After losing the Eastern Conference finals to the Detroit Pistons in both 1989 and 1990, the Bulls vowed that it would not happen again in 1991. They won 20 of 21 games during a late-season surge that saw them overtake Detroit for the division title. Michael Jordan, in his seventh season, earned his second Most Valuable Player award, while fourth-year men Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant emerged as key contributors.
In the postseason, the Bulls made quick work of the New York Knicks (three games to none) and Philadelphia 76ers (four games to one) to set up the opportunity that they had waited for all year—a rematch with Detroit in the conference finals.
The Bulls not only won the series; they swept it in four straight games. They trailed for just 13 of the 192 minutes played. Detroit coach Chuck Daly frankly admitted that his team had no answer for the Bulls' quickness, athleticism, and desire. As the clock ticked down in the final game, Detroit's Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer, Mark Aguirre, and Dennis Rodman embarrassed themselves more thoroughly than the Bulls' dominance had. They left the bench and slinked into the locker room before the game was over.
The Bulls then dispatched Magic Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers with surprising ease in the NBA Finals to capture their first world championship. Jordan cradled the trophy in his arms and wept for joy, but also for relief that he was no longer a superstar whose team had never won a title. He didn't know yet that this first ascent to the pinnacle was not the culmination of his career, but just the beginning of a new phase. (Likewise for Phil Jackson, who had won two titles as a player and now had his first as a head coach. He would add ten more before he was through, setting a record that will last a long time.)
MICHAEL JORDAN |
In the postseason, the Bulls made quick work of the New York Knicks (three games to none) and Philadelphia 76ers (four games to one) to set up the opportunity that they had waited for all year—a rematch with Detroit in the conference finals.
The Bulls not only won the series; they swept it in four straight games. They trailed for just 13 of the 192 minutes played. Detroit coach Chuck Daly frankly admitted that his team had no answer for the Bulls' quickness, athleticism, and desire. As the clock ticked down in the final game, Detroit's Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer, Mark Aguirre, and Dennis Rodman embarrassed themselves more thoroughly than the Bulls' dominance had. They left the bench and slinked into the locker room before the game was over.
The Bulls then dispatched Magic Johnson and the Los Angeles Lakers with surprising ease in the NBA Finals to capture their first world championship. Jordan cradled the trophy in his arms and wept for joy, but also for relief that he was no longer a superstar whose team had never won a title. He didn't know yet that this first ascent to the pinnacle was not the culmination of his career, but just the beginning of a new phase. (Likewise for Phil Jackson, who had won two titles as a player and now had his first as a head coach. He would add ten more before he was through, setting a record that will last a long time.)
"They still haven't proved anything," Rodman had said after the Bulls eliminated the Pistons. "They've got to win about five or six [championships] before they're a great team." The Bulls obliged by capturing half a dozen world championships before the decade was out. Who could have guessed that Rodman himself would be aboard for the second three-peat from 1996 through 1998?
ED BELFOUR |
The Blackhawks sailed through the 1990-91 season with a record of 49-23-8, racking up 106 points and capturing the President's Trophy as NHL regular-season champions. Ed Belfour won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year and the Vezina Trophy as the league's outstanding goalie. Laconic veteran right wing Steve Larmer and brash young center Jeremy Roenick were the club's top offensive threats, while Chicago native Chris Chelios, newly acquired from Montreal in a trade for star center Denis Savard, anchored the backline. The Hawks went into the postseason with justifiably high hopes—but they failed to advance beyond the first round. They lost the first series to the Minnesota North Stars, four games to two.
NEAL ANDERSON |
In Mike Ditka's 10th year as their head coach, the Bears went 11-5 and qualified for the NFL playoffs as a wild-card entry. The streaky Bears won their first four games, lost two, won five, lost two, won two, and lost one. They were routed 52-14 by San Francisco in the season finale. The 49ers (who finished at 10-6) had already been eliminated from the postseason, and they took out their frustration on the Bears before a national audience on Monday Night Football.
The Bears lost to Dallas, 17-13, at Soldier Field in the divisional playoff round. It turned out to be their last playoff game under Ditka, whose postseason record ended up at 6-6.
The Bears sent five players to the Pro Bowl: running back Neal Anderson, center Jay Hilgenberg, linebacker Mike Singletary, strong safety Shaun Gayle, and free safety Mark Carrier.
FRANK THOMAS |
The White Sox moved into the new Comiskey Park (now known as Guaranteed Rate Field), directly across 35th Street from the site of their previous home. They drew over 2.9 million to the new park, shattering the franchise attendance record by 800,000. Coming off an excellent showing in 1990, the Sox slipped a bit in the standings, going 87-75 to finish eight games behind the world-champion Minnesota Twins. On the plus side, a pair of 23-year-olds, first baseman Frank Thomas and third baseman Robin Ventura, established themselves as rising stars.
On August 11, 21-year-old lefty Wilson Alvarez made his White Sox debut a memorable one, tossing a no-hitter at Baltimore. (He had started one game for the Texas Rangers in 1989, becoming the first person born in the 1970s to play in the major leagues.) The 7-0 victory put the Sox 20 games over .500, but they proceeded to drop 15 of the next 17 and never threatened thereafter.
DON ZIMMER |
The Cubs came into the season with three new big-name, big-money free agents on the roster—outfielder George Bell, lefty starter Danny Jackson, and closer Dave Smith. None of them performed up to expectations, and manager Don Zimmer didn't last through May. Club president Don Grenesko mentioned to reporters that Zimmer, like every employee of the Tribune Company, would be subject to an annual performance evaluation. When Zimmer (who was not familiar with or agreeable to the practices of corporate "suits" like Grenesko) took offense and demanded that he receive his evaluation then and there, Grenesko obliged by firing him. General manager Jim Frey, a boyhood friend of Zimmer's, apparently was not consulted.
Zimmer's replacement was Iowa Cubs skipper Jim Essian, a catcher on the White Sox' beloved "South Side Hit Men" team of 1977. Essian guided the Cubs to a 59-63 mark for the remainder of the season and never managed in the majors again. Frey was also shown the door after the season, and he too was replaced by a White Sox alumnus, Larry Himes.
BLACK TIE AFFAIR |
Owned by suburban auto dealer Jeff Sullivan and trained by Ernie Poulos, the Irish-bred gray stallion Black Tie Affair won his last six starts at six different racetracks—all in graded-stakes competition—to take home the Eclipse Award as thoroughbred Horse of the Year. The five-year-old was the first Chicagoland-based Horse of the Year since the 1950s, and he remains the last to date. Given the lamentable state of racing in Illinois, he was almost certainly the last ever.
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