This is the full roster of the 1987-1988 season of the bulls.
Michael Jordan Charles Oakley Sam Vincent Dave Corzine Brad Sellers John Paxson Horace Grant Scottie Pippen Rory Sparrow Sedale Threat Artis Gilmore Mike Brown Elston Turner Granville Waiters Tony White
Horace Grant Scottie Pippen are the rookies sitting on the bench.
Charles Oakley as we all know by now was the superstar as his career goes and was the total rebound leader of the league. John Paxson game winner three peat member at his prime that year as we all know by now.
so lets see the rest. Sam Vincent on the team that year and next career 7.8 point 19mins average guy avering 13.0 points that season. Dave Corzine on the team that year and next career 8.5 point 22.3mins average guy averaging 10.0 points that season Brad Sellers on the team that year and next one and half career 6.3 point 18mins average guy averaging 9.5 points that season Rory Sparrow on the team only that year played 55 games 18mins/game Sedale Threatt on the team only that year played 40 games 19mins/game Artis Gilmore on the team only that year played 24 games 15.5mins/game Mike Brown on the team that year and the year before only played 46 games 12.8mins/game Elston Turner on the team that year and the year before only played 17 games 5.8mins/game Granville Waiters on the team that year and the year before only played 22 games 5.2mins/game Tony White on the team that year played 2 games 1mins/gmaes
要求喬丹關鍵時刻加強得分剛好是教練的訴求.
This was not going to be an easy conversation. Basically I was planning to ask Michael, who had won his third scoring title in a row the previous season, to reduce the number of shots he took so that other members of the team could get more involved in the offense. I knew this would be a challenge for him: Michael was only the second player to win both a scoring title and the league MVP award in the same year, the first being Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1971. I told him that I was planning to implement the triangle and, as a result, he probably wouldn’t be able to win another scoring title. “You’ve got to share the spotlight with your teammates,” I said, “because if you don’t, they won’t grow.” “Okay, I guess I could average thirty-two points,” he said. “That’s eight points a quarter. Nobody else is going to do that.” “Well, when you put it that way, maybe you can win the title,” I said. “But how about scoring a few more of those points at the end of the game?” Looking back, Michael says that he liked this approach because it “allowed me to be the person I needed to be.” Sometimes I would tell him that he needed to be aggressive and set the tone for the team. Other times I’d say, “Why don’t you try to get Scottie going so that the defenders will go after him and then you can attack?” In general, I tried to give Michael room to figure out how to integrate his personal ambitions with those of the team. “Phil knew that winning the scoring title was important to me,” Michael says now, “but I wanted to do it in a way that didn’t take away from what the team was doing.” Source: Eleven Rings by Phil Jackson