OLD MVP, NEW HEROICS; JORDAN SHOT BEATS JAZZ IN GAME 1.Byline: Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. Karl Malone Michael Jeffrey Jordan (born February 17 1963) is a retired American professional basketball player. swished. In the final 10 seconds, that's what it all came down to. Jordan hit a 21-foot jumper at the buzzer after Malone missed two free throws with 9.2 seconds left, giving the defending champion defending champion n (SPORT) → defensor/a m/f del tÃtulo defending champion n (Sport) → champion(ne) en titre Chicago Bulls The Chicago Bulls are a professional basketball team based in Chicago, Illinois. They play in the National Basketball Association. The team was founded in 1966, and has won six NBA Championships since. an 84-82 victory over the Utah Jazz in the opener of the NBA Finals The NBA Finals is the championship series of the National Basketball Association. The team winning the Eastern Conference Finals earns one of the two berths in the championship round, with the other going to the team that wins the Western Conference Finals. on Sunday night Sunday Night, later named Michelob Presents Night Music, was an NBC late-night television show which aired for two seasons between 1988 and 1990 as a showcase for jazz and eclectic musical artists. . It was a finish that was as Jordanesque for the Bulls as it was heart-wrenching for the Jazz, who led for most of the game. And it all came down to who performed in the clutch. This time, it was the old MVP (Multimedia Video Processor) A high-speed DSP chip from Texas Instruments, introduced in 1994. Officially introduced as the TMS320C80, it combines RISC technology with the functionality of four DSPs on one chip. and not the new one. Jordan, a four-time MVP, finished with 31 points on 13-of-27 shooting with eight assists and four rebounds. Malone, who played well until those free throws, even grudgingly admitted afterward that Jordan is the better player. ``What do you want me to say, Michael Jordan, just like everybody else? Obviously, it's Michael Jordan, no matter what Karl Malone says or not,'' Malone said. ``Michael wanted the ball at the end and made the shot, and it's hard to argue with that.'' Malone, who missed seven of his first eight shots from the field, had 23 points and 15 rebounds. What Malone didn't have, however, was the ability to make his two biggest shots of the game - free throws after Dennis Rodman pushed him in a scramble for a loose ball. Scottie Pippen Scottie Maurice Pippen (born September 25, 1965 in Hamburg, Arkansas) is a retired American professional basketball player who played in the National Basketball Association (NBA). said something to Malone before the free throws. ``I said, `The Mailman doesn't deliver on a Sunday,' '' Pippen recounted, referring to Malone's nickname. With a sellout United Center crowd screaming its lungs out, Malone rolled the first one off the rim and then did the same with the second. ``I'm from Summerfield, La., and we don't have any excuses down there. So I'm not going to use any,'' Malone said. ``It was agonizing, but I won't dwell on it. They were big free throws, but it shouldn't have come down to that. It was just me up there, I just didn't make them. They felt good, I just didn't make them. '' Jordan rebounded and the Bulls called a timeout, and it was no surprise who got the ball. ``I think anyone watching anywhere in the world knew who would take the shot,'' Utah guard John Stockton This article is about the professional basketball player. For the U.S. Senator from New Jersey, see John P. Stockton. John Houston Stockton (born March 26, 1962) is a retired American professional basketball player who spent his entire career (1984–2003) as a said. It was Jordan, of course, who took a pass from Toni Kukoc, dribbled the clock down against Bryon Russell Bryon Demetrise Russell (born December 31, 1970 in San Bernardino, California), is a former basketball player in the NBA. During a 12 season NBA career that spanned most of the 1990s and into 2005, he played for the Denver Nuggets, Washington Wizards and Los Angeles Lakers and was and then faded to his left to get open. The shot left his hands with less than a second left and hit nothing but net, and Jordan then turned to the crowd with his fist raised. ``As I was watching the clock and the defense - I was surprised Russell was on me because he hadn't guarded me all game - I felt they may double-team,'' Jordan said. ``But the double-team never came and I knew I was in a one-on-one situation. I crossed over, he went for the steal and I moved to my left and put up the jump shot.'' ``We ran the play to perfection Adv. 1. to perfection - in every detail; "the new house suited them to a T" just right, to a T, to the letter ,'' Pippen said. ``We gave Michael the ball and told him don't leave them any time on the clock. He just eyed it out and took the shot he felt good about.'' It was a spectacular ending to a hard-fought game which Utah led most of the way. The Bulls didn't take their first lead of the fourth quarter until Luc Longley hit a jumper off a feed from Jordan with 3-1/2 minutes left. A short jumper in the lane by Jordan put Chicago ahead 78-77 with 1:57 left, but Malone answered with a driving layup after fooling his defender with a head fake. Jordan missed a shot on Chicago's next possession, but Ron Harper grabbed the offensive rebound and found Pippen for a wide-open 3-pointer and an 81-79 lead. Those were the last of 27 points by Pippen, whose status for Game 1 was doubtful until a couple of hours before game time. Pippen also had nine rebounds despite a soft-tissue injury on his left foot. Stockton, who scored 16 points and had 12 assists, put Utah back ahead 82-81 on a 3-pointer with 51 seconds left. Fifteen seconds later, Jeff Hornacek was called for a touch foul on Jordan, who made one of two shots to tie the game at 82. Stockton then dribbled the shot clock down and missed a screened 3-pointer, and Malone, a 77 percent foul shooter, was fouled in the race for the loose ball. His two misses were reminiscent of Game 7 of the 1996 Western Conference finals against Seattle, when he missed a pair in the final 10 seconds that could have put Utah in the finals. Jordan and Pippen were the only players to score in double figures for Chicago. Rodman had four points and 12 rebounds. Hornacek had 11 points for the Jazz, whose precision shooting and crisp passing seemed to stun a United Center crowd looking forward to a fifth NBA NBA abbr. 1. National Basketball Association 2. National Boxing Association NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (= title in seven years for their team. Stockton also had seven of Utah's playoff-high 18 turnovers, and the Jazz shot only 7 for 11 at the foul line. ``The first game is always the toughest - I don't care what anybody says,'' Jordan said. ``Utah came in and played extremely well. I'm sure they're going to take a moral victory from tonight's game.'' CAPTION(S): 2 Photos Photo: (1--color) Michael Jordan clenches clenches the turned down portions of the nails used to keep horseshoes in place. Where the nails come out of the hoof wall they are twisted off and turned down as clenches to prevent the nails from working out. Called also clinches. his fist after sinking the game-winning shot against Utah in the opening game of the NBA Finals. (2) The Jazz's Bryon Russell is rendered helpless as Michael Jordan unloads the game-winning shot in the final seconds of Game 1. Associated Press |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion