Robert Parish took over as the all-time leader in games played and stretched his career to 20 years, only the second NBA player (after Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) to reach that plateau.
<p>Your browser does not support iframes.</p>
Overall, though, this season belonged to the Chicago Bulls. It wasn't a perfect season for them -- after all, they did lose 10 games in the regular season and three in their playoff run to the team's fourth title in six years. But it came pretty close.
A rock star environment surrounded Michael Jordan (who was playing in his first full post-retirement season), Scottie Pippen, the newly-acquired rebounding machine Dennis Rodman and the Bulls everywhere they went as they stormed through the league to an NBA record 72-10 regular season, shattering the 1971-72 Lakers' mark of 69.
In his first full season since returning to the NBA, Jordan won his eighth scoring title to break Wilt Chamberlain's record of seven and also came away with an elusive triple crown: the MVP awards for the regular season, All-Star Game and NBA Finals.
While the spotlight shined extensively on the star trio, the Bulls were also recognized for the accomplishments of their supporting cast. Toni Kukoc was named Sixth Man of the Year while Phil Jackson was awarded the Coach of the Year.
In the Eastern Conferece playoffs, the Bulls went 11-1 (falling only to the Knicks in Game 3 of the East semis) and were back in The Finals for the first time since 1993. There they met the Seattle Sonics, who overcame years of disappointing postseason flameouts to reach their first Finals since 1979.
Although the Sonics showed resilience in winning Games 4 and 5 on their home court, they couldn't stop the Bulls' train. Chicago's storybook season ended with it winning the franchise's fourth championship in six seasons in an easy Game 6 victory as the Bulls returned to the top of the NBA.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar