackson having a holiday card on his desk from Dennis Rodman (seriously, Rodman sent out holiday cards?! I don't even do that). A couple cringe-worthy moments of Jordan bullying Krause.
- One reason the dynasty Bulls mean so much to me is that my dad and I watched almost every single game together from the second three-peat. After Jordan retired, my dad basically stopped watching basketball so we lost one thing we used to bond over. I made my dad watch this documentary. At first he wasn't too interested, but gave in. As soon as it was over, he gave me a call and was so emtotional about it. Just absolutely loved it. It made him feel nostalgic and it took him back to a better time, because let's face it --- 1998 kicks 2020's ass.
- One personal story, I was absolutely obsessed with the Bulls starting from 1996 (when I was 11). We went to Pakistan in 97 to visit family for the entire summer vacation. I brought with me a VHS copy of Learning to Fly and watched it every single day in Pakistan. My cousin, who had never seen a basketball game before, watched it with me and became hooked. When I was leaving, he asked if he could keep the VHS. I told him no.
- Everyone keeps talking about how this team was running on fumes and on its last legs, but I've never agreed. The Bulls were nearly unstoppable when Pippen came back from injury. I think we win again in 1999. But even in this hypothetical, I think it's pretty telling that no one ever assumes that we would have come back with a slightly retooled roster. Krause had essentially stopped doing his job and wasn't going out of his way to make this team better. In fact, he weakened it by trading Jason Caffey for David Vaughn. I hope they cover that aspect in the documentary. It seems like a small non-factor now, but Caffey brought a lot to that Bulls bench. He was also arguably their most athletic player and was pretty vital with Rodman checking in and out. Jordan and Harper, in particular, were pretty furious when the trade went down, but I remember reading later that Jackson had asked Krause to find him more size (Caffey was 6'8" and Vaugh was 6'11'). Vaughn, who wasn't nearly as good as Caffey, played like three games for the Bulls and was given the cold shoulder by his teammates before being cut. Vaughn, who then was signed by the Nets, ended up getting a bit of revenge though as he ended up having a pretty memorable block on a Jordan dunk attempt. The Bulls replaced Vaughn with Dickey Simpkins who actually ended up having some good moments that season. Still the Bulls biggest hole that season seemed to be having an athletic and tall power forward on the bench and I think if Krause had tried to successfully fill that spot the team wouldn't have seemed like it was on fumes.
- Speaking of Simpkins, I noticed that he and Luc Longley aren't on the interview list. I wonder if they were approached and turned it down or just overlooked. I would have loved to hear their perspectives given they were there for the entire three-peat. Seems weird to include Joe Kleine but not them.
- Ultimate what-if scenario --- After Pippen retired he wrote a piece on the Tribune about his career. In it, he mentioned that he wished he never went to the Rockets and just took the lockout season off to evaluate things (and possibly ultimately join Jackson in LA). Had that happened, Jordan, Pippen, Jackson, and Rodman would have all sat out the 98-99 season together while the Bulls tanked. Maybe in a different universe, you fire Krause and get all those guys in a room and convince them to return to the Bulls. Then heading into the 99-00 season you'd possibly have this roster:
C. Brand/Simpkins/Perdue
PF.Rodman/Kukoc/David
SF.Pippen/Artest
SG.Jordan/R.Harper/Fred Hoiberg
PG.B.Barry/BJ Armstrong/R.Brown/Maloney
That feels like a potential contender in 99-00 to me and I think Brand, Artest, and Barry would have given that team the jolt of youth they needed. Artest, in particular, would have really fit in with his devastating defense and would have preserved Jordan and Pippen in the playoffs by taking the tough defensive assignments.
- Bring back Ray Clay.
ThreeYearPlan wrote:Bulls fans defend HomoSapien more than Rose.