A shared executive. A shared Finals. Even a shared players intro song.
The Phoenix Suns are in the #NBAFinals and they’ve got a long shared history with our Chicago Bulls. Here are 18 facts (and one bonus) that bind our two franchises.
A thread.
Between 1966 and 1970, the NBA added eight expansion teams, going from nine teams to 17. Two of those teams were the Chicago Bulls and Phoenix Suns.
As we’ll see in this thread, they shared a helluva lot, starting with their first employee.
Chicago Heights’ Jerry Colangelo.
Bulls-Suns history #1, March 1966: Expansion Bulls hire Jerry Colangelo as the team's first employee.
Bulls founder Dick Klein scoops up Chicago Heights native and @IlliniMBB captain Colangelo to serve as head scout and head of marketing.
Bulls-Suns history #2, Feb. 1968: Expansion Suns hire Colangelo as GM.
Bulls employee #1 becomes Suns employee #1 two years later. Colangelo, age 28, would become the first GM of the new Suns. Nineteen years later he would lead a group that would buy the franchise.
Bulls-Suns history #3, Apr. 1968: Colangelo hires recently fired Bulls coach Red Kerr as coach of the Suns.
The first head coach of the Chicago Bulls?
Johnny "Red" Kerr.
The first head coach of the Phoenix Suns?
Johnny "Red" Kerr.
Bulls-Suns history #4, Jun. 1971: Colangelo hires recently fired Bulls scout Jerry Krause.
Two months after the 1971 NBA Draft (pictured here), the Bulls fired Jerry Krause. His old scouting peer Colangelo scooped him up the next month.
Bulls-Suns history #5, May 1975: Jerry Krause leads Suns scouting effort to draft Alvan Adams #4 overall.
Adams would win 1976 NBA Rookie of the Year and finish 2nd on the Suns in scoring, 3rd in rebounds and 1st in blocks.
Bulls-Suns history #6, May 1976: Suns reach their first-ever #NBAFinals.
With Adams and other Krause-scouted players, 42-win Suns upset the defending-champ Warriors to reach the Finals. Krause was no longer there; they fired him in Sep. '75. He had his player run-ins for sure.
Bulls-Suns history #7, Jun. 1988: Jerry Krause fails to convince Central Michigan guard Dan Majerle to tank his draft prospects so that the Bulls can get him in the 2nd round. In the 1993 Finals, Jordan takes out some of his anger with Krause on Majerle.
From David Halberstam:
Bulls-Suns history #8, Dec. 1988: Suns trade Craig Hodges to Bulls in a deal that includes Ed Nealy.
Hodges would become a 3x three-point shootout champ and 2x NBA champion. As for Nealy...
Bulls-Suns history #9, 1989 to 1993: Ed Nealy ping-pongs between the Suns and Bulls.
Phoenix trades him to Chicago in ’89, he signs as a FA with the Suns in 1990, and the Bulls trade for him from the Warriors in 1993. On IR, he gets a ring with the Bulls in his final NBA game.
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Jerry Krause is one of my favorite figures in Chicago sports history. Just a fascinating man with a great story. Want to learn more about his not one, not two, but THREE stints with the Bulls?
PS I know that Krause story is for subscribers only. Here is my ode to The Sleuth from after his death in 2017. We would not be six-time champs without his moves. Simple as that.
Bulls-Suns history #10, early 1990s: The Suns steal Sirius.
That's right, the Phoenix Suns took our famed player intro! Steal from the best, right? Here we are doing it in Nov. 1986, Jordan's third season. The song was discovered by P.A. announcer Tommy Edwards.
By at least the 1989-90 season, the Suns — then owned by Chicagoan Jerry Colangelo — started using Sirius for their player intros. Here it is during the 1990 Western Conference Finals.
And here is @jakemalooley's must-read oral history on the intro:
As the Bulls rose, the intro exploded. @AndNowPA replaced Edwards in 1990-91, and once we won a title the intro was complete:
"Your WORLD CHAMPION... Chicago Bulls!"
Game 1, 1992 #NBAFinals. When the lights cut out at the old barn, all was subsumed. @irwin65
Obviously the Suns were watching. In 1992-93, they got a new superstar, a new coach, a new arena, new uniforms...
...and a new player intro. Same song, but now they had 3D jumbotron graphics of entering the stadium. This is from Game 6. Look familiar, Bulls fans?
Two seasons later, the Bulls upped the ante again, matching the Suns with the 3D computer intro, though this time moving through downtown to reach the UC.
Here is the player intro on March 24, 1995, Michael Jordan's first home game since his return from baseball.
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On Feb. 1, 1995, Michael Jordan was the projected left fielder for the AAA Nashville Sounds while Scottie Pippen was desperate to get himself traded off the Bulls.
45 days later, on March 18, they were reunited.
This is the day-by-day account of those 45 days.
A thread.
Last year, @nbcschicago & I teamed up to tell the full story of “I’m Back.” I wanted to show how close MJ came to staying in baseball and how close Pip came to getting traded. I love the piece, but a bare bones look at the daily events is compelling too.
What we have here is a confrontation with a scary truth: the 2nd three-peat came very close to not happening. A look at the daily events by stripping away the narrative reveals how a major piece of Chicago sports history changed day by day.
Red Grange made one of the most clutch plays in Bears history. Down 23-21 in the '33 championship, the Giants could have scored on the final play via lateral. Grange tackled Dale Burnett high, pinning the ball to his chest to prevent the lateral to Mel Hein. Game over. Champs.
Happy 87th Birthday to a great man and leader and the greatest winner American team sports have ever seen. Salute to you, @RealBillRussell!
Nobody wins like Bill Russell.
🏆🏆'55-'56 NCAA champ
🥇'56 Olympic gold
#2 overall pick, 1956
🏆'57 NBA CHAMP
❌'58 NBA Finals runner-up
🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 '59-'66 NBA CHAMP
Replaces Red Auerbach as head coach while still playing
❌'67 East finals
🏆🏆 '68-'69 CHAMP
Retires
To win the way Bill Russell won, you have to LOVE winning and hate losing. The pursuit of victory must never dim. The joy of victory must never fade. Look at these three celebrating their 7th title together. They look like they've only won their first.
Fumble return touchdowns! A backup QB! 4th quarter comebacks!
World Series heroics?
Here is the true story of two wild weeks at Soldier Field, and the iconic playmaking of a man Bears fans love.
The magical, the memorable, the magnificent.
The Mike Brown Games.
A thread.
In consecutive weeks in 2001, Oct. 28 & Nov. 4, the great Mike Brown delivered two of the most memorable plays in Bears history: a pair of walkoff OT interceptions.
These TDs fueled that great 2001 season, and shared connections to memorable Bears games before and after.
While Mike Brown's career was far more than just two plays in two weeks, these plays epitomized what we all loved about #30: leadership, instincts, joy, winning games and the flair for the moment.
Here he is discussing them in 2019 with @JeffJoniak.
I was talking to a Bears fan friend today after the press conference, discussing the basis for Bears fan fury, and it led me to look at some key numbers of the past 25 years comparing us, the Packers, and the Lions. And frankly, we're closer to being the Lions than the Packers.
I summed up my personal Bears frustration with this, but even that wasn’t quite right, because no one is the Patriots. I’d settle for being a millionaire in this scenario, and that’s Green Bay.
I know we all got annoyed when Lions fans tried to equate a six-game winning streak to the entire damn history of our two franchises. That was a ballsy maneuver for one of only two clubs from prior to the Super Bowl era that has never been to a Super Bowl.
Starting in 2017, when the Bears chose Mitch Trubisky, Mike Glennon and Mark Sanchez over either Pat Mahomes or Deshaun Watson plus Colin Kaepernick, I started looking at our franchise's history with Black QBs.
The question of why the Bears seem to consistently make the wrong choice at quarterback has been alive since at least the 1940s, when Papa Bear brought in two brilliant QBs as heirs to Sid Luckman's throne, and managed to lose both of them within 4 years.